Agatha Christie has a simple appeal to readers and theatre audiences - pure plot and puzzles with a mystery to be solved by the finale. "Spider's Web" falls into the more obscure part of her theatrical repertoire - it doesn't have the hook that her top rank plays like "Witness for the Prosecution" or "And then There Were None" have, but there are its own compensations - it plays with the whodunnit form in interesting ways, not taking itself terribly seriously without ever activley spoofing the whole thing.
That Guy who Watches Canberra Theatre
Saturday, 2 August 2025
Spider's Web, Canberra Repertory, 24 July-9 August
Friday, 25 July 2025
Zach Ruane & Alexei Toliopoulos - Refused Classification, The Street Theatre, 24-25 July
A tribute to early 2000s film culture and Margaret Pomeranz in particular, this two-handed comedy documentary show combines history, improv, recreations, infodumps and the dramatic reading of an Office of Film and Literature Classification report in a show that is hilarious, informative, emotionally heartwarming and politically provocative. It's a look at Australian Film Censorship history, at the changing nature of how we consume media, and at once intricately researched and completely ridiculous.
Wednesday, 23 July 2025
Julius Caesar, Chaika Theatre, ACT Hub, 23 July-2 August
Shakespeare's grand tragedy of assassination and what comes after is notable for the title character being killed at the top of Act 3 - it's more about the world created by the tyrant as it is about him as a central character. Caitlin Baker's production captures this in a modern production - the suited entourages finding quiet spaces to plot and plan, the cynical creation of a public consensus and the manipulation that switches that consensus in seconds - and the flailing hoplessness that comes afterwards. It captures complex realpolitik in real time, moment by moment, up close and very personal.
Friday, 11 July 2025
Big Name, No Blankets, ILBIJERRI Theatre company and Canberra Theatre Centre, Canberra Theatre, 10-12 July (and subsequently touring to Desert Festival Araluen and Papanuya)
(note - photo from the 2024 Sydney Festival season - some cast changes since this run)
Friday, 4 July 2025
The Pirates of Penzance, Queanbeayn Players, The Q, 3 Jul-13 Jul
After a very trimmed down touring verison earlier in the year from the Hayes, it's good to have a full-cast chonky orchestra version of this Gilbert and Sullivan warhorse - though this is the Essgee version created with new orchestrations by Kevin Hocking, adaptation by Simon Gallaher and with additional lyrics by Melvyn Morrow, so the purple pants jokes are indeed back in abundance. As suits a company having a 60th anniversery, it's a frothy fun party of a show with joy bouncing across the footlights into the audience -while the Essgee version is a 30 year old revision of a 145 year old original, the only place where the age is felt is in Gilbert's victorian era freak-outs over older women having a sexuality (which is always moderated by Sullivan writing really great stuff for them to sing - one of the reasons G&S holds up to all ages is that Gilbert is fundamentally a cynic and Sullivan a sentamentalist - the two tones appeal to the different moods of the audience and somehow manage to unite gloriously harmonically in the best of their shows).
Wednesday, 25 June 2025
The Beauty Queen of Leenane, Free Rain, ACT Hub, 25 June-5 July
Martin McDonagh kicked off his writing career in 1996 with this sharp black comedy about a mother and daughter in a relationship that veers between caregiving and mutual hatred, and the two brothers who's lives intersect with theirs, before going on to a career that's seen him write and direct cult film "In Bruges" and two Oscar-contendors, "Three Billboards outside of Ebbing, Missouri" and "The Banshees of Inersheerin". This initial play, though, is a tight classic of the form, with the mutual destruction of the two women at the centre, the possibility of romance cruelly denied, and the rural frustration that drives the population of a small Irish village.
Cate Clelland directs an intimate production in a corner of the Hub stage, with the audience right on top to hear the bitter barbs and feel the spaces between the characters. Janie Lawson and Alice Ferguson anchor the play as the longing, tired daughter and the bitter, needy mother, more alike than they'd like to think in their mutual battle. Bruce Hardie as possible suitor Pato Dooley has a charming romanticism and delivers the largely expositional act-two-opening letter with gentle care, giving a sense of his own aging frustration and gentlemanly forbearance. And Robbie Haltiner is deliciously irritating as the gossipy Ray Dooley,so caught up in his own petty issues that he never realises what he's doing to the people around him.
Clelland has designed a solidly realistic set, a tight cage for the cast to push up against one another in, slightly faded and tired like the characters.
This is a strong solid production of a modern classic - at almost 30 years old, it's a play that speaks to the gap between family and kinship, and to the destructive nature of need.
Saturday, 21 June 2025
A Doll's House Part 2, Canberra Rep, 12-28 Jun
Taking the question of what happens 15 years after Nora walked out the door in the original, and looking at what the costs of personal liberation might be, "Doll's House Part 2" brings us a tightly contained drama of lost connections, possibilities and emotional truth. Lucas Hnath's script brings the language up to the moment (with some significant swearing) but keeps the dilemmas timeless. Joel Horwood's produciton uses the width and height of Rep's stage for a grandly imposing room, minimally furnished but with stark lights and angles introducing shadows and isolated spaces for the four characters to meet, argue and sometimes find a moment of connection. It's an impressive production visually as well as dramatically, on Tom Berger's grand set under Lachlan Houen's equally spectacular lighting, but the emotional side isn't lost in this stark, simple space. It's a show that doesn't require an in-depth knoweldge of Ibsen, though there are some links back to the original, and indeed connections to a couple of other Ibsen works which pay back the informed, but the central situation and stakes are set up easily for those coming in just for this story.
Lainie Hart owns the stage as Nora - bringing the excitement of her adventures in the world outside and her slow-dawning realisation of what her choices have cost those left behind, and her realisation of how some of the history she left behind may be about to recur. It's intelligent, emotional, compassionate yet powerful. Joining her are Elaine Noon as the compassionate-but-concerned Anne-Marie, Anna Lorenz as the determined-to-be-distant Emmy and Rhys Robinson as the somewhat-shattered-but-still-in-motion Torvald - all strong characters determined to not be steamrollered by Nora again.
This is an immaculate production - impeccably accurate, with a strong, simple design sense and powerful performances.