ACT Hub's latest exercise is a new writing presentation doing short plays in repertoire (though in the event one play is genuinely short at 25 minutes and one at 70 minutes is pretty much a full length festival work) - it's as much an exercise for the writers to get their work performed in front of an audience to see what works and what doesn't as it is something for audiences. Both works picked are very much raw material rather than something that feels fully finalised, both are directed by their authors and both feature a mostly young cast with one older performer in a key role for them to play against.
In the case of "The Beastiary", we get the story of a group of artists in a not-too-distant future fighting back against a government that has blanded out and persecuted political artists (something that feels a little ripped from recent headlines with the Venice Biannale and National Gallery incidents in the news this week). They've managed to kidnap the responsible minister, who's defiant against them, and they confront her using the terms, approaches and language of their given artform. It's an angry young work by Hannah Tonks, and while it moves briskly in her production, and the cast of performers give it a strong and clear production (Kat Dunkerley with the larger load of exposition as Fox, Ariana Barzinpour as Badger, Quinn Goodwin as Donkey and Jennifer Noveski providing nervous, urgent backup as the other artists and Carole Wallace selling both arrogance and fear as the minister), there is some sense of special pleading here - this is artists complaining about being artists in a way that doesn't always find a good way of bringing in the rest of the outside world. The animal masks are well executed and it definitely knows how do to a beginning, middle and end but I would have liked to see a sense that a wider world existed outside the four walls of the bunker the characters exist in.
For "The Forsaken", we centre on an isolated retiree, Leonard, lost in regret and frustration, who's acquired some sophisticated spyware to listen to the activities of his neighbors - two young parents in one flat and two young male friends in the other and using those to channel his reckoning with his own past. Pat J Gallagher is strong in the role of Leonard, handling some fairly long monologues with clarity and directness, and in support there's good skills shown by Callum Doherty in a dual role as the more easygoing of the two friends and as Leonard's high-energy visitor who brings him various things to interract with, from a parrot to a truly alarming amount of psychedelics, Kara Taylor as the easygoing friend's girlfriend who gets concerned by what's going on with her boyfriend's flatmate, Ryan Hedges as the nervy flatmate working on desperate schemes, Marco Simunec as the young husband resenting his responsibilities and Ashleigh Butler as the wife who feels forever placating him. But Oliver Kuskie's script is very much a mood piece and feels underplotted - there's incident, sure, but it never quite pulls together and comes up with a satisfactory ending - although he does direct strongly to keep sightlines clear in the complex three-location set.
In short, this is an interesting experiment, though in some ways I would have liked both writers to swap directing duties - I suspect there would have been benefit to both from having an outside eye explore the work and for both to apply their directing strengths to another person's play - and both feel a little under-workshopped. I hope next time ACT Hub tries something like this they either find a structure that allows for more development time or a structure that allows for more outside eyeballs before it hits a paying audience.