Reviews

SHOUT! The Legend of The Wild One

Book by John-Michael Howson, David Mitchell and Melvyn Morrow. Presented by Gosford Musical Society. Laycock Street Community Theatre. August 2nd – 17th, 2024

Shout! is one of a handful of Australian musicals that local societies dare to stage. Despite being one of the most loved Australian home-grown musicals, it’s a shame it’s only seen every 15 years or so, as it’s a piece of theatre about one of Australia’s most iconic early rockers, giving audiences a snapshot of earlier days of the Australian entertainment industry.

Co-directors Leigh Collins and Ash Moody have pulled together a strong team of Gosford Musical Society’s longest-serving collaborators to bring this latest version on stage.

Zorba’s Last Dance

By Tom Petisinis. La Mama Courthouse. July 31 – August 11, 2024

Zorba The Greek is a great classic novel written by Nikos Kazantzakis, first published in 1946. Set on the island of Crete, it tells the story of Alexis Zorba, a wild feisty man who is there to open a lignite mine. He meets a bookish young man and teaches him to break free and embrace life.

A dead man awaits his death rites to the other world, a one-woman chorus (Donna Dimovski-Kantarovski) conducts a ceremonial ritual to take him to his final resting place.

Scenes With Girls

By Miriam Battye. Salad Days Collective. At Pip Theatre, Milton, Qld. 31st of July – 3rd of August, 2024

At Pip Theatre, Salad Days Collective’s production of Miriam Battye’s Scenes With Girls bursts onto the stage with a raw, unfiltered energy that captures the essence of modern female friendship with startling clarity. Directed by Ava Rusch and brought to life by a dedicated cast and crew, the Australian premiere of this contemporary play offers a compelling exploration of love, identity, and the often-overlooked intensity of female bonds.

Uncle Vanya

By Anton Chekhov. Adapted by Joanna Murray-Smith. Ensemble Theatre. Director Mark Kilmurry. 26 Jul – 31 Aug, 2024

Adaptations only work in the hands of an exceptional and principled writer. Australian playwright Joanna Murray-Smith is both. Her adaptation of Anton Chekhov’s 1898 play Uncle Vanya is reverent to the style and intention of the famous Russian playwright, and the play’s enduring themes and ageless characters. This is an adaptation that really works.

Legally Blonde The Musical

Music & Lyrics by Laurence O’Keefe & Nell Benjamin. Book by Heather Hach. Musical Theatre Students, Griffith University Queensland Conservatorium. Conservatorium Theatre, Brisbane. 1 to 10 August 2024

Obliterate your winter blues with a therapeutic dose of ‘OMG pink’ and Malibu sunshine, courtesy of the astonishing cast and crew of Legally Blonde The Musical! Based on the novel by Amanda Brown and the MGM film, this fun-packed Legally Blonde is a multilayered vehicle for a great message about being yourself and maximising your potential, ditching toxic relationships, the power of working together, and some strictly non-PC jokes side-by-side with a foreshadowing #MeToo message. There’s a fabulous Greek chorus and, not one, but two dogs!

The Government Inspector

By Nikolai Gogol, adapted by David Harrower. Hayman Theatre Company. Directed by Helen Trenos. Hayman Theatre, Curtin University, Bentley, WA. Jul 23-27, 2024

Hayman Theatre Company presented this 1836 Russian classic, in the form of a very modern adaptation by David Harrower. Chosen by director as an acting challenge for Curtin University student actors, the cast have risen to the challenge of this interesting ensemble play.

While the dialogue sets this play in Russia, Setare Mogharebin’s interesting open framed set, and the costumes designed by Adah Hill and Lizzie Martin, while vaguely “historic” do not place us in a clear time frame. Bold lighting choices by Daisy Heath add interest and emotion.

The House Amongst the Willows

By Robert Scott. Esperance Theatre Guild. Directed by Barry Wroth. The Bijou Theatre, Esperance, WA. Jul 19 - Aug 3, 2024

We don’t often have the pleasure of a good thriller on stage, but Esperance residents are being treated to this modern-day thriller. 

Fletcher takes his new fiancée Sadie to meet the parents of his dead wife, but things begin to go terribly wrong.

King Lear

By William Shakespeare. Bell Shakespeare. Arts Centre Melbourne, Fairfax Studio. 25 July – 11 August 2024

When old King Lear asks his three daughters, ‘Which of you shall we say doth love us most?’ an audible ripple, a gasp or a groan, runs through the theatre.  ‘Oh-oh,’ we think, ‘here we go.’  There is a feeling of dread as well as anticipation.  How will we be shown them this time?  Because most of us know the consequences and now they are set in train.  We know there will be jealousy, lies, murder, torture, death and madness.  Why does King Lear (Robert Menzies) ask that foolish question?  Vanity?  Or is he

Mary Stuart

Adapted by Kate Mulvaney, after Friedrich Schiller. Chaika Theatre. Directed by Luke Rogers. A.C.T. Hub, Kingston. 24 July to 3 August 2024.

 

Alice by Heart

Music by Duncan Sheik. Lyrics by Steven Sater. Book by Steven Sater and Jessie Nelson. MLOC Productions. Shirley Burke Theatre, Parkdale, Vic. 26 July – 3 August, 2024

Originally a Royal National Theatre commission, performed in London in 2012, Alice by Heart has not had a professional run in Australia, but community theatres appear to be picking up this musical, written by the Spring Awakening team.  

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