Reviews

PUFFS (Or Seven Increasingly Eventful Years at a Certain School of Magic & Magic)

Written by Matt Cox. Dare Collective. Directed by Matt Taylor. The Tramsheds Auditorium, Inveresk, Tasmania. Dec 4-7, 2024

PUFFS, was born around a decade ago, and became the little play that could. On a whim, Matt Cox cobbled-together a comedic piece about three OTHER kids that may have attended a very similar school to that famous fictional school of magic. And, initially it was only intended for a week long run Off-Off Broadway, but it was then workshopped and progressed to Off-Broadway, and soon professional touring productions began staging it internationally - and inevitably, it has just staged its Tasmanian premiere! 

Jack Maggs

By Samuel Adamson, based on the novel by Peter Carey. State Theatre Company South Australia. Directed by Geordie Brookman. The Playhouse, Canberra, 5–7 December 2024.

Peter Carey’s novel Jack Maggs reimagines Charles Dickens’s Great Expectations through more modern sensibilities and the viewpoint of the ex-convict rather than the child.  Dickens’s fearsome Abel Magwitch has become Jack Maggs, and the child Pip has become Henry Phipps.  Samuel Adamson’s adaptation of the novel into a play cleverly frames it within an 1879 stage production that presents the “true story” of the events of 1837.  This allowed the framing play’s narrator intermittent engagement with the (1879) fictitiou

Skating in the Clouds

By Clare Mendes. Theatre Works, Acland Street, St Kilda. 4-14 December 2024

Skating in the Clouds is a richly metaphoric work, which playwright Clare Mendes describes as a fairy tale; it’s about the pressing (though if you listen to our leaders, you wouldn’t think so) problem of climate change, or global warming – and species extinction and food security - and the varied ways in which we beleaguered, anxious humans respond to these things.  There’s no Fairy Godmother in this fairy tale.  If our responses range from defeatism and suicidal depression through to Pollyanna-ish denial, well, that’s the way it is…

The Lady of the Camellias

Performed by Shanghai Ballet. Choreographed by Derek Deane OBE. Presented by Queensland Ballet. QPAC Lyric Theatre, 5 – 8 December, 2024

Derek Deane’s The Lady of the Camellias, performed by Shanghai Ballet at QPAC’s Lyric Theatre, was an unforgettable portrayal of love, sacrifice, and redemption, told through breathtaking dance and exquisite artistry. Based on Alexandre Dumas fils’ celebrated novel, this production seamlessly wove the elegance of classical ballet with the raw emotion of its timeless story.

Gilbert and Sullivan’s The Pirates of Penzance in Concert

Music and Lyrics by Gilbert and Sullivan. Additional Arrangements by Isaac Hayward and Andrew Greene. Directed by Stuart Maunder AM. Presented by Prospero Arts and QPAC. Concert Hall, QPAC 5 – 8 December 2024

Brisbane’s QPAC is an outstanding venue, home to a variety of theatres that each have their unique advantages. The chief advantage of the Concert Hall (aside from its gigantic, glistening pipe organ) is its acoustics. As such, one is used to seeing orchestras, chamber music, and opera appear on its stage. When a production chooses to stage a Gilbert and Sullivan work in the Concert Hall, you have to expect they are about to blow you away with their musical prowess. Consider this reviewer significantly blown away. 

The Glass Menagerie

By Tennessee Williams. Presented by The Theatre Guild Student Society. The Little Theatre, University of Adelaide. Wednesday 4 December - Saturday 7 December 2024.

To begin The Glass Menagerie Tennessee Williams writes within Tom’s opening lines: “The play is memory.  Being a memory play, it is dimly lighted, it is sentimental, it is not realistic...”  acknowledging the play as a work of art rather than a rigidly true account.  Tom introduces his sister and mother and the anticipated “gentleman caller” (directed in an appealing, choreographic fashion) while poetically opining his own fate and the state of the world.

Muse

National Institute of Circus Arts. Curated by: Tegan Carmichael. Devised by: Graduating students. Artistic consultancy: Alonso Pineda, Emma Pursey, Donna Dunmire. NICA, 39-59 Green St, Prahran. 4 - 7 December, 2024

A simple invitation to place a small stone on the edge of the stage introduced a showcase of well-developed physical theatre skills. Each student had time to shine and highlight their skills on their chosen apparatus. This is a thoughtful summation of the work each student has done.

The Heartbreak Choir

By Aidan Fennessy. Ensemble Theatre, Sydney. Directed by Anna Ledwich. 29 November 2024 – 12 January 2025

Aidan Fennessy was dying of cancer when he wrote this excellent Australian play. Caught in Melbourne’s complex response to COVID, he never saw it produced by the MTC in 2022 when planned. But now it has arrived in Sydney as the Christmas production at the Ensemble and the local audience showed its lusty approval with lengthy and thunderous applause. 

While singing in a choir, said Fennessy, ‘each character can hold their differences and be together at the same time.’ And his play goes on to prove that dictum in spades.

Bloody Murder

By Ed Sala. Canberra Repertory, directed by Josh Wiseman. Theatre 3, Canberra. 21 November – 7 December 2024.

Lady Somerset’s annual soirée takes place on the isolated country estate where she lives with her morally loose nephew, Charles; her maid, Jane; and a couple of downstairs servants.  This year’s guests include a pompous major; a countess; a dissipated actor; a sweet ingénue…

A Very Naughty Christmas

Creator/Producer Alex Woodward. Creator/Director/Choreographer Daniel Venz. Director Emily Gilhome. Presented by Woodward Productions. Roundhouse Theatre, Qld. 28 November – 18 December 2024

It’s the show that puts the ho into ho ho ho, and it’s back for another very naughty season. Now in its eighth year of production, A Very Naughty Christmas is a big, bright, and brazen celebration of the holidays just for the grown-ups. This Christmas themed cabaret has sex appeal with a burlesque sense of humour, raunchy remixes of familiar festive tunes, comedic skits and banter, and some hilarious audience interaction.

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