Tom Stoppard's comedy is almost 60 years old but has lost none of its relevance - the story of two minor characters from Hamlet lost, confused, and finally doomed due to (see title) is a tale that's uniquely appealing to our complex world where the sense of never quite knowing where you are or what's going on around you is ever-present. These two figures are styled as a classic comic pair - one inquisitive idiot, one complacent idiot, both lost in a world they have minimal control over. The fact that the "bigger picture" they're missing is one of the great works of world literature throws an additional twist in the tale.
Saturday, 26 February 2022
Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are dead, Canberra Rep, Theatre 3, 11 Feb-5 Mar 2022
Tom Stoppard's comedy is almost 60 years old but has lost none of its relevance - the story of two minor characters from Hamlet lost, confused, and finally doomed due to (see title) is a tale that's uniquely appealing to our complex world where the sense of never quite knowing where you are or what's going on around you is ever-present. These two figures are styled as a classic comic pair - one inquisitive idiot, one complacent idiot, both lost in a world they have minimal control over. The fact that the "bigger picture" they're missing is one of the great works of world literature throws an additional twist in the tale.
Friday, 25 February 2022
Ruthless!, Echo Theatre, The Q, 24 Feb-12 Mar
Monday, 21 February 2022
As you like it, Lakespeare, Verity Lane Market (and various other locations until 6 Mar)
Friday, 18 February 2022
Triple X, Sydney Theatre Company and Queensland Theatre, Wharf 1 Theatre, 8 Jan-26 Feb 2022
This much-delayed modern romcom finally gets its Sydney season, nearly two years after it was originally planned. And there's a reason this has stuck around when other shows in development - it's not the most surprisingly original plot in the world (guy in the hours before his wedding thinks about his relationship with his ex, and, surrounded by friends and family, ends up making a decision), but the angle that this is a hetrosexual man and his ex is a trans-woman does begin to suggest some of the complications in store. Throw in a more-than-usually invested family, a few shocking offstage events, a dramatically significant bottle of avocado oil, some dodgy standup and a surprise appearance and you've got the making of a truly fascinating evening in the theatre.
Seven Methods of Killing Kylie Jenner, Darlinghurst Theatre Company and Green Door Theatre Company, Darlinghurst Theatre, 25 Jan-20 Feb 2022
A modern tale of social media spiraling out of control, about social and economic outrages, about privilege and despair, and a hilarious tale of friendship and individual power, it's no wonder this comedy is getting a sold-out return season. Like all the best comedies, Jasmine Lee-Jones's script has a serious question at its heart, about how we engage with one another in an increasingly fragmented world, about how we stand up against the ludicrous entitlement of the billionaire class, and how the cyberconversations we have impact on our lives.
Directors Shari Sebbens and Zindzi Okenyo keep the pace fast and furious, keeping a dense and intelligent script crystal clear for the audience. Moreblessing Maturure as Cleo is the cocky, rageful centre of the story, staking her clam as sarcastic narrator, arbitrer and ultimately the vulnerable figure finding the backlash to her opinion too much. As her offsider, Iolanthe holds her own both as interlocutor and later as interrergator as revelations about Cleo's past come to light.
Keerthi Subramanyam's design is clean and simple, a private space with the social media projections looming over it, and gives just enough space for the various surprises to show up. This is a production that undoubtedly still has life in it (it's already announced a tour to LaBoite in Brisbane, and I wouldn't be surprised to see it on the road further), and it's a right-to-the moment contemporary comedy that will delight anyone whether or not they have any idea who the hell Kylie Jenner is.
Thursday, 17 February 2022
At What Cost, Belvoir St Theatre, 29 Jan-20 Feb 2022
Luke Carroll as that leading man is compelling and fascinating throughout, as his character turns to the more paranoiac and protective, angrier and more defensive, he balances his character's indignation with emotional truth that anchors the production. Alex Malone does a lot to make the antagonist more than just a monster, making her twisting, defensive nature on the edge of being understanding before the stack of lies and half-truths collapses towards the end. Ari Maza Long and Sandy Greenwood's roles are slightly underwritten but we do get a sense of their histories with Caroll and Malone, and of why they both end up where they are in the middle between them.
