"Eureka Day" is a comedy set in a private, somewhat liberal Californian school during the 2018-19 school year - when the school is disrupted by a case of the mumps which precipitates a debate about immunization that nobody is ready for and which rips the school apart. It's a wild look at modern liberalism in crisis - the language that emphasises mutual respect and the way that mutual respect is abused by people who cannot brook any compromises at all - and how civil debate breaks down into emotional pleading and gratuitous insult.
Friday, 13 June 2025
Eureka Day, Outhouse Theatre Company, Seymour Centre, Reginald Theatre, 29 May-21 Jun
The Spare Room, Belvoir St Theatre, 7 June-13 Jul
Mortality comes to us all, but the way we choose to face it can vary and the way it affects those around us is also tricky territory to navigate. But in the hands of Helen Garner, Judy Davis, Eamon Flack, Elizabeth Alexander and the rest of the Belvoir team, it becomes an illuminating, often hilarious, frustrating, emotional and powerful night in the theatre. The setup is simple - a woman invites a friend into her home to stay for three weeks while the friend gets treatment for cancer, but it quickly becomes apparent the treatment is alternative at best and fraudulent at worst, and the clear acceptance of this stuff by the friend drives the host into distraction.
Eamon Flack adapts Helen Garner's book with a clear centering of the narrator, Helen, played to perfection by Judy Davis - we get instant access to her emotions, her frustrations, her attempts to restrain herself from interfering in a friend's personal choices and the moments when the dam breaks and she lets loose with rage, managing to work through much of this while doing the challenging work of replacing fitted sheets repeatedly. Elizabeth Alexander as Nicola, the friend, has the right level of sunny innocence to her - you know exactly why Helen has remained her friend and why she tries so hard to hold back from hurting her friend as long as she does, but you also see the pain and frustration at her condition that drives the desperation to find other options - she's not just a suffering object in the corner or a fool who's easy to dismiss, she's a real and rounded character.
The remaining supporting cast play multiple roles, of healers, friends, community members, allies and a few surprise elements - Emma Diaz, Alan Dukes, and Hannah Waterman all do a fine job of establishing rounded figures in a couple of lines and a moment of response to the main two in a set of fine cameos.
Mel Page's set and costumes mix the domestic and the professional, using all the spaces available on the stage to tell a story that traipses all over Melbourne. The presence of cellist Anthea Cottee providing live soundtrack gives the show a soulful vibe and adds to the intensity in some of the more emotive moments.
As someone who's got a friend currently undergoing cancer treatment, I found this enlightening, emotional but not overly indulgently so, and thoughtful about the bigger questions of facing the end. And between Davis and Alexander there's expert actresses embodying the story.
Wednesday, 4 June 2025
Present Laughter, ACT Hub, 4-14 June
Noel Coward's 1942 comedy is a self-portrait, or at least a portrait of the self that Coward wanted to present to the public - a celebrity at the centre of his universe, looked after by his colleagues and staff but somehow caught in hetrosexual romantic entanglements and crises of his own ego. Recent revivals have allowed elements of Coward's own homosexuality to enter the picture (both this version and the Old Vic production filmed for NT Live with Andrew Scott) in different cross-gender castings in key roles, but the story largely remains the same - of an egomaniac under siege. It's a show that needs a gentleman of a certain age to play the Coward-substitute, meaning that of the big 4 Coward Plays ("Hay Fever", "Private Lives", "Blithe Spirit" and this), it's the least revived - quality leading men are a rare supply.
Fortunately, the ACT Hub has Jarrad West, in fine form as Garry Essendine, the centre of this play's universe. Petulant, self-important, hectoring, lustful and frequently getting as good as he gives, West gets to use several of his considerable talents in giving us a rounded picture of a celebrity at home - from the sarcastic bon-mots cast at his colleagues to the sufferings when people intrude on him and make him the target of their own agendas. It's a consummate star performance and completely owns the stage.
Fortunately, he's supported by a cast just as strong - Callum Doherty has never been as beautiful as he is as the flirtatiously dopey David Skillington, calculating yet vulnerable. Jenna Roberts steals scenes openly as the grim Swedish housekeeper Miss Erikson, mordantly enjoying herself with her tales of suburban spiritualism and cadging a few cigarettes into the bargain. Leonidas Katsanis as the valet Fred brings a practical, direct manner to the character, rising above the madness. Tracy Noble as secretary Monica gives us the effort to wrangle her erring employer towards some level of engagement with things he needs to actually be doing, along with a genuine affection towards him. Crystal Mahon as Garry's not-quite-ex-wife Liz gives charm and slightly scolding affection in a way that indicates why they're not quite-exes-yet. Michael Cooper as the bumptious Roland Maule is a strong, startling presence as the self-confident steamroller of a fan who starts by insulting before switching to equally threatening worship. Amy Kowalczuk has grand efficiency as gender-swapped Henrietta. Joe Dinn is all emotional crisis as Morris, and Karina Hudson is effortlessly seductive as Joanna.
