Reviews

The Sound of Murder

By William Fairchild. Directed by Peter Neaves. Old Mill Theatre, South Perth, WA. June 3-18, 2021

The Sound of Murder is a nicely produced murder play, with some unexpected twists, elements of a thriller and a touch of melodrama. A good-looking production that moves swiftly and keeps its audience interested throughout.

Centred around Charles Norbury, a children’s book author who dislikes children and refuses to grant his wife a divorce. His wife Anne and her lover Peter plot his murder, but plans go seriously awry. 

Four Seasons

Queensland Symphony Orchestra Maestro Series. QPAC Concert Hall, Brisbane. 3rd June, 2022

Concert-goers were treated last night to a unique blend of musical styles with Baroque composer Vivaldi's classic example of one of the earliest forms of 'program' music (music designed to evoke an image) being coupled with a selection of Argentinian composer Piazzolla's avant garde tangos, arranged for solo violin and string orchestra by Ukranian-born Leonid Desyatnikov.

Kunstkamer

The Australian Ballet. With Orchestra Victoria. State Theatre, Arts Centre Melbourne. 3rd – 11th June, 2022. Live stream 10th June

There isn’t much to say about Kunstkamer which hasn’t already been written. I went to the opening night expecting that this ambitious contemporary ballet may not actually be my cup of tea. I’m happy to admit that my fears were not realized. There has been much said about David Hallberg returning to the stage and the import of Jorge Nozal, on whom the ballet was choreographed. Unsurprisingly those two dancers were magnificent in their stage presence and performance.

Mother Courage and her Children

By Bertolt Brecht. Translated by Tony Kushner, directed by Damien Millar. Produced by Lara Week and Bagryana Popov. La Mama Courthouse, 349 Drummond Street, Carlton. 1-19 June, 2022.

The story of Mother Courage captures an incredibly bleak vision of humanity when operating purely on survival instinct. This production captures all the intricacies of the different ways that individuals must navigate the realities of the Thirty Year War and somehow keep their dignity intact, as well as eek out what ultimately turns out to be a miserable existence.

Grease Live on Stage

By Jim Jacobs and Warren Casey. Drew Anthony Creative. Directed by Drew Anthony. Planet Royal Theatre, Lake St, Northbridge, WA. June 1-26, 2022

Drew Anthony Creative presents this tight and slick production of Grease at Planet Royale, a production that has its audience bopping in their seats and leaving with smiles.

Iolanthe

By W. S. Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan. Gilbert and Sullivan Society of Western Australia. Directed by Michael Brett. The Dolphin Theatre, University of Western Australia, Nedlands, WA. June 2-11, 2022

Presented by the Gilbert and Sullivan Society of Western Australia, Iolanthe is, as G&S Society President Kevin Langoulant describes it, deliciously fanciful Victorian nonsense. Well-presented and beautifully sung, this Victorian comedic operetta remains a lovely distraction, 140 years after its first performance.

Moulin Rouge! The Musical

Book by John Logan. Presented by Carmen Pavlovic, Gerry & Val Ryan and Global Creatures. Capitol Theatre. From June 2022

La Féerie, a French title that translates as "fairy play", was a French theatrical genre known for “fantasy plots and spectacular visuals,” lavish scenery and technical stage effects. Moulin Rouge! The Musical slips almost seamlessly into a modern interpretation of that genre.

Owl & the Albatross

By Paris Balla. Theatre Works & Ryan Hamilton. Theatre Works, Acland Street, St Kilda. 1 -11 June 2022

2023.  The city is like a furnace and blanketed with smoke.  Jane (Cassandra Hart) takes her asthmatic teenager Owl (Geo Valentine) down the coast and dumps them (that’s how Owl sees it) on Owl’s old Grandad, Albert (Don Bridges).  He lives alone in a lighthouse overlooking an ocean choked with rubbish.  He’s self-sufficient and unexpectantly having a teen around is bad enough – let alone a prickly ‘gender fluid’ teen – and at first it’s a discombobulating experience for him. 

Gods and Little Fishes

By Richard Sydenham and Jamie Oxenbould. New Theatre, Newtown, NSW. May 31 – Jun 25, 2022

Imagine the grief of a travelling salesman who wins a fortune in the Opera House Lottery, only to see his eight-year-old son kidnapped for ransom and then found murdered in bushland. 

Australia’s first kidnap-for-ransom case in 1960 is the inspiration for this tender and strangely funny new play by Richard Sydenham, who directs, and Jamie Oxenbould, who plays a version of the grieving father.

21 Pornographies

Rising Festival. Arts House, Meat Market, North Melbourne. Jun 1 – 4, 2022.

“If you imagine you are looking into a huge mansion, with endless corridors and halls…” Danish dancer /choreographer Mette Ingvartsen eloquently describes a story with filmic detail, as she walks into the performance space; it is only the beginning of one of her many vignettes.

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