Reviews

I Sing Songs

Performed by Steven Kreamer. fortyfivedownstairs, 45 Flinders Lane, Melbourne. 23 - 27 January, 2019.

Steven Kreamer is an astonishing emerging talent as a musician, composer and performer who has also demonstrated his talents as an arranger and orchestrator. This show is a very personal account of his journey as a musician. The strength of this show is the numerous original compositions often written at important crossroads in his life. While the songs are predominantly reflecting on his experience of love and romance, they are often giving detailed accounts of episodes that have had some formative influence on his life and work.

One Infinity

Beijing Dance Theater / Dance North Sydney Festival. Carriageworks. Jan 23 – 27, 2019

Since leaving Chunky Move, the dance company he founded in Melbourne, choreographer/director Gideon Obarzanek has taken a lively interest in the spoken word and other storytelling techniques of the theatre.

One Infinity is, by contrast, an hypnotic collaboration between Chinese musicians and ten dancers from the Beijing Dance Theater and Australia’s Dance North. 

Le Gateau Chocolat: Icons

Sydney Festival. Spiegeltent, Hyde Park, Sydney. January 23-27, 2019

The British cabaret artist Le Gateau Chocolat is one of the joys of the festival circuit. He first debuted as a solo artist in Adelaide in 2011 and has appeared in Edinburgh and Perth, as well as in the Spiegeltent shows La Clique and La Soiree. A bearded drag queen who uses the male pronoun, he’s an absolute joy, never fitting a single description and never needing to. He’s created an on-stage persona that works wonders, mainly because of the strength of his performances.

The Big Time

By David Williamson. Ensemble Theatre. Directed by Mark Kilmurry. January 18 - March 16, 2019

The question posed every year by David Williamson’s annual World Premiere productions at the Ensemble Theatre is has his latest play earnt its stripes on the quality of the work or his famous name? The answer in 2019, for play number 54, is that The Big Time is one of his best in recent years, likely to delight the company’s traditional audience.

Playtime 2

By Kier Shoosmith and cast. Connections Nightclub, Northbridge, WA. 21-23 January, 2019

Playtime 2 is the sequel to the popular Playtime from last year’s FringeWorld. Playing a very short season at Connections Nightclub, this is Play School if it was made for millennials. Songs, play and craft to help people in twenties navigate the scary adult world.

Bright, colourful and happy, this unlikely combination of children’s theatre (for adults) and big issues, is funny and refreshing and keeps its audience involved throughout.

Les Misérables

Music by Claude-Michel Schönberg. Lyrics by Herbert Kretzmer. Original French text byAlain Boublil and Jean-Marc Natel. Additional Material by James Fenton. Adaptation by Trevor Nunn and John Caird. Young Australian Broadway Chorus. National Theatre, St Kilda. January 18 – 26, 2019.

A brilliant new production under the fabulous direction of Robert Coates, Young Australian Broadway Chorus present an outstanding staging of the Boublil and Schonberg’s musical Les Misérables currently on at the National Theatre, St Kilda.

The French novel by Victor Hugo, written in 1862, considered one of the greatest novels of the nineteenth century, was adapted into a musical in 1980 and has since become the second longest running musical in the world.

Maisie

Music and Lyrics by Paris Ceglinski. Amor é Music. Fringe World. The Studio, Subiaco Arts Centre, WA. 18-19 January, 2019

This fun-sized musical for kids deserved a longer run, playing just four matinee performances on the opening days of the Fringe World festival.

For those who remember the early days of Barking Gecko, this was a step back in time, with a packed studio and children seated on the floor at the front. A warm family experience and a lovely first theatre experience for some.

The Tempest

By William Shakespeare. Presented by Oz Act. Loch Ard Gorge, Port Campbell National Park. 19 & 20 and 26 & 27 January 2019

The return of Oz Act to Loch Ard Gorge for a performance of The Tempest is a fantastic opportunity to enjoy the more mystical elements of this play. The surroundings create a perfect backdrop for the themes of isolation and being subject to the force of nature.

Cyrano de Bergerac

By Edmond Rostand. Adapted by Glyn Maxwell. Blue Sky Theatre Productions and Open Gardens South Australia, Collingrove Homestead (and other SA gardens), 11 January to 2 February 2019

The comedy and tragedy of a Frenchman with a large nose was Edmond Rostand’s peerless creation in 1897. Written for a nation that was in danger of forgetting its art and culture, Cyrano de Bergerac symbolises the still relevant struggle between skin-deep attraction and the lasting beauty of a soul.

Velma Celli’s A Brief History Of Drag

Chapel Off Chapel (Melbourne), January 18 and 19; The Factory Theatre (Sydney), February 4 and De Parel Spiegeltent (Perth), February 7 to 10, 2019

We all love a good drag show and when one pops up that is defiantly different, first we raise an eyebrow and then embrace the new with open arms.

Velma Celli, aka Ian Stroughair, delivers a novel new show that is honest and bona fide authentic. More importantly it is his own personal story as a musical theatre artist and journey into solo performance.

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