Reviews

The Graduate

Adapted by Terry Johnson. Mount Players (Vic). Mountview Theatre, Macedon. November 1 – 23 2019

The Graduate is a fun, well-paced offering by Mount Players.  As expected, it shines a bright light on the social mores of the 1960s.  And yes, the auditorium was filled with grey haired patrons, many of whom are doubtless old enough to remember the hubbub caused by the release of the film.  In fact it takes us well and truly back into the era.

Electric Dreams

Music & lyrics by Drew Lane, book based on the movie ‘Electric Dreams’ created by Rusty Lemonrande. Music Theatre Melbourne presents a Staged Workshop Development Production. Gasworks Theatre, Albert Park. 20 – 24 November 2019

Here is a new Australian musical – even if it’s set in San Francisco in 1984 – mounted by the thoroughly professional Music Theatre Melbourne.  Nerdy but nice architect Miles (Tom Green) moves into a new apartment.  Guided by his more sophisticated buddy/mentor Frank (Stephen Mahy), Miles gets one of these new-fangled (to him) computers.  He names it ‘Edgar’ (its voice is Owen James), and it acquires more features than Miles expected let alone understands.  Beautiful cellist Madeleine (Madeleine Featherby), nursing a broken heart, come to Sa

Native Tongue

Mojo Juju. Playhouse, Queensland Performing Arts Centre (QPAC). 19 November, 2019. Part of Clancestry: A Celebration of Country, 18 November to 2 December, 2019

Singer-songwriter, Mojo Juju, was nominated at the 2018 ARIAs as Breakthrough Artist of the Year. Her third studio album, Native Tongue won Album of the Year and Song of the Year at the 2019 National Indigenous Music Awards. The song also won Best Independent Single at the Australian Independent Record Labels Association Awards. The accolades are justly the result of four year’s work on an album, a body of work that is a very personal collection of stories about the experiences of her family and her fascinating heritage.

Waiting in the Wings

By Noël Coward. Canberra Repertory. Directed by Stephen Pike. The Q, Queanbeyan, 20–23 November. Theatre 3, Canberra, 29 November – 7 December.

A large, comfortable charity home in 1960 England named The Wings houses retired actresses.  Of its nine present residents, all but one know of an impending addition to their number, the actress Lotta Bainbridge.  The resident in the dark, May Davenport, has refused for the past 30 years to speak with Lotta, and everybody else is afraid of her reaction — which is understandably worse than it might have been when May finally realises that Lotta is soon to arrive M

Little Red Riding Hood: A Pantomime

By K. O. Samuel. Directed by Anita Bound. KADS Town Square Theatre, Kalamunda. 15-30 November, 2019

KADS’ Little Red Riding Hood is a very British pantomime, playing to very healthy houses. As is to be expected from a traditional panto, it plays on many levels, with appeal to diverse age groups.

Timeless: Alondra’s Season Finale

Alondra de la Parra conducting the Queensland Symphony Orchestra (QSO), Concert Hall, Queensland Performing Arts Centre (QPAC), 15 & 16 November, 2019

Alondra de la Parra’s three years at the helm of the QSO came to a close in Brisbane with a celebratory and emotional concert presentation with two performances at QPAC – a shorter matinee concert on the Friday and a full programme on Saturday night. And judging by the diversity of the audiences at both events, the QSO’s aim of introducing more people to music has been a smashing success.

Cinderella

By Rodgers and Hammerstein. Presented by Lynch & Paterson. Princess Theatre, Brisbane. 15-17 November 2019

With a cast of 24 and more than 15 crew, Cinderella is a major undertaking for relatively new musical production company, Lynch & Paterson – a creative partnership founded in 2015 by the multi-talented Lucas D Lynch and Samantha Paterson to present musical theatre, opera, orchestral works and other stage productions. With several successful productions under their belt, the strength of this Cinderella is the standard of the ensemble work.

Six Degrees At A Hot Melbourne Market

Directed and designed by Mazz Ryan and D. B. Valentine. Studio Theatre Gasworks Arts Park, 21 Graham Street, Albert Park. 13 – 23 November, 2020

Perfectly housed in the studio space at Gasworks in Albert Park, Melbourne Writers’ Theatre’s current offering is perhaps a little more edgy than usual, with a dystopian flavour. 

It pays homage to our wonderful Queen Victoria Market.

Alexandra Flood and Alex Raineri

Presented by Opera Queensland. Opera Queensland Studio. 15 – 16 November, 2019

Opera Queensland’s Artistic Director Patrick Nolan has introduced a new series that’s become a fast favourite with Brisbane’s music aficionados. Set in an intimate studio space, the new opera series allows you to get up close to the performers, with a smaller audience. This allows you to experiencethe power of operatic performance on a level usually only enjoyed by the behind-the-scenes creatives on operatic works.

Oil

By Ella Hickson. Red Stitch Actors’ Theatre. 27A Cromwell Road, Prahran. 12 November – 15 December 2019

Ella Hickson’s Oil is a sprawling saga stretching from 1889 and on into our future.  In scene one, an American oil man (Darcy Brown) quips to a dirt-poor, candle-lit farming family, as he introduces them to the wonders of kerosene, ‘The Stone Age didn’t end because they ran out of stones.’ 

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