Showing posts with label Nov 2013. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nov 2013. Show all posts

26 November 2013

Play with the Valkyries

This is a Door – All Day Play Room
Pop Up Playground
29 November to 1 December
Theatre Works
theatreworks.org.au
popupplayground.com.au


Pop Up Playground are bloody wonderful.

Robert Reid, Sayraphim Lothian, Ben McKenzie and their gorgeous game makers realised that we weren't having as much fun as we should be and have been popping up all over the city with games for everyone.

A Pop Up Playground event is guaranteed to have you feeling happier than when you arrived.

And you get to play!

The second This is a Door is on at Theatre Works this weekend. Here's what we got up to last year.
And this was the Fresh Air Festival in February.

What I already love more than I can say about this year's Door (#tiad13) is this:



Being deep in the Ring Cycle, when I saw that Sarayphim had made her sewing machine into a Valkyrie, I said how much I'd love to play the Valkyrie game.

Sadly, the game didn't exist.

Until, I saw this on Twitter:


What?!

Then these:



The Valkyrie Game is real and I'm going to be playing it on Friday night.




25 November 2013

Review: Super Discount

Super Discount
Back to Back Theatre, Sydney Theatre Company and Malthouse Theatre
15 November
Merlyn Theatre, Coopers Malthouse
to 1 December
malthousetheatre.com.au


Back to Back Theatre are the superheroes of Melbourne theatre who leave us wanting to wear our undies on the outside, don a sexy cape and do something that leaves someone else feeling better every day.

 Super Discount began because ensemble member Brian Tilley is obsessed with superheroes: those outsiders who hide from society and are only admired when their difference is on display.

With director Bruce Gladwin, the company developed a show about good and evil, where they start by deciding who gets to play Mark Deans's gold-caped super hero, who mostly prefers to be quiet. With Simon Laherty, Scott Price and Sarah Mainwaring making the decision, Brian thinks it should be him because he understands superheroes and intellectual disability, but David Woods (non-company member, but regular guest) puts himself forward because he can act disabled and should therefore be equally considered – especially because he might be more convincing.

Cringing? Uncomfortable? Hell, yeah!

Formed in 1987, Back to Back is based in Geelong and is the only company in Victoria with an ensemble of full-time of actors, who are all perceived to have an intellectual disability. They've toured the world, won piles of awards and part of their artistic rationale is to "create theatre to challenge the gods".

They rock in all the great ways and continue to confront latent prejudices and assumptions about disability and heroism with theatre that bites with sharpened teeth, but only hurts because you've laughed so hard.

This was on AussieTheatre.com.

23 November 2013

Photos: Seigfried


The Melbourne Ring Cycle
Seigfried
Opera Australia
State Theatre, Arts Centre Melbourne

Stefan Vinke as Siegfried.
Seigfried, the third opera in the Melbourne Ring Cycle, opened on Friday night.

This one had a picture of the thylacine from One and Two, has dragons with and without scales and is the last time the astonishing voice of Terje Stensvold, as Wolton and The Wanderer, is heard in the cycle.

All photos by Jeff Busby.

Terje Stensvold as Wanderer.
Jud Arthur as Fafner, the dragon.

Warwick Fyfe as Alberich & Terje Stensvold as Wanderer. 
Jud Arthur as Fafner. 
Stefan Vinke as Siegfried & Jud Arthur as Fafner. 
Terje Stensvold as Wanderer, Deborah Humble as Erda and Elizabeth Oley (Erda double). 
Terje Stensvold as Wanderer & Stefan Vinke as Siegfried.
Susan Bullock as Brünnhilde
Susan Bullock as Brünnhilde & Stefan Vinke as Siegfried.
Stefan Vinke as Siegfried & Susan Bullock as Brünnhilde.



21 November 2013

Photos: Die Walküre

The Melbourne Ring Cycle
Die Walküre
Opera Australia
State Theatre, Arts Centre Melbourne

Jud Arthur as Hunding, Miriam Gordon-Stewart as Sieglinde & Stuart Skelton as Siegmund.
The Ring Cycle continues with opera two, Die Walküre, opening in Melbourne last night. 

