Reviews

Green Park

By Elias Jamieson Brown. Griffin Theatre Company / Sydney Festival. Green Park, Darlinghurst. January 19 – 30, 2022

There’s something very equalitarian about casual gay sex. Total strangers often cross so many borders of class, nationality, background, generations and wealth to negotiate one moment of ecstasy. 

Writer Elias Jamieson Brown takes us on a Grindr date to show us how it’s done. 

Killing Katie: Confessions of a Book Club

By Tracey Trinder. Director: Francesca Savige. Ensemble Theatre, Kirribilli. 9 January – 26 February, 2022

Tracey Trinder’s characters have graced the small screen for many years. Killing Katie: Confessions of a Book Club is her first stage play – and it’s a winner. The writing is clever, economic, perceptive, witty. The characters are tellingly recognisable yet lovably warm. The dialogue demands astute direction and fast, adroit delivery. It’s a director’s play and actors’ play rolled into one …

Wudjang: Not the Past

By Stephen Page and Alana Valentine. Bangarra / Sydney Theatre Company / Sydney Festival. Roslyn Packer Theatre. January 17 – February 12, 2022, then Hobart and Adelaide.

Stephen Page’s magnificent, largest ever and probably last production after decades as artistic director of Bangarra blends his choreography with more theatrical forms and collaborators than ever.

Page calls it a “contemporary ceremony”; Wudjang mixes opera and musical melodies and ditties, with live musicians, singers and actors working in both English and Stephen’s ancestral dialect of Mununjali of Yugambeh country (south east Queensland).  And seventeen remarkable dancers.

The Odyssey: The Epic Tale of Odysseus on his Super Long Journey Home

Black Martini Productions. Fringe World. The Library, The Girls School, Perth, WA. Jan 14-23, 2022

After the success of Black Martini’s Troy Story in last year’s FringeWorld (available on YouTube if you need a primer), the team return to continue Odysseus’ journey, as he battles monsters who are trying to eat him, revengeful Gods, witches, storms, whirlpools and drugs on a ten-year journey home.

I Like Bananas

By Jessie Gordon and Libby Hamer. Fringe World. Ellington Jazz Club, Beaufort St, Perth WA. Jan 17-20, 2022

I Like Bananas is a celebration of British Music Hall jazz. Fronted by Libby Hamer and Jessie Gordon with six-piece jazz band, the Hounds, this is slightly naughty, a little bit bawdy, old fashioned and funny.

Dressed in suits and straw hats, the music hall style is nicely established, and Jessie Gordon and Libby Hamer sing beautifully and entertain with style.

Sh*t We Like To Sing - Under the Rainbow

By Broken Crayon Productions. Fringe World, WA. Directed by Charlie Darlington. Jan 15-19, 2022

The second of two Sh*t We Like to Sing offerings this Fringe World season, Under the Rainbow, explores gender, sexuality and what makes us, using the songs that the performers just love to sing.

Playing, very appropriately, at Connections Nightclub, the show features six very talented performers (and depending on the night, a guest performer or two).

2 Marys

Written and directed by Suzanne Ingelbrecht. Midland Junction Arts Centre, WA. Jan 14-16, 2022

Beautifully acted by two very strong performers, this World Premiere production tells a story inspired by the relationship between Mary Shelley and her friend Mary Diana Dods, an illegitimate daughter of the Earl of Morton who wrote as David Lyndsay and assumed the identity of aristocrat Sir Walter Sholto Douglas in order to marry another friend, Isabella Robinson, who was pregnant and had been abandoned.

Me, My Cult and I

By Colin Ebsworth. FringeWorld, The Goodwill Cub at the Recabite, William St, Northbridge, WA. Jan 14-Feb 13, 2021

Originally advertised as playing just three performances until January 16, the clear popularity of Me, My Cult and I has led to a ‘return season’ late in the FringeWorld festival.

Colin Ebsworth’s parents were matched by Reverend Sun Myung Moon and married in a mass wedding ceremony with thousands of other couples in in Madison Square Gardens. Born in Alabama, Colin grew up in Perth, as part of the Unification Church, colloquially known as the ‘Moonies”.

Arty Facts

By Trevor Todd. Much Productions. FringeWorld. Directed by Jane Sherwood. After Dark, Pier St, Perth WA. Jan 16-25, 2022

Have you ever wondered what the subjects in your favourite portraits are thinking? Arty Facts, presented by Much Productions for FringeWorld, is a little show that attempt to answer that question, as we meet the people in the pictures, in a series of comedic vignettes.

Playing well in the intimate space of After Dark, three performers don a variety of quick costumes - and are usually instantly recognisable as the artwork. 

Russell Morris: The Real Thing

Concert Hall, Queensland Performing Arts Centre (QPAC), Brisbane. 15 January 2022

Russell Morris won't like this review because I am going to describe him using a word he hates: 'icon'. But to me, he is an Aussie music icon because, like most of his compadres from our music industry from the 1960s to present day, he's highly underrated and has had to adapt to survive in an industry that would really rather he had success overseas. Instead he chooses to stay in Australia and reinvent himself to continue to work.

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