"Blithe Spirit" is what is known as a warhorse - a comedy that has a broad popular appeal that attracts an audience and can reliably be seen as an appealing night out. I've reviewed it twice in the last decade-and-a-bit - once at Rep in 2014 and once by the Sydney Theatre Company in 2022. Coward's comedy about love-after-death-turning-into-the-same-petty-squabbles-after-death, with its rich range of characters and a plot that twists and turns thoroughly delightfully, holds up as a good night's entertainment.
That Guy who Watches Canberra Theatre
Saturday, 3 May 2025
Blithe Spirit, Canberra Rep, 1-17 May
"Blithe Spirit" is what is known as a warhorse - a comedy that has a broad popular appeal that attracts an audience and can reliably be seen as an appealing night out. I've reviewed it twice in the last decade-and-a-bit - once at Rep in 2014 and once by the Sydney Theatre Company in 2022. Coward's comedy about love-after-death-turning-into-the-same-petty-squabbles-after-death, with its rich range of characters and a plot that twists and turns thoroughly delightfully, holds up as a good night's entertainment.
Thursday, 1 May 2025
Sweet Charity, Free Rain, The Q, 29 Apr-18 May
Free Rain's latest production is a retro delight, taking a 1966 musical that I'd previously been convinced was locked into it's old era (see my review of the 2015 Hayes Theatre company tour here) in a production that's stylish, clever and both a tribute to Bob Fosse's original choreography and prodeuction concept and a bright vehicle for new-to-Canberra-Stages Amy Orman. The show was originally a vehicle for Fosse's muse and wife, Gwen Verdon, and Orman is stage centre for 90% of the action, and absolutely owns the stage with confidence, charm and adorability - you take her to your heart in the first five minutes and never lose interest in her for the next two and a half hours of stage time.
Tuesday, 15 April 2025
Are You Lonesome Tonight, The Q and Opera Queensland, The B, 15 Apr (and subsequent performances in Griffith, Gouburn, Bathurst, Cessnock, Wagga Wagga, Coffs Harbour, Port Macquarie, Casino, Tamworth, Roma, Winton, Longreach, Balcardine, Blackall, Gympie, Gold Coast til May 31st)
Opera Queensland's touring show is a melding of Opera and Country music, treating both with respect while delivering a potted history lesson and samplings of several of the hits. A talented trio of performers, both on voice and playing guitar, Cello and violin, accompanied by Trevor Jones (fresh from his accompanist/major-general duties on "Pirates of Penzance") present exeprts from "Corronation of Poppea", "Marriage of Figaro", "La Boheme", "Carmen", "La Traviata" and "The Rabbits", alternating with Hank Williams, Dolly Parton, Taylor Swift, Troy Casser-Daley and Slim Dusty, exploring the commanalities and differences of the two forms.
Thursday, 10 April 2025
The Moors, Lexi Sekuless Productions, Mill Theatre at Dairy Road, 26 Mar-12 Apr
Evoking the 19th century gothic novels of the Bronte sisters (and elements of the lives of them as well), with the dour and moody Yorkshire moors reflecting the inner passions of two sisters, their maid, the recently arrived governess (despite there not being any child to tutor), a mastiff and a moorhen, "The Moors" is a delightfully odd play full of grim corners, surprise twists, rage, literary conciets and lust and plays wonderfully in the intimate Mill Theatre, on Aloma Barnes' set which serves both for indoor scenes and outdoors with a painting scheme that lets the characters blend into nature while their outfits stand out boldly.
Wednesday, 19 March 2025
The House of Bernarda Alba, Chaika Theatre, ACT Hub, 19-29 Mar
Photo from Jane Duong Photography
Frederico Garcia Lorca's 1936 Spanish tragedy of five sisters trapped together under a domineering mother where their own desires tear them apart is a masterpiece of tension and dramatic release - set during a long hot summer, the emotions are palpable and the tensions can be cut like a knife. As oldest sister (and inheritor of the family fortune) Angustius prepares for her wedding day, the other sisters develop their own plans, building to a crashing climax. Karen Vickery's production embodies this tension, makes it palpable in the glances, in the tones of voice and in the movements of the actresses.
Leading the cast is the dominating Zsuzsi Soboslay, imperious and upright as Bernarda - a stiff reed in the changing winds. Sophie Bernassi as Angustius sells the frustration, the release and the crashing loss as she tries to mould herself to her mother's expectations and comes against her sisters' own needs. Karina Hudson as Adela, rhapsodic in her lusts, is so wonderfully selfish and possessed by her ambitions that you can see the disaster ahead without being able to stop it. Yanina Clifton as Martirio has a great, scheming undercurrent of rage and demand for her own satisfaction, hoarding her hidden knowledge of what's going on to release it at a time when it'll cause the most damage. Amy Kowalckzuk is beautifully able to sublimate her own desires with emphatic embroidery, sudden glances or an inappropriate snort as Magdalena. Christina Falsone as the housekeeper Poncia watches and attempts to advise, knowing she can't stop the disaster that is coming down the line towards all of them. And Alice Ferguson's Maria Josefa falls into revelries of her own desire for freedom, now long gone with her youth.
Vickery's production uses the in-the-round stage as an arena for us to examine these women's struggles, on Marc Hetu's simple red-brick stage. Fiona Leach's costumes capture the mood and the heat as the women move from confining mourning wear to lounging slips and sleepwear. It's a true steam-train of a prodction, relentlessly moving to its inevitable conclusion, a sultry, tense evening of tragedy and power. This is a classic given form and power in a strong, intimate production driven by its actresses. It should be seen and savoured.
Saturday, 15 March 2025
The Pirates of Penzance or The Slave of Duty, Hayes Theatre Co in association with the Art House Wyong, Hayes Theatre, 14 Feb-16 Mar (and subsequent tours to Wollongong and Canberra)
photography John McCrae