This is the one where it's totally ok for brother and sister to fall in love with each other and introduces the famous Valkeries, who rescue the souls of heroes and take them to Valhalla to be with the gods. And it's the first appearance of Brünnhilde, sung by English soprano Susan Bullock, who sings high Cs like she's blowing a kiss.

If you don't have tickets, but want to hand out with the "Ring Nuts" from all over the world, there's the FREE Festspielhaus in the Arts Centre courtyard. There's a bar and an entertainment program featuring Ring performers and Melbourne favourites.

All photos by Jeff Busby.

Terje Stensvold as Wotan & Jacqueline Dark as Fricka.
Terje Stensvold as Wotan & Susan Bullock as Brünnhilde.
Susan Bullock as Brünnhilde, Stuart Skelton as Siegmund & Miriam Gordon-Stewart as Sieglinde.
The Valkyries: Elizabeth Campbell as Grimgerde, Roxanne Hislop as Rossweisse, Dominica Matthews as Schwertleite, Sian Pendry as Siegrune, Hyeseoung Kwon as Helmwige, Deborah Humble as Waltraute, Anke Höppner as Gerhilde & Merlyn Quaife as Ortlinde. 
Susan Bullock as Brünnhilde & Terje Stensvold as Wotan. 






19 November 2013

Photos: Das Rheingold

The Melbourne Ring Cycle
Das Rheingold
Opera Australia
State Theatre, Arts Centre Melbourne
melbourneringcycle.com.au

Lorina Gore, Dominica Matthews & Jane Ede as The Rhinemaidens & the Sea of Humanity
After three years of work, gossip and a bit of controversy, Opera Australia's Melbourne Ring Cycle opened last night with the first of the four operas, Das Rheingold.

I was among the very lucky people to see all four dress rehearsals, which were not for review. And what a week  it was: 21 hours of either seeing or talking about opera in the five hours of intervals. I loved every moment of it and am looking forward to hearing what others think as the first cycle rolls out this week.

All I will say is that the opening of Das Rheingold is exquisite.

In the meantime, photos have been released.

Great news for those who missed out on tickets. There are rush tickets available, details here.

Or there are plenty of shows, exhibitions, talks, tours, concerts and dinners as part of The Ring Festival if you miss out again or your eyes drop out at the cost. The also festival includes lots of FREE events, so everyone can get a dose of opera.

But here are some photos. All by Jeff Busby.

Warwick Fyfe as Alberich, Lorina Gore, Jane Ede & Dominica Matthews as The Rhinemaidens & the Sea of Humanity
Jacqueline Dark as Fricka, Hyeseoung Kwon as Freia, Jud Arthur as Fafner, Terje Stensvold as Wotan & Daniel Sumegi as Fasolt.
Jud Arthur as Fafner & Daniel Sumegi as Fasolt. 
Richard Berkeley-Steele as Loge & Terje Stensvold as Wotan. 
Warwick Fyfe as Alberich.
Graeme Macfarlane as Mime, Warwick Fyfe as Alberich & Opera Australia Chorus and volunteers. 
Warwick Fyfe as Alberich & Opera Australia dancers.
Warwick Fyfe as Alberich, Richard Berkeley-Steele as Loge & Opera Australia Chorus and volunteers.
Jud Arthur as Fafner, Andrew Moran as Donner, Hyeseoung Kwon as Freia, Andrew Brunsdon as Froh & Richard Berkeley-Steele as Loge. 
Deborah Humble as Erda.

Andrew Moran as Donner, Hyeseoung Kwon as Freia, Jacqueline Dark as Fricka, Andrew Brunsdon as Froh & Rainbow Girls. 