Isaac Drandic presents a smooth flowing production that builds wonderfully to the climax, using the space to flow the action onwards in a tightly paced show that moves from early geniality to final starkness. Jacob Nash's set design gives the space visual interest, as does Keerthi's realisation of the set and costumes.
For all that I'm a little tough on the writing here, I did find this a compelling night in the theatre, as well as a presentation of some interesting ideas. But in the end it doesnt' feel so much as a fully rounded play as a great part for an aboriginal actor with three supporting actors doing different levels of lifting to cover for the rest.
Girl from the North Country, GWB Entertainment etc, Theatre Royal Sydney (til 19 Mar), Her Majesty's Theatre Adelaide (25 Mar-10 Apr), Comedy Theatre Melbourne (from 29 April)
This is an odd show to become an international hit - an irish playwright telling a story set in 1930s Duluth, with 19 songs by Bob Dylan crossing 49 years of his career across 14 of his albums. But since opening at London's Old Vic, this has drawn audiences in London and New York to a distinctively different musical production, as much about the drama as it is about the songs, with soul and heart and unexpected beauty.
Conor McPherson is probably best known for theatre with a distinctly horror edge, whether it be the ghosts with plays like "The Weir" and "Shining City", demonic forces like in "The Seafarer" or the horror of a theatre critic among vampires in the monologue "St Nicholas". This play (also directed by McPherson) has its own discomforting edges as madness and misery consume the residents of a Duluth, Minesotta boarding house during the depression, as people are confronted with desperation and their need to escape, often expressed through those self-same Dylan songs, given gorgeous period-appropriate arrangements with a rich band made up of four onstage musicians with assistance by the rest of the cast. It's paced in such a way that there's never really time for an applause break after each song, so we're carried by the narrative as things proceed to their inevitably grim fate in a tale that borrows a little from some of Dylan's songs and a little bit more from the works of John Steinbeck.
The cast is a mixture of familiar strong hands, some in interestingly different roles - Lisa McCune has never seemed more eager to break away from her popular conception as a TV sweetheart, into the disturbed and bitter Elizabeth Laine seen here, full of recriminations and disturbance, while Peter Carroll and Grant Piro both channel the more menacing parts of their repertoire, Helen Dallimore is earthy and compelling (and also plays a mean drum kit), Zahra Newman shows her seemingly endless versatility in a role that's miles away from most of what I've seen her do before, and Callum Francis gives a role miles away from his acclaimed Lola from Kinky Boots. Greg Stone has maybe the most difficult monologue in the entire show and makes it compellingly painful, and Terrence Donavan provides narration as the town doctor with suitable forboding. There's not a weak link anywhere, and it's a pleasure to see Dylan songs sung so well (it's a cliche to say Bob is not the best singer of his own work, but it's also true).
Rae Smith's set designs combine simple furnishings with gauzy backdrops to provide interesting settings for the intimate confrontations, with singers seen through the gauze providing backup to the action.
This is a brave experience for commercial theatres to be trying - it's nothing like you might expect a Bob Dylan musical jukebox musical to be, but it's compelling and dangerous and heartfelt. Canberra Theatre Centre is listed as a co-producer so hopefully the tour will pop up here sometime, but if not it's worth the trip to Sydney to catch a show that's raw and compelling. Recommended.
Wednesday, 2 February 2022
Smokescreen, Bare Witness Theatre Co, The Q, 2-5 Feb 2022
Back in theatres for 2022, the first of the "Q The Locals" mini-season sees rising performers Christopher Samuel Carroll and Damon Baudin in a two-hander about marketing, society, personal ethics, psychology and the ways that capitalism may very well have doomed us all - ambitious perhaps, but also insightful, intelligent and incredibly pertinent. It's a simple production - two actors in suits, a long table with an ashtray and a drinks cabinet, talking for about 105 minutes, Carroll chain-smoking herbal cigarettes for most of the night. )