Reviews

Come From Away

By Irene Sankoff and David Hein. Directed by Katherine Freind and Allen Blachford. Koorliny Arts Centre, Kwinana, WA. Nov 15 - 30, 2024

Koorliny Arts Centre’s production of Come From Away, the WA Amateur Premier of this very popular show, has created quite a buzz, and the full, very theatrical crowd on Opening Night can testify that this production is very much worthy of the hype.

This story of the town of Gander, whose residents cared for thousands of people from stranded airplanes following September 11, has quickly become a modern classic.

Dirty Rotten Scoundrels

By Jeffrey Lane and David Yazbek. Murray Music and Drama Club. Directed by Lori Anders. Pinjarra Civic Centre, WA. Nov 15-29, 2024

Murray Music and Drama Club’s production of Dirty Rotten Scoundrels is neither dirty nor rotten. And the fun and vibrant storyline makes it a great choice for an end of year production 

Performed cabaret style, which seems a great choice for the show’s casino settings, it has a good sense of glamour and sparkle, and there are some notable performances. It is performed to a quality backing track.

Crimson Gully

By Sreekanth Gopalakrishnaan. The Great Indian Theatre Company. Directed by Sreekanth Gopalakrishnaan. Nexus Theatre, Murdoch University, Murdoch, WA. Nov 15-17, 2024

The second major production by The Great Indian Theatre Company, Crimson Gully, played for a short season to sold out houses at the Nexus Theatre. Starting each show with reminders of theatre etiquette, and a front of house member who felt the need to explain that A row was at the front, and that the seats followed the alphabet back from there, it is clear that they are bringing new audiences to theatre, and that is a great thing to celebrate.

Puss In Boots

By Ben Crocker. Wanneroo Repertory. Directed by Shelly McGinn. The Limelight Theatre, Civic Drive, Wanneroo, WA. Nov 21 - Dec 7, 2024

It’s Pantomime time, and the first to open this year is Wanneroo Repertory’s Puss in Boots. Having been on the planner and delayed for a couple of years, it has finally reached the stage - the final production before the Limelight’s big renovation.

A cast of 31 performers bring this traditional pantomime to life, and it features some standout performers.

Mother and Son

By Geoffrey Atherden. Adelaide Repertory Theatre Company. Arts Theatre, Angas Street. 21- 30 November, 2024

Mother and Son is an iconic Australian television series from the 1980s which I, and I’m sure thousands of other Australians cherished. We revelled in the naughty, difficult, absent-minded Maggie, and her long-suffering son, Arthur’s exploits. Coming to this reboot of Mother and Son, directed by Jude Hines, I felt hesitation about how this would translate across decades and likewise, if anyone could carry off these much-loved characters. I was captivated from curtain up!

Sweat

By Lynn Nottage. Sydney Theatre Company. Wharf 1 Theatre. Nov 11 - Dec 22, 2024

This gritty, evocative Pulitzer Prize winning play is set at a time during the second Bush Administration when working class Americans are about to have their lives irrevocably disrupted.

The main setting is a bar where close-knit employees meet to drink, talk, party and fight. Inspired by the plight of steel workers in Pennsylvania, the audience hears that the factory is hard work, leaving the women after several decades on the floor with “sagging titties” and “bunions”.

The Hall

Text and songs by Ro Bright & Pat Irwin. Bullet Heart Club. At fortyfivedownstairs. 21 November – 1 December

When you have Natasha Herbert – an actor of such intense presence, vitality and beauty - as ‘Tup’, a grandmother with Frontotemporal dementia, it breaks your heart.  The sense of waste and loss is all the keener.  The Hall doesn’t soften her condition.  She scarcely recognises her daughter Alison (Brooke Lee), now her principal longsuffering but loving carer, or her non-binary (they/them) teenage grandchild, Billie (Emmanuelle Mattana). 

Cruel Britannia: After Frankenstein

Director: Cohan. Writer and Performer: Kristen Smyth. Sound Design: Di Drew. Costume Design: Jessamine Moffett. Set Design: Rachel ‘Stoz’ Stone. Lighting Design: Ashleigh Shearman. Producer: Ben Anderson. The Show Room, Arts Centre, Melbourne. 21 - 30 November, 2024

Kristen Smyth has ventured into the difficult territory of presenting painful and challenging experiences to an audience. She has wrapped the torturous Thatcherite skinhead, drug and club culture and the experience of identity discovery and transitioning in the cloak of our common understanding of the making of a monster as depicted in Mary Shelley’s “Frankenstein”. The fundamental question of who the monsters are is deeply explored in this searching and poetic text. The Director, Cohan has offered a purity of vision which supports the text’s life.

Carrie

Music by Michael Gore, lyrics by Dean Pitchford, book by Lawrence D. Cohen, based on the book by Stephen King. WAAPA’s Second Year Musical Theatre. Directed by Tyler Jacob Jones. The Roundhouse Theatre, WAAPA, Edith Cowan University, Mt Lawley, WA. Nov 8-14, 2024

The musical Carrie is perhaps best known as being one of Broadway’s biggest flops, but in the hands of WAAPA’s Second Year Musical Theatre students, it was an unmitigated success. This cohort’s first public performance as an individual cohort, it was designed, built and crewed by WAAPA Production and Design Students, and accompanied by WAAPA Music Students.

The Murmuration of Lost Birds

By Marie-Eve Cigna, Laura Goodlet.Henry Kent, Natasha Pearson, Rueben Mongoo, Roisin Wallace – Nash. WAAPA Bachelor of Performing Arts, Performance Making and Spare Parts Puppet Theatre. Directed by Michael Barlow. Victoria Hall, Fremantle, WA. Nov 8-9, 2024

For some years WAAPA’s Bachelor of Performing Arts, Performance Making students have been collaborating with Spare Parts Puppet Theatre, for their ultimate performance project. Always an excellent partnership, this year’s The Murmuration of Lost Birds, with its themes of young birds leaving the nest and flying off into an uncertain future, was particularly poignant, and I felt privileged to witness this charming cohort’s last ever performance together.

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