Karen Vickery directs with a slightly loose hand (in particular the melencholic tag of the play feels like it goes on a little too long) but when the play is at full farcial energy, it is delightfully over the top and fun. Fiona Leach nad Jennie Norberry's costumes are beautifully chosen, and Karen Vickery and Michael Spark's set gives glamour and luxury to the ACT Hub space.
This is a delight, with a strong company giving support to a definitive, undiluted Jarrad West Stunner of a performance. It's stylish, charming and utter fun. Catch it quick.
Wednesday, 14 May 2025
If We Got Some More Cocaine I Could Show You How I Love You, Everyman Theatre, ACT Hub, 14-24 May
(photo by Ben Appleton, Photox Photography)
John O'Donavan's play looks at two young men in modern Ireland, a country emerging from a long history of conservative Catholic dogma into a more modern and accepting world - both have recently robbed a group of service stations and the parents of one of them and are hiding on the roof of a house near their home, wating for the heat to die down. But the main thing they have to deal with is their mutual attraction and what they're going to do with it - with Mikey being out and Casey not, they find themselves talking around the topic and finding rationalisations for not taking things any further. The big bag of cocaine that was hiding in Casey's mum's boyfriend's toilet is an incentive to push them into being more honest about where things stand, and to make decisions that will affect both of them.
Joel Horwood directs this with a sensitive ear for the moments between the pair - keeping them moving on a realistic isolated island of a roof (designed by Horwood and Isaac Reilly), in their distinctive casual wear (costumes by Winsome Ogilvie). Robert Kjellgren as Mikey has the broader role, confronting how being out in high school has hardened him and made it more difficult for him to deal with the opening up of the world around him - while Joshua James as Casey is more ruled by fear and doubt and coping mechanisms in a more tightly controlled performance. There's a great give and take between the pair as they open up in between moments of fear and doubt, and like the best of Irish drama there's a great joy in the use of language as the character's phrasing feels precise and true.
Lachlan Houen's lighting adds to the mood, as various risks arise below, with low-angled lighting pointing up at the young men, and Neille Pye's sound design adds street effects to take us to the small-town Friday night feeling.
This is a compelling tight 90 minutes of drama that captures an emotional journey between two men with heart and soul - a mix of crime, romance and coming-of-age.
Saturday, 10 May 2025
Posh, Queen Hades Productions, Old Fitz Theatre, 19 Apr-17 May
Laura Wade's 2010 play is very much of a time and a place - the time is just after the general election that returned the Conservatives to government in Britain, and the place is a small country gastropub, a reasonable distance from Oxford University, where a club of ten young men are gathering for a dinner of extreme indugence - all in their finest coat tails and pin striped pants. It's clear that their club has a long and somewhat debauched history, and it's equally clear that many of the young men are not entirely confident that they can live up to the reputation of that history, though goodness knows they'll try. Various participants are responsible for preparing elements from an indulgent main course to a call girl for entertainment during the evening to cocaine to enjoy during the meal and an after-trip to Rejkavik. But for all their money, these young men's inadequacies are just as apparent and the resentment pushes outside to find whatever fresh victim is available nearby, once they stop picking at each other, leading to a truly horrific event...
Friday, 9 May 2025
The Wrong Gods, Belvoir St Theatre and Melbourne theatre Company, Belvoir, 3 May-1 Jun
Writer S. Shakhtidaran has had a pretty good run with Belvoir, from his debut, "Counting and Cracking" in 2019 (reviewed here) to his follow-up "The Jungle and the Sea" (reviewed here) - both big-scale epics directed by company director Eamon Flack. This time he returns with a smaller scale show (cast of four rather than 16 in the first and 11 in the second), all set in one location rather than the multiple locations of the other two, but thematically it's dense material - starting as something simple and domestic between a mother who wants to keep her daughter in her small village living a traditional lifestyle and the daughter who wants to further her education and opportunities, and building in the second act to bigger questions about the whole village and potentially the nature of human civilisation itself.
