It is nice to see a comedy hero who I've appreciated since the mid 90s. And here he's telling some reasonably amusing jokes in a not-particularly structured evening of material that never really seems to be straining for anything greater than some light chuckles. There's a few hints that there may be darker personal territory that could be delved into for more insight, but it's mostly just time with a 57 year old guy giving light observations about life, illnesses and a cheap biography of Michael Douglas. I didn't hate this and I don't have much right to bitch about this but this does feel a little like a show done for the sake of having a show rather than anything coming from burning passions or a particular desire to say anything beyond "hell, recognise me from TV"? I do feel now that we've seen standup that can take the form into new and interesting places, this feels clunky and very safe.
Friday, 25 March 2022
Tony Martin, Canberra Comedy Festival, Playhouse, Canberra theatre
Thursday, 24 March 2022
King of Pigs, Red line Productions and Critical Stages Touring, The Q. 24-26 April 2022
(Note, this is a photo of the 2018 original production, not of the current touring cast).
In a series of short scenes, we're exposed to what happens when women are met with male violence - whether on a casual date or as part of a short-or-long-term relationship. Kate Skinner has the marathon part of the one woman at the centre of all these relationships, shifting into various ages and lives and about how things can go so wrong so quickly, and how long-term buried problems can resurface again and again. Three of the four men are figures of menace, whether it be Tom Stokes as a controlling husband hiding his brutality under a middle-class veneer, Anthony Yangoyan as a wannabe footballer taking his frustrations out on his partner, or Sam Alhaje as the guy who just took a mate's night out too far. Jason Chong is to a certain extent the eyes and ears of the play as the one who interacts with everybody as a counselor with his own home complications, seeing the issues outside his house maybe have a reflection in his own relationship as well. Blazey Best directs a production that rides the complex transitions that Steve Roger's writing sets up, giving us snapshots of a situation that's all too familiar but feels fresh and, alas, eternally relevant.
There's sharp work from Isabel Hudson's simple set design, together with costumes that allow the men to be separately identified very quickly, and assists Skinner with her many character transitions.
This is important, relevant theatre that's played expertly and is absolutely necessary viewing, both for the subject matter and the skill of the performers and production crew.
Saturday, 19 March 2022
Otello, Opera Australia, Joan Sutherland Theatre, Sydney Opera House, in repertory 19 Feb-19 Mar 2022.
"Othello" is considered the Shakespeare play with one of the biggest race problems - for centuries the play and the opera were both largely performed in blackface. Opera Australia's production, a remount of a production that's been in their repertoire since 2003, eschews the blackface (as can be seen above, both Otello and Desdemona are played by South Korean performers), and thereby highlights another issue with the plot - the grotesque nature of a plot that seems to assume that the proper treatment for sexual infidelity by a wife is murder, and the only tragedy is that Desdemona is falsely accused, not that her husband is a bit overfond of murder to resolve his issues.
Friday, 18 March 2022
Hand to God, Red Line Productions, Old Fitz, 24 Feb-26 Mar 2022
Thursday, 17 March 2022
Opening Night, Belvoir St Theatre, 26 Feb-27 Mar 2022
It's four days to opening night and Myrtle is struggling. She can't relate to the character she's playing, and the writer, the director and the leading man are no help, generally insulting her when she tries to seek help about who she's meant to be playing and to deliver more than a 2 dimensional caricature. And that night at the stage girl there's a disturbing encounter with a fan. The next few days are a nightmare of rehearsal, obsession, self-examination and paranoia before the big night...
Thursday, 3 March 2022
Keating!, Queanbeyan Players, Belconnen Theatre, Feb 25-Mar 6 2022
The chase for the "great Australian Musical" has been one of the great quests of Australian theatre, but Casey Bennetto's 2005 musical "Keating" probably has come the closet to getting genuine widespread public acclaim. From humble beginnings as a small Melbourne Comedy festival show to an expanded Belvoir production that toured virtually nonstop from 2006-2008, it's a sensational piece of legend-building spectacle, with a mix of pastiche, satire, and authentic emotional heart-string-pulling material, plus it recognises the power of rap battles as a representation of political debate well before a certain famous American musical of recent vintage (then again, both are pre-dated by the 1980's "Rap Master Ronnie" by Gary Trudeau). Using the popular labour mythology of Keating as a stylish smoothie right out of the 60s Rat Pack (the official publicity image for the Belvoir production was Keating's Rolling Stone cover-shot), it tells a familiar story of struggle, rise to power and dealing with the challenges that happen once in office. There's great choices of matching material to the moment, whether it be Alexander Downer's funky "Freaky", the every-Australian-ad-of-the-80s-sounding "The Mateship", the Elvis comeback special vibe to "Sweet"... it's a major achievement and it's a pity Bennetto has never really been able to duplicate it since.