Two young men meet under a strange new tree. They're from seperate tribes - one's from the River Mob, one's from the mountain mob. They're there to exchange information about the white people who have started setttling in their neighbourhood. We get to learn more about the young men - how they're being raised to take part in their seperate tribes. And as they meet more times, it becomes apparent there's an attraction between them. But the tree's fruit hints at how bitter things are going to become.
Friday, 26 August 2022
Whitefella Yella Tree, Griffin theatre company, The Stables, 19 Aug-23 Sept (and Canberra Theatre 28 Sept-1 Oct)
Tell me I'm here, Belvoir Street theatre, 20 Aug-25 Sept
Adapting a non-fiction story can be filled with challenges. Particularly when it's 30 years old story of a mother dealing with her son's schizophrenia in the face of a medical establishment which can't help her or him,legal and emotional challenges, and the impacts on her partners and her other children. Veronica Nadine Gleeson's adaptation attempts to capture all of Anne Devenson's story of her relationship with her son Jonathan, from his birth to his far-too-soon death, in a way that feels episodic yet connected as her stable intellectual life gets disrupted by a young man who has no control over what his own mind is telling him. There's a deliberate attempt to keep Jonathan's perspective as apparent as Anne's, down to Stephen Curtis' set which is an apparently simple orderly dining room with shelves and large table, all surrounded by white, which Jonathan continously draws graffiti on. It's a spectacular demonstration of both the beauty and the disruption which Jonathan brings into Anne's life, and it's told compassionately and carefully, accumulating detail over the two-and-a-bit hours of the show.
Thursday, 25 August 2022
The strange case of Doctor Jeckyll and Mr Hyde, Sydney Theatre Company, Ros Packer Theatre, 8 Aug-10 Sept
On paper, this looks like a trip back to the same well that gave us Picture of Dorian Grey - a victorian-era short novel about concealed identity, played out on a bare stage with multiple moving screens projecting footage captured by multiple camera people on stage, mixing it live with pre-filmed footage. This time performed by two men rather than one woman, so the stunt is diluted.
Thursday, 18 August 2022
Demented, Ruth Pieloor in association with Rebus Theatre, The Q, 17-20 Aug
Ruth Pieloor's new play explores the path of dementia in a way that's all-too familiar to those who've had a family member slowly drift away - the distractability, the argumentativeness, the frustrations and the fleeting joys of reconnecting. As someone who's last experience was almost two decades ago (when my grandmother passed) it feels true and deeply felt. And there's a strong central thread of four generations of women trying to handle caring for one another in the face of tragedy.
There's a lot of bonus meta-theatre thrown in here that doesn't always connect cleanly to the main thread - in particular, elements of clowning (which mostly serves to make the scene changes go a little longer, and always feels like it's leaning on the side of cute rather than anarchic), and elements of Japanese bunraku puppetry (which is beautiful but never quite achieves the "angel of death" feeling that the published script seems to think the figure should). It's a show that works better in the second half than the first - the first seems full of day-to-day scenes that mostly restate the same set of frustrations between Maggie, a former circus performer living with dementia, and Rachel her mature adult daughter who finds herself having to guide her mother through a second childhood, while the second is where the rubber hits the road and the downward spiral starts working outwards across the rest of the family.
The four performers all have strengths to them - Chrissie Shaw's strength as the often-frustrating Maggie sticking to her guns in the face of everything her family tries to help her feels infused with truth, though there's a tendency for her to play cute to the audience more than is strictly necessary. Heidi Silberman does a fair bit with a role that could be stuck in a rut of frustrated sighs and general irritation - playing in the space between frustration and love. Rachel Pengilly gives young widowed mother Kat a very real sense of conflicted loyalties between her cyclone of a daughter and the emotional labour of her mother and grandmother. And Carolyn Eccles gives 5-year-old Emily a sly sense of chaos and wild enthusiasm - physically giving herself over to the disruptive nature of a small child pushing their boundaries.
Ali Clinch's staging feels a tad too busy for the material, splaying across the width of the Q's stage with multiple moving elements when a bit of stillness and focus may have served it better - allowing a steady sense of place to be disrupted by chaos more often, rather than having the disruption just be part of the usual style of the presentation. Bret Olzen's Auslan interpretation is an interesting addition, though having him isolated to a single point on the stage does make me doubt how useful this is for Auslan users when performers are on one far side of the stage and he's far on the other - are they able to follow both the physical action of the actors and the interpretation?
This piece is clearly a labour of love for its production team, and there's a lot to appreciate. I do think there's a deeper play here that's lost a little in the accompanying decoration and busyness of the production, but you can still see the heart and soul of it.
Saturday, 6 August 2022
Hand to God, Everyman Theatre, ACT Hub, 27 Jul-13 Aug 2022
I rarely go back and rewatch shows. Seeing the same show twice in one year is pretty much verboten. So .. given I saw the Old Fitz version of this play back in March (link here), why did I come back for more? Well, partially it's that I have historically kinda been Everyman's bitch (see reviews from here to here), and partially that my husband expressed an interest in coming to see this and he very rarely wants to see anything.
Friday, 5 August 2022
The Year of Magical Thinking, Critical Stages Touring, The Q, Aug 5-6, 2022
Joan Didion's 2005 memoir was adapted for the stage in 2007 and has played with actresses like Vanessa Redgrave and Robyn Nevin. Stripped back to a monologue, telling the story of Didion's dealing with the grief after the death of her husband and the hospitalisation of their daughter. It's a deep meditation on how those left behind negotiate the life after - the bargaining, the ritualistic behaviour to avoid provoking memories, the evasion of your shared past and the reinterpretations of events in the light of the loved one's departure.
Thursday, 4 August 2022
Romeo and Juliet, Canberra Rep, Theatre 3, 28 Jul-13 Aug 2022
Shakespeare has a large presence on Australian stages, due partially to having well known stories with rich dialogue for actors to wallow in, and partially due to being well out of copyright. This does mean that there's a risk of this work becoming overly familiar and productions going well out of their way to make themselves unique and different in a way that doesn't really serve the text so much as directorial ego.