Thursday, 8 May 2025
Bloom, Melbourne Theatre Company and Sydney Theatre Company, Ros Packer Theatre, 29 Mar-11 May
Tom Gleisner has been on Australian TV screens for around 40 years (if you include his early D-Generation stuff) though he's only previously been involved in writing for the stage with a co-writing credit on Working Dog's 2014 play "The Speechmaker" (which was simulataneously a sell-out hit for Melbourne Theatre Company and something that the production team decided to never take anywhere else). Still, that kind of media profile tends to jump the queue for production, even in genres which the writer isn't really known for. Gleisner's never written a musical before but the form fits him like a glove - a mixture of sentiment and jokes in a very human story of lives in a retirement home.
Saturday, 3 May 2025
Blithe Spirit, Canberra Rep, 1-17 May
"Blithe Spirit" is what is known as a warhorse - a comedy that has a broad popular appeal that attracts an audience and can reliably be seen as an appealing night out. I've reviewed it twice in the last decade-and-a-bit - once at Rep in 2014 and once by the Sydney Theatre Company in 2022. Coward's comedy about love-after-death-turning-into-the-same-petty-squabbles-after-death, with its rich range of characters and a plot that twists and turns thoroughly delightfully, holds up as a good night's entertainment.
Thursday, 1 May 2025
Sweet Charity, Free Rain, The Q, 29 Apr-18 May
Free Rain's latest production is a retro delight, taking a 1966 musical that I'd previously been convinced was locked into it's old era (see my review of the 2015 Hayes Theatre company tour here) in a production that's stylish, clever and both a tribute to Bob Fosse's original choreography and prodeuction concept and a bright vehicle for new-to-Canberra-Stages Amy Orman. The show was originally a vehicle for Fosse's muse and wife, Gwen Verdon, and Orman is stage centre for 90% of the action, and absolutely owns the stage with confidence, charm and adorability - you take her to your heart in the first five minutes and never lose interest in her for the next two and a half hours of stage time.
Tuesday, 15 April 2025
Are You Lonesome Tonight, The Q and Opera Queensland, The B, 15 Apr (and subsequent performances in Griffith, Gouburn, Bathurst, Cessnock, Wagga Wagga, Coffs Harbour, Port Macquarie, Casino, Tamworth, Roma, Winton, Longreach, Balcardine, Blackall, Gympie, Gold Coast til May 31st)
Opera Queensland's touring show is a melding of Opera and Country music, treating both with respect while delivering a potted history lesson and samplings of several of the hits. A talented trio of performers, both on voice and playing guitar, Cello and violin, accompanied by Trevor Jones (fresh from his accompanist/major-general duties on "Pirates of Penzance") present exeprts from "Corronation of Poppea", "Marriage of Figaro", "La Boheme", "Carmen", "La Traviata" and "The Rabbits", alternating with Hank Williams, Dolly Parton, Taylor Swift, Troy Casser-Daley and Slim Dusty, exploring the commanalities and differences of the two forms.
Thursday, 10 April 2025
The Moors, Lexi Sekuless Productions, Mill Theatre at Dairy Road, 26 Mar-12 Apr
Evoking the 19th century gothic novels of the Bronte sisters (and elements of the lives of them as well), with the dour and moody Yorkshire moors reflecting the inner passions of two sisters, their maid, the recently arrived governess (despite there not being any child to tutor), a mastiff and a moorhen, "The Moors" is a delightfully odd play full of grim corners, surprise twists, rage, literary conciets and lust and plays wonderfully in the intimate Mill Theatre, on Aloma Barnes' set which serves both for indoor scenes and outdoors with a painting scheme that lets the characters blend into nature while their outfits stand out boldly.
Wednesday, 19 March 2025
The House of Bernarda Alba, Chaika Theatre, ACT Hub, 19-29 Mar
Photo from Jane Duong Photography
Frederico Garcia Lorca's 1936 Spanish tragedy of five sisters trapped together under a domineering mother where their own desires tear them apart is a masterpiece of tension and dramatic release - set during a long hot summer, the emotions are palpable and the tensions can be cut like a knife. As oldest sister (and inheritor of the family fortune) Angustius prepares for her wedding day, the other sisters develop their own plans, building to a crashing climax. Karen Vickery's production embodies this tension, makes it palpable in the glances, in the tones of voice and in the movements of the actresses.
