Saturday, 17 January 2026

Hamlet Camp, Modern Convict, Carriageworks, 7-25 Jan


 Image by Daniel Boud

This is very much a chance for three former-young-theatrical-turks of the late 2000s/early 2010s to play together - all have previoulsy played Hamlet, Cowell in a Bell production in 2008, Leslie in an MTC production in 2011 and Schmitz in a La boite production in 2010 in Brisbane followed by a Belvoir production reviewed here in 2013 which Leslie took over when Schmitz left early to be in an international TV series about pirates, "Black Sails". Now the three team up in a play written by all three looking at three survivors of the role, how they've reacted to directorial concepts and the various challenges of the part, and how life after the role-of-all-roles goes. It's witty though very in-jokey, and clearly a vehicle for their individual talents. Pre-show, they each perform a poem about various aspects of themselves-  Schmitz starts off talking about his other day job working the counter of one of my favourite second-hand-book-stores (it makes it somewhat weird that I may have purchased a cheap thriller or a a preloved play from him); Cowell looks at his connection to his stuff while he's travelled overseas has panned out;  and Leslie looks at his career from the inevitable-young-Western-Australian-of-a-certain-age-Ship-To-Shore-performance (the very anglo Leslie played the very not anglo Guido Bellini) and having roles stolen by Heath Ledger, to his current life watching tv with his kid and wondering how he compares to the perfromers who his kid likes. 

All three are very much playing to their strengths - Schmitz is sardonic, Cowell bullish and bold, Leslie tense and neurotic -  and while the show does feel more like three talents gathring to entertain themselves and us rather than anything particularly deep and thoughtful about the artifice of acting. But as a summer fling for the performers, it's perfectly servicable. 

Friday, 16 January 2026

Mama Does Derby, Windmill Production Company in association with Sydney Festival and Adelaide Festival, Sydney Town Hall, 15-22 Jan


Combining spectacle and personal narrative, "Mama Does Derby" tells the story of a mother and daughter who've been each other's mutual support system for a number of years, moving to a small town to restart their lives yet again, and what happens when... well, the title happens. Theatre on roller skates is not entirely unknown ("Starlight Express" gets a shoutout in the script, and there's always "Xanadu" too) but this is a show that uses the roller skates as support to the mother-daughter story. There's a lot of elements playing in here (a sparkly-clad trauma demon in high heels, some driving lessons for the daughter, an emerging friendship, some counelling sessions plus the roller derby and a three-piece band playing support and occaisonal supporting roles) but Virginia Gay's script keeps it all in balance with a nice dry wit, and Claire Watson serves the script well with a clever aesthetic, using the derby-team as stage crew rolling set pieces on and off.

I will pause and say that, as a non-traditional theatre venue, Sydney Town Hall has to use temporary seating, and in my long experience of sitting on temporary seating, what they have this time was somehow the most massively uncomfortable thing I've ever sat on - I felt the seat distinctly sagging under my weight (which, yes, I'm a husky guy, but still, this is public seating, if they're going to do stuff below a certain grade they should warn people). The show is 90 minutes long and I was repositioning myself at every scene transition to try to find a comfortable position - never finding one. However I was still enjoying the show despite the horrendous seating, and this is more a note for the venue than the production.

Back to the show. Gay's writers note captures some of the vibe: "We wanted to talk about the anxieties that Clare Watson & Virginia Gay torment us, the things that stop us from sleeping at night (or haunt our dreams when we do), and we wanted to do it in the context of a comedy horror where those demons take physical forms, because Buffy actually is the most important text of my generation, and I need to pass its learnings on". It's a very well done piece of work even if on post-show analysis it does feel like some elements are pushing in different directions - the script emphasises the daughter and the meat of the play is dealing with her trauma, but the roller derby aesthetics all belong to the mother, and Amber McMahon is a powerful force in the role of Maxine as she has been in Sydney theatre for quite a while. Elvy-Lee Quici as the daughter holds her role solidly and is a convincing protagonist, holding the show together. Aud Mason-Hyde as friend/teasing partner Hux is great at delivering Gay's driest quips. Benjamin Hancock as trauma-demon Nathan has spectacular physicality, slithering around the stage in the highest of high heels. The athletes of Inner West Roller Derby League do a great job both as performers and as stage crew moving setpieces around the stage in perfect physical co-ordination, and the three-piece band led by Joe Lui are tight, rocking and underscore the show well. It's a lush, enjoyable spectacle that will leave you with a grin on your face. 

Dear Son, Belvoir St Theatre, Queensland Theatre Company and State Theatre Company of South Australia, co-presented with Sydney Festival, Belvoir St Upstairs Theatre, 8-26 Jan


 Image by Stephen Wilson Barker


Isaac Drandic and John Harvey's adaptation of Thomas Mayo's collection of letters from indigenous men to their fathers and sons explores deeply personal narratives of joy, sorrow, connections gained and lost, and it's an example of positive masculinity at its finest. A simple setup - an outdoor recreation shelter with BBQ and firepit, is the site where 5 men gather to tell various stories taken from Mayo's book of letters written in response to a racist cartoon in a News Corporation paper about Aboriginal men not knowing the names of their children. It's a case of the response vastly overwhelming the cause in both power and breadth, as the five actors (Jimi Bani, Waangenga Blanco, Kirk Page, Aaron Pedersen and Tibian Wiles) bring us into their stories, with sound, movement and with powerful projections (video designed by Craig Wilkinson, AV realised by Susie Henderson). Drandic directs with a hand that lets the actors take ownership of other people's stories, both solo and shared across the group - with the finale letting the five men talk in their own persona of their family connections. It's an emotional journey, and a show both exposing, emotional and ultimately heart-holding as it gives us a chance to see how tough family relationships can still hold together even in the roughest of circumstances.