(cast pictured is not quite the current touring cast, but close enough)
Thursday, 30 March 2023
Boop, Statera Circus, The Q, 30-31 March
(cast pictured is not quite the current touring cast, but close enough)
Saturday, 25 March 2023
Love Letters, Canberra Rep, 15-26 March
AR Gurney's "Love Letters" has been in constant rotation on stages around the world since it premiered in 1989, due partially to a compelling story to perform covering two American children of privilege as they age from childhood to their late 50s, following them as they write (or don't write) letters back and forth. A carefully contained work that focuses on the two actors and their storytelling as they grow back and forth, the simple setup belies complex emotions - Andrew and Melissa are clearly drawn to each other but their individual personalities, shaped in childhood, as he strives to achieve more and she rankles with the expectations put upon her, push them apart. Melissa even rankles with the storytelling medium we have - pushing Andrew for a genuine personal connection rather than just his preferred approach, the calm, considered, written word. It's a story of two people that also acts as an indictment of their entire world - the unwritten social rules that trap both of them, the upbringings that set both up so poorly for adulthood, and the way their passions bring both undone.
Thursday, 23 March 2023
Holding the Man, Everyman Theatre, ACT Hub, 22 Mar-1 April
Tommy Murphy's 2006 adaptation of Timothy Conigrave's 1995 posthumous memoir has been a theatrically engaging delight since its first production at the Stables theatre in Kings Cross (where parts of act two are set)- playing all around Australia, and with runs in the West End and the US. But this is the first time it's played on Murphy's home turf, where he got his start growing up in Queanbeyan and studying at St Edmunds - we can probably blame the complications of performance rights and the somewhat conservative programming tendencies of a lot of Canberra's theatres (plus possibly the flatter-than-they-should-have-been ticket sales for his earlier work "Strangers In Between" in its season at the Q).
Murphy's adaptation takes the memoir and brings out the latent theatrical qualities in it - Conigrave's emergence as a performer and a writer is an ongoing background in the story and here it's given full life, with elements of his life blurring into performances, auditions, drama classes, and rehearsals. But the meat of the story is the beautiful, engaging story of two young men who discover each other in high school and can't bear to be parted until death hits in brutally - the unlikely-yet-true story of love found between two very different young men in a catholic school and maintained over 15 years, surviving through parental bigotry, youthful experimentation, different career goals, and HIV diagnosis, only parting at a hospital bed with John's final breath. It's an honest love story, and Conigrave is brutal in his honesty about himself - his infidelties, inconstancies and sometimes unbearable precociousness, not ever able to stop himself from hurting the man he loves, equally honest about the effects on the mental state of both John and Tim as HIV develops into full-blown AIDS. Murphy's adaptation takes delight in giving this a strongly era-specific background as Tim emerges from high school into the undergraduate gay societies and then the wider gay communities, blundering through the politics, the emotional landmines, and the self-justifying arguments that the infidelity isn't really hurting anyone.
This project is clearly a director's dream for Jarrad West - having been involved in local productions of four of the great gay plays of the last 40 years - "Angels in America", "Laramie Project", "Normal Heart" and "Beautiful Thing" - and with a strong theatrical style that's made multiple use of puppets - "Home at the End", "Avenue Q" and last year's "Hand to God", this is absolutely slap bang in his wheelhouse. And he does not disappoint, giving the show theatrical verve and focus, as Tim and John's love story is backgrounded by four skilled performers slipping between roles across genders at reckless speed as everything from grotesque teenage boys to campus radicals to parents to fellow-NIDA-students to nightclub dwellers to friends and lovers. There's an assured knowledge that just having an actor stand a certain way, wear a scarf at a particular length and angle, and speak with specific elocution will instantly scream "Acting Teacher at NIDA" and an avoidance of any additional complications that could get in between the audience and the story - a pure service of the text.
The cast is strong throughout - Joel Horwood drives the story as narrator and protagonist Tim, letting him be brash, foolish, open-hearted, and ultimately unforgettably moving in his final monologue. Lewis McDonald as the more reticent John has the strength to make every word, every sound that comes from him count - it's never in doubt that his love for Tim is deep and strong even as he criticises Tim's choices. Joe Dinn commits to every character, from harassed shopping-centre entertainer to two very different fathers to campus radical in full-bodied joy. Amy Kowalczuk similarly commits, whether as sympathetic friend Juliet realising her crush on a gay boy is not going to get reciprocated, a grotty teen boy, an anguished new-romantic or the aforementioned round-vowelled-NIDA teacher. Grayson Woodham is this productions surprise package for me - I've not seen him in anything else before and after this I want to see him in a whole heap of things - everything he does, from playing a primary-school acquaintance to a free-thinking mother to a carer friend of Johns is deeply considered, real and strong. Tracy Noble rounds out the cast with strong compassionate performances as a mix of mothers, friends, therapists and one-particularly-intimidating-lesbian.
