Patrick Hamilton's 1929 thriller has had very long legs for a thriller which is also very much of its time - in the post-war and post-Oscar-Wilde Trial era, when the bright young things partied seemingly unaware of the consequences, where fashion and behaviour broke from Victorian staidness and, after the Russian Revolution, new intellectual paradigms were being trialed all over the world. Hamilton's tense thriller reflects both the thoughts of its era and of its writer, a alcoholic with a distinct strain of melancholy, as he morphed a recent popular murder case into a story of power, ethics and thrills.
Wednesday, 26 May 2021
Rope, Canberra Rep, theatre 3
Friday, 21 May 2021
Little Girls Alone in the Woods, Canberra Youth Theatre, Courtyard Studio, Canberra Theatre
This plays with myth and folklore in a way that is invigorating, using it's large, mostly female, ensemble to tell a story about the rejection of "civilised" society and what happens to those who break away. It's not so much a straight telling of Euripides "The Bacchae" as it is a thematic reflection that uses the core ideas in a modern setting, as a small country town finds its young girls disappearing into the Bush, with those remaining behind finding more and more restrictions in place. There's clever choices in Morgan Roses script and in how it builds tension- seeing both from the perspective of the schoolkids seeing their friends slowly disappear, with girls increasingly restricted in the name of safety, and the perspective of the girls in the Bush, giving way to their wilder impulses while never quite certain what their rebellion might mean or what to do next.
Sunday, 16 May 2021
A German Life, John Frost for The Gordon Frost Organisation, Playhouse, Canberra Theatre Centre
Christopher Hampton's adaptation of a 2016 Austrian Documentary about Brunhilde Pomsel, a one woman narration of a witness to the rise, fall and aftermath of the third Reich, is a gift to the right actress, but a peculiarly difficult one - it requires a performer who can draw you in through sheer, unrelenting ordinariness - someone apparently just like anybody else, telling a matter of fact story that becomes astonishing in how close a person can be to pure naked horror without apparently recognising it until it is way too late to do anything about it.
Robyn Nevin has that gift of appearing average while being anything but. On a simple set design resembling a 2000s nursing home room, Brunhilde takes us into one of the 20th centuries essential horrors, while proclaiming how little she really saw and could have done. Her regrets register as apparently real and heartfelt, but it's impossible not to question her and to be dragged down the rabbit hole of what more she could have, should have done
Neil Armfield's staging tells this simply, handing the stage to Nevin, accompanied at the side by Catherine Finnis's cellist, with occasional video overlays of Third Reich images to show what's lying behind Brunhilde's simple statements, reminding us what this all came to. It's a virtuoso 80 minutes or so and confronting in where it leaves us, wondering how close we are to falling into the same traps, how willing we are to lie to ourselves that we have no idea what's going on, when we can see very clearly the evils that lie all around us.
PS. I will note that I booked for this one somewhat late, due to both already having other shows booked in to see this week, and due to a somewhat eye-watering initial ticket price. I ended up booking in after a discount became available on Thursday, but I'm still a little wary of that initial ticket price becoming a recurring thing.
Saturday, 15 May 2021
Fun Home, Sydney Theatre Company, Ros Packer Theatre
Thursday, 13 May 2021
Don Juan, Slightly Isolated Dog, The Q