Leading the cast is the dominating Zsuzsi Soboslay, imperious and upright as Bernarda - a stiff reed in the changing winds. Sophie Bernassi as Angustius sells the frustration, the release and the crashing loss as she tries to mould herself to her mother's expectations and comes against her sisters' own needs. Karina Hudson as Adela, rhapsodic in her lusts, is so wonderfully selfish and possessed by her ambitions that you can see the disaster ahead without being able to stop it. Yanina Clifton as Martirio has a great, scheming undercurrent of rage and demand for her own satisfaction, hoarding her hidden knowledge of what's going on to release it at a time when it'll cause the most damage. Amy Kowalckzuk is beautifully able to sublimate her own desires with emphatic embroidery, sudden glances or an inappropriate snort as Magdalena. Christina Falsone as the housekeeper Poncia watches and attempts to advise, knowing she can't stop the disaster that is coming down the line towards all of them. And Alice Ferguson's Maria Josefa falls into revelries of her own desire for freedom, now long gone with her youth.
Vickery's production uses the in-the-round stage as an arena for us to examine these women's struggles, on Marc Hetu's simple red-brick stage. Fiona Leach's costumes capture the mood and the heat as the women move from confining mourning wear to lounging slips and sleepwear. It's a true steam-train of a prodction, relentlessly moving to its inevitable conclusion, a sultry, tense evening of tragedy and power. This is a classic given form and power in a strong, intimate production driven by its actresses. It should be seen and savoured.
Saturday, 15 March 2025
The Pirates of Penzance or The Slave of Duty, Hayes Theatre Co in association with the Art House Wyong, Hayes Theatre, 14 Feb-16 Mar (and subsequent tours to Wollongong and Canberra)
photography John McCrae
Friday, 14 March 2025
Song of First Desire, Upstairs Theatre, Belvoir Street Theatre, 13 Feb-23 Mar
Thursday, 13 March 2025
4000 Miles, Wharf 1 Theatre, Sydney Theater Company, 17 Feb-23 Mar
(photography Daniel Boud)
Amy Herzog's 2011 play tells the story of a grandson and his grandmother -of him coming to her apartment in desperation after a personal disaster and the weeks that follow which map out the nature of the relationship between them. It's a prickly relationship with the somewhat-deaf and prickly Vera and her reticent grandson Leo resolving some but not all of their issues over the course of a hundred minutes in stage time - for the boy, a first encounter with mortality, the dissolution of a relationship and his choice of a path ahead, for Vera, a reflection on her own past relationships and what mattered in her life. Along the way we meet two young women Leo's connected with - his long term girlfriend Bec and a one night stand, Amanda - both of which bring fresh perspectives on the pair.
A lot of the narrative drives from Leo - we're given an arc of his escape from responsibility into an emerging sense of him accepting new ones - Vera comes across as a little underwritten (which is ironic given 90% of Herzog's writers note is about how the character is based on her own grandma) - we get elements of her past and present but I don't sense that Herzog has fully thought through how a woman in her senior years finds purpose outside of family. There are some intriguing thoughts on the complacency of the comfortably well-off leftists who imagine themselves better people because they've been standing up against bad behaviour in their own country, never reflecting on how leftist policies have damaged people in other countries - but again, this examination never gets particularly deep. It's largely an attempt at comfortable warm vibes rather than a lot of thought on the issues it produces, and Kenneth Morelada's production largely produces those vibes well, with Jeremy Allen's comfortable West Village apartment giving us a stylish, intellectual retreat.
Nancye Hayes as Vera anchors the evening well - giving Vera a lot of sharp, cantankerous edges combined with vulnerability. Shiv Palekar as Leo gives the combination of youthful enthusiasm and sudden damage from recent traumatic events palpable power - we know immediately something's going on behind his actions and the unravelling as it proceeds is powerful. Ariadne Sgouros relies a little bit too much on a self-protective smile to barely conceal the concerns Bec has underneath - she should have been assisted to find other ways of expressing the uneasy relationship she has with Leo than just one facial expression. Shirong Wu has one scene but makes it count, giving her character variety and life and presenting a strong contrasting viewpoint into the otherwise cosy environment.
Kelsey Lee's lighting design shifts moods well, giving a sense of different times in the same room - and Jessica Dunn's composition and sound design adds to the mood as we transition between times.
This isn't the strongest season opener of STC's recent seasons - it's a little too eager to be gently ingratiating for that - but it's a good opportunity to see a theatrical legend like Hayes and to observe a human connection across the footlights.
Thursday, 27 February 2025
Baby Jane, Canberra Rep, Canberra Rep Theatre, 20 Feb-8 Mar
Photographer: Antonia Kitzel.
