Reviews

Straight from the Strait

Book by Norah Bagiri, after John Romeril. Composer, Co-Librettist, Music Director and Arranger: Rubina Kimiia. Presented by Opera Queensland, Yumpla Nerkep Foundation and QPAC, as part of the Brisbane Festival. Playhouse Theatre, Brisbane. August 28-31, 2024

In 1968 a number of Torres Strait Islanders, working on the Mount Newman Rail Project in WA, broke a world record by laying seven kilometres of track in under 12 hours. How they did it captured the imagination of various indigenous folk, et al, in particular theatremaker and director of the show Nadine McDonald-Dowd as well as Aunty Ruth Ghee, a Meriam Mer woman and original mature-age student from the Aboriginal Centre for Performing Arts.

The History Boys

By Alan Bennett. Hobart Repertory Theatre Company. Beck Goldsmith (Director). Beck Goldsmith and Morgan Steven (set design). The Playhouse Hobart. August 28th – September 7th, 2024

History may be “one fucking thing after another” as Rudge says, but it is also about the individuals who live through it. The History Boys tackles sweeping concepts through the lives of eight boys preparing for entry to Oxford and Cambridge Colleges.

Juxtaposing classic literature with the popular culture, this production is underscored by well curated music of the 1980s. Various other competing forces shape the students; educational philosophies, opposing values and teacher personalities.

Celebrity Theatresports 2024

Director/Co-Producer Julie Dunsmore. Co-Producer Michael Gregory. Enmore Theatre. 25 Aug, 2024

Once a year the stars of Theatresports – and some special guests – take to the stage to raise money for Canteen, the wonderful organisation that helps young people when cancer hits them or members of their family. Celebrity Theatresports celebrates “the opportunity to support, develop and empower young people impacted by cancer” in the way it knows best … by the “joy of improvisation”!

Lost in Yonkers

By Neil Simon. Directed by Karin Staflund. Roxy Lane Theatre, Maylands, WA. Aug 16-Sep 1, 2024

Neil Simon’s American classic Lost in Yonkers may be Roxy Lane Theatre’s most outstanding production to date. This well directed, intelligently performed trip to New York during World War II is charming healthy sized audiences.

When their widowed father is forced to work away from home, teenaged Jay and little brother Artie are sent to live with their little known overly strict Grandmother and their intellectually challenged Aunt Bella.

Bloom

Maxwell Foster and Alex Raineri. Brisbane Music Festival. FourthWall Arts, Brisbane. 25 August 2024.

Where else but the Brisbane Music Festival could you step out to the edge of the City after your morning coffee on a Sunday and enjoy world-class classical and experimental music, plus Australian and World premieres? The festival’s Artistic Director, Alex Raineri and his friend and colleague on the keys, Maxwell Foster, toured the USA in May this year, performing for classical music fans from Chicago and across to Baltimore, where Maxwell is currently based.  

The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time.

By Simon Stephens, adapted from the novel by Mark Haddon. Director: Hannah Goodwin. Belvoir St Theatre. 17 Aug – 22 Sept, 2024

Mark Haddon has always maintained that his novel, first published in 2003, is not about “any specific disorder” but about “difference … about being an outsider, about seeing the world in a surprising and revealing way”. The young hero of The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time is 15-year-old Christopher John Francis Boone. He is bright, a “mathematician with behavioural difficulties”. But he doesn’t like being touched.  He takes things very literally. He reacts to noise and bright light.

2024 One Act Season

By Rachel Bublitz, Will Lacker and Dylan Glatthorn, Ed Monk and Freddie Frinton. Directed by Georgia Stidwell and Brianna Thompson, Kieran Ridgway, Harrison Ricci and Ray Egan. Marloo Theatre, Greenmount, WA. Aug 23 - Sep 7, 2024

Darlington Theatre Players’ One Act Season is very much a mixed bag, with four very different, but all very watchable shows combining to create a very entertaining evening.

The season is dedicated to Darlington Theatre stalwart and Life Member, and ITA Hall of Fame Gwyne Marshall who passed away last week, Overseer of the box office and constant feature of front of house for over thirty years, her presence will be greatly missed - with more than a few patrons shedding tears when they realised her absence on opening night.

Gaslight

By Patrick Hamilton, adapted by Johnna Wright and Patty Jamieson. Produced by Queensland Theatre and New Theatricals. Directed by Lee Lewis. Roslyn Packer Theatre, Sydney. August 23 – September 8, 2024

The beautiful and elegant Bella should have everything to live for – recently married with a dashing husband Jack, a substantial home equipped with the latest invention, gas lights, and two servants on hand.

Yet the seeds of chaos are never far away. Precious items such as her mother’s pearls have going missing, with her husband eating away at her confidence, calling into question her grip on reality.

Is she going mad or is she being manipulated?

Sweet Road

By Debra Oswald. Pymble Players, NSW. Aug 7 – 31, 2024

The Pymble Players are journeying down the road on their way to the Zenith Theatre in Chatswood in 2025 and hopefully that will be a successful trip for the group.  The characters in Sweet Road however have somewhat challenging journeys that traverse city streets, unsealed country roads and a rollercoaster of uncomfortable emotions.

Nana’s Naughty Knickers

By Katherine DiSavino. Adelaide Repertory Theatre. The Arts Theatre, Angas Street, Adelaide. August 22nd-31st 2024

Nana’s Naughty Knickers presented by The Rep is a piece of winter ‘froth and bubble’. Director Barry Hill is clear that this is a piece designed to make people laugh out loud and suspend their cares and worries.

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