Thursday, 25 May 2023
Ruben Guthrie, Wander Theatre and National University Theatre Society, Act Hub, Causeway Hall, 25-27 May 2023
Friday, 19 May 2023
The Trials, Canberra Youth Theatre, Courtyard Studio, Canberra Theatre, 19-26 May 2023
Canberra Youth Theatre has been reaching out for more provocative, modern, interesting writing for the last few years now - using their youth casts to tell contemporary stories that tie into themes that are absolutely worthy of adult interest. In this case, it's a recent English drama, about the climate crisis and the almost inevitable judgment that will be laid down on our behaviour during the current era - when the science is known, the solutions are available and we're still living as if it's not going to happen. Three adult performers (Michael Sparks, Zsusi Soboslav, and Elaine Noon) play the defendants in a story where, after the cataclysm, those deemed Climate Criminals are judged by a jury of people in their early-to-late-teens. The format is simple - each have a five-or-so-minute speech justifying themselves, then the twelve deliberate guilty or not guilty. The debates are not simple or one sided, and the participants are passionate - some enraged and full of vengeance, some unwilling to judge people by the standards of another era, and the dynamics of each debate turn on those personalities.
Dawn King has written a dark piece that most adult audiences will find confronting - it's inevitable you will put yourself in the hot seat and wonder how future generations would judge you (yes, I would probably be guilty). Luke Rogers production gives it intensity and power from the second you enter the theatre - there's a tense atmosphere that only grows with the assistance of Patrick Haaesler's tense soundscape and Ethan Hamill's sharp lighting. But it's not all grimness - there's light and shade in the interactions of the jurors, as some engage deeply in the task, some have a terrifying relish for vengeance, others try to find space for compassion, and the stakes inevitably get more and more personal as we go on. The jury scenes have some resemblance to "Twelve Angry Men", without the amateur detective elements and with more balance across the cast (there isn't really a central character the way that "Twelve Angry" revolves largely around Juror number 8), and the chance to see the accused removes this from simple abstraction to something tougher.
It's a play that reflects both ways - both looking at the guilt of my contemporaries, and the limitations of the vengeance sought by the next generation. It's confronting, thoughtful, emotionally powerful and absolutely worth seeing.
Saturday, 13 May 2023
The Lieutenant of Inishmore, NUTS, Kambri Drama Theatre, 10-13 May
McDonagh has been criticised by many native-Irish writers as using Irish stereotypes to get ahead (he's of Irish parentage but has never lived there) at the expense of their community, and certainly, this isn't the play you'd go to for a nuanced political view of the situation - it's a fast-paced gorey spoof featuring hot-headed men (and one woman) making impulsive decisions that can only really end one way. Director Liat Granot plays it with Over the Top Enery, all the performances primed for maximum comedy. It's not a subtle production, but it's not a subtle play. If there's a little too much floor-acting for the limited sightlines of the Kanbri Drama Theatre, the storytelling is still clear and it makes the carnage slightly easier to take if it's just very slightly out of view.
Toby Griffiths as the titular lieutenant has surface charm and the right kind of intensity to be a true psychopath. Zara Hashmi as the immature Mairead plays the role perhaps a little quiet and non-committed - she's a little too concerned with looking nice rather than suiting the role. Jamie Grey and Wyatt Raynal as Donny and Davey are a double-act in equal stupidity as two-almost-close-to-normal-but-still-insane figures trying to escape a very likely fate. Adam Gottshalk, Paris Scharkie and Anna Kelley as a terrorist trio show self-righteiousness and egomania well. And Eli Powles in his one scene as torture victim James steals every moment he can, even down to dealing with an increasingly malfunctioning chair with aplomb.
This is by no means the most polished or smooth work that I've seen, not even in the last 48 hours or so. But there's a reckless energy that suits the play here, a wild eccentric power that gives us McDonagh's twisted world straght between the eyes, and lets it hit home.
Friday, 12 May 2023
Puffs, or Seven Increasingly Eventful Years at a Certain School of Magic and Magic, Echo Youth, The Q, May 11-20 May 2023
At its heart, Matt Cox's "Puffs" is a work of fanfiction - that subgenre where fans of a piece of work take the concepts of someone else's work and transform it into an alternative retelling that can look at underexamined elements of the original, tell different stories using the building blocks they've fallen in love with, and maybe even do a few small repairs on the plotholes or dodgy worldbuilding that come from a story that's designed to centre two or three heroic central characters, not be an all encompassing thoroughly consistent mythos for people to live their entire lives in. And like all fanfiction, if you're not aware of the work it's building from or don't know the details it's using, it can feel a bit shallow or like a lot of confusing references thrown at you at great speed. For those who've dabbled in the obsession, though, it can be a complete delight as you get a chance to dive deeper into the thing that you love - or, in the case of the increasingly-jaded-in-retrospect-largely-due-to-the-Author's-public-actions-Harry-Potter-Fandom, used to love but now have mixed thoughts about.
Thursday, 11 May 2023
Steel Magnolias, Free Rain, ACT Hub, 10-20 May
Robert Harling's 36-year old comedy-drama is a constant candidate for revival - well remembered from the 1989 film and with an all-female cast with not a dud role among them, it's an appealingly quotable combination of hilarious comedy and emotional punchy drama as six Louisiana women in a beauty parlour look at the challenges of family, friendship, aging, marriage, parenthood and religion with the aid of a fresh set of nail polish and an ungodly amount of hairspray. It's been 9 years since it was last seen in Canberra (previous review here) but given the show's nature as a modern classic, a return visit is always welcome- particularly with a cast as strong as this one.