Henry Farrel's 1960 novel "Whatever Happened to Baby Jane" became a sensation when filmed in 1962 - the combination of aging divas Bette Davis and Joan Crawford in a story about two mutually dependent sisters, aging and squabbling while one slips into dementia caused a box office smash and defined the rest of their careers in a series of somewhat lurid shockers. But Ed Wightman's adaptation of the novel takes it back to the original - much of the high-camp is removed and we're returned to a brutal drama about frustrated dreams, childhood exploitation and desperation. This isn't just a tour of memorable moments of the movie - there's no rat and there's no "but you are in that chair, Blanche" - instead we get a stronger look at what made Jane the cracked person we see and the consequences of decades of neglect.
Locking down this more realistic tone is Louise Bennett in the title role - the child within Jane is never far from the surface, including the immaturity and capriciousness of a child, as well as the strong sense of carrying around foundational pain. The role gives her plenty of room to move - there's a moment when she sings when it becomes apparent that if Jane could only learn how to function as an adult she could have a rich and powerful career as a singer, but her stunted expectations of herself as a child performer keep her a disturbing freak - and she seizes every opportunity to explore the range from broken child to bitter monster. Matching her is Victoria Tyrell Dixon as wheelchair-bound sister Blanche - you get the sense of the vain and pampered actress and she's not just a simpering victim to Jane's rages- she rages back with equal strength. Elsewhere, Andrea Garcia makes her moral, certain maid into something compelling - we empathise with her efforts to help Blanche. Tom Cullen as Edwin Flegg is a character with his own complications- his attempts to play along with Jane's delusions incresasingly strained as she she presents more and more bizzarely. Michael Sparks as The Man has a role where the pencil-thin-moustache and brylcreamed hair sell 90% of the role - his sleazy approach of providing then ripping away support to Jane's delusions shows how far she's damaged by her past.
Andrew Kay's set is a grand Hollywood mansion with rising mould on the wall - it looks truly lived in and sells the dilapidated grandeur of the characters well. Anna Senior's costume designs match a 60s modernism with the slightly more grotesque look of Jane's throwback performing outfit, without having the throwback outfit look too over the top. Nathan Sciberras' lighting manages the shift from strict reality to the more abstract fantasy situations, and Neville Pye's sound design uses disconcerting echoes and rumbles to heighten the tension.
This is a tense drama of bitterness and rising tension, until the brutal resolution, and is absolutely worth catching.
Friday, 21 February 2025
Hub Fest 2025, ACT Hub, 16-22 February
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.
Saturday, 15 February 2025
Bubble Boy, Queanbeyan Players, Belconnen Community Theatre, 14-23 Feb
Thursday, 13 February 2025
Macbeth, The Q and Lakespeare, The B (and Aunty Louise Brown Park in better weather), 12-16 Feb (and various other locations til March 2)
After 4 comedies and one history, Lakespeare takes one of the tragedies outdoors (or, in the case of bad weather, indoors under blanket lighting). It's Shakespeare's shortest tragedy, a fast-moving trip through prophecies, regicide, and revenge, and director Jordan Best delivers a brisk, immediate production focussed on using the cast as an ensemble (all except Isaac Reilly as the titular Macbeth appears in other roles). It's a different production to her last go at the play 9 years ago, but gains in immediacy and in-your-faceness what it may lose in sharp lighting effects and other subtle niceties There's rich power in the production from the initial entrances of the three witches, all dressed as a cross between Goths and Miss Havisham in veils, moving like the otherworldly monsters they are in Gaia La Penna's costumes, through the personal and political machinations and brutal ramifications of the lust to gain and keep political power, to the final desperate battles against fate.
Friday, 7 February 2025
Garry Starr: Classic Penguins, MILKE, The Q, 7 Feb (and touring everywhere from Hobart to Wangaratta over the next few months)
I reviewed two of Garry's shows in 2023 and they were two of the highlights of that year- Greece Lightning and Performs Everything. Much like those two, this is a fast, funny set of sketches tied together by a literary theme - this time based on the orange-and-white covered books published by Penguin Books, with each sketch punctuated by the titles (sometimes based on the story, sometimes just goofing around on the title). Starr's a committed performer, willing to do anything no matter how silly or physically challenging to get a laugh - and after previous performances in a tight pair of tights or a barely concealing g-string, he performs most of the show in nothing more than a top hat, a jacket, a pair of spats and flippers and a ruff - cock, balls and arse completely on display. It's 18+ for a reason.