To wrap up, this is a major Australian piece of work finally getting its Canberra premiere by one of Canberra's best directors using some of Canberra's best actors. It's an emotional ride that will take you through joy, anger, heartbreak, hilarity and sober brutal truth. It's a triumph.
Saturday, 18 March 2023
Anita Wigl'it - Funny Gurl, The Kingfisher at Gluttony, Rymill Park, Adelaide Fringe Festival, 14-19 Mar
Anita Wigl'it was one of three New Zealanders on the first series of RuPaul's Drag Race Down Under and one of the two who had already hosted her own drag competition on New Zealand TV, "Haus of Drag". Despite this, she got bumped pretty early, and after coming back for "Drag Race: Canada vs The World" she got bumped from that pretty early too. And now she's got a solo tour where she tells her background and her future.
Velvet Rewired, The Moa at Gluttony, Rymill Park, Adeliade Fringe Festival, 5-19 Mar (and touring subsequently to Hobart, Townsville, Newcastle and Melbourne)
So I've managed to miss this cross between Circus and Disco in the last 8 years of its on-and-off touring (including the run in Canberra in February) but finally, in the middle of a busy Adelaide Fringe, I managed to catch it. It's an energetic celebration of the music, the lights, and the attitude of the 1970s, starring Genuine Australian Disco Diva Marcia Hines as our diva, delivering a whole heap of classics, closing up with her 1977 classic, "You". There's strong efforts all round, from Tom Sharrah as a wandering disco visitor slowly brought into the musical ecstasy, the high energy support work of DJ Joe Accria and his multiple rhythms, the gorgeous support work of sirens Jacinta Gulisano and Sascha Lee Saunders, the stunning routines of aerealists Beau Seargeant and Hayey Timmermans, the astonishing rollerskating acrobatics of Sven and Jan, or the dancing styles of the aptly named Marc "Fullout" Royale.
Sunday, 12 March 2023
Paul McDermott Plus One, Adelaied Fringe Festival, Rhino Room Upstairs, 7-12 Mar
McDermott has been giving his own style of aggressive, assertive cabaret since the mid-eighties, and astonishingly for anyone with over thirty-five years of career behind him, he still maintains the same level of rage and attack, with a set of politically leaning songs about the royal family, US politics and women, glorying in the grotesque, the unpleasant and the rage-inducing. It's an invigorating hour in his company, followed shortly after by a 20-minute busking set just up the road outside a block of apartments up the road from the Rhino Room (interrupting any residents who may want to just get home) with a rousing set that gets the audience involved in singing along to an engaging set of songs, including just one really sentimental one to close up the night. For those of us who weren't around when McDermott was husting for change outside David Jones just down from the merry-go-round in civic, it's a chance to catch what you missed out on - for those who didn't (and judging from the age of much of McDermott's audience, many of them possibly didn't), it's a chance to reindulge with a performer who's just as sharp and engaged as ever he was.
Saturday, 11 March 2023
A star is torn, Adelaide fringe Festival, The Arch at Holden St Theatres, 4-18 March
Greg Fleet is a stand-up of some 30 years standing who has recently been turning his skills to playwrighting of a more or less autobiographical nature. This show has the same undercurrent of autobiography while also imposing the much-filmed "star is born" narrative, with a rising female performer eclipsing the fading male star - this time not in a romantic relationship, but the other stations of the cross are familiar... her meeting him on a bender, helping launch her career and then seeing himself left behind to a pitiable end.
Friday, 3 March 2023
Downtown - The Mod Musical, Queanbeyan Players, Belconnen Theatre, 24 Feb-5 Mar
Queanbeyan Players have kicked off the last two years with a perfectly framed smaller musical at the Belconnen Community theatre- last year with Keating, this year with Downtown. It's a nice vibe to see something intimate and fun from one of the region's longest-lasting theatre companies, and it gives us a chance to see performers in a more intimate environment, carrying on the spirit of Supa, which QP has absorbed along with the life members and the history. It's a valuable separate string to QP's bow and I hope it continues.