17 November 2013

Review: Summertime in the Garden of Eden

Summertime in the Garden of Eden
Sisters Grimm and Theatre Works
10 November 2013
Theatre Works
to 16 November (and then to GriffinTheatre in Sydney)
theatreworks.org.au


Last year, the Sisters Grimm put on a show in a backyard shed in Thornbury. They pushed the crap aside and brought in some op shop curtains and folding chairs. It was nigh on impossible to get one of those seats and Melbourne was split into those who saw Summertime in the Garden of Eden and those who did not.

But – praise be – Summertime's deep south has returned to Melbourne's inner south and there might be some tickets left for the Theatre Works season, but get in quick because ticket sales prove that missing it isn't an option, unless you go to Sydney for the Griffin season.

Declan Greene and Ash Flanders formed the Sisters because they were bored to tears by the dullness of mainstream  theatre. From making venues out of any available space, they're now being invited onto mainstream stages (Little Mercy recently went to the STC and The Sovereign Wife was created for the MTC's Neon program), but they have consistently ensured that they embrace the extra budget and broader audience with the same mix of disdain and love that got them there in the first place.

Summertime (written by Greene and Flanders) is a Gone-With-the-Wind-cum-Tennessee-Williams Georgia. The rumblings of war and change are heard, but mean little as Daisy Mae (Agent Cleave), Big Daddy (Bessie Holland), Mammy (Genevieve Giuffre) and Daisy's beau (Peter Paltos) prepare for the return of prodigal sister Honey Sue (Olympia Bukkakis).

Saying more about gender, race and class (and theatre audiences) than a posh university full of earnest arts students, their shocking secrets are revealed in a story that makes perfect sense in the world where debutantes have full beards and a golliwog doll is cheered.

And, being a Sisters's show, it's tear-wiping painfully funny. It's not easy to laugh at the likes of Big Daddy's abuse of Mammy and the revelation of what Honey Sue saw in the greenhouse, but it's impossible not to.

Following the shed-chic of its first outing, first-time Sister and designer Marg Horwell had to create a new world to bring it into a theatre.  In this south, the cotton is high, the horse is crocheted and the flowering plant holders are macrame, and – along with Katie Sfetkidis's emotion-churning lighting – this overwhelmingly beautiful world re-defines high-camp trash with a look that's as outrageously glorious and sharply intelligent as its writing.

And the costumes! From Mammy's white trash wigger garb to dangerously swirly hooped dresses and a finger licking Big Daddy, the costumes show character with a glance and suit each performer so much that it's hard to imagine anyone else wearing them.

And the cast! With Greene's direction keeping the story tight and forcing everyone to the edge of no return, they balance a pin head between caricature and originality that teases with its familiarity and turns to run squealing into the unexpected. And their endless pain and repression is shriekingly funny.

I loved the backyard chooks and VB fridge of the shed show, but all little Sisters grow up to discard their training bras and dance in a bigger world. Summertime in the Garden of Eden is as shocking and hilarious as any of their earlier works, but they've transformed their atrocious aesthetic into something exquisite.

This was on AussieTheatre.com.




14 November 2013

Mini review: Noises Off

5 Pounds of Repertory
Noises Off
5 Pound Theatre
14 November
The Owl and the Pussycat
to 16 November
5pound.com.au



It should take weeks of dedicated rehearsal to nail the tightly choreographed farce of Noises Off, the 1982 play by Michael Frayn that ran for years in the UK. For the first show of the second 5 Pounds of Repertory season, the company had a week, as they do for every play in this season.

And they nailed it.

Noises Off is a who's-that-at-the-door farce about a knickers-down farce that's seen from its frighteningly-real dress rehearsal, then from backstage on a country tour and is finally presented to the audience on its closing night.

It's fucking hilarious and how they did it in a week is astounding. As last year's first five-plays-in-five-weeks experiment proved, the stress of such short rehearsal periods forces creativity and solutions that may never have come up were there time to ponder.

Director Jason Cavanagh has also turned this very British piece into something very local and very about making theatre in Melbourne. Sometimes, there's nothing wrong with a joke for the in crowd. He also jokes about the tour to Nunawading, but the Nunawading audiences are large and appreciative and would go mad for this play.

As is everyone who's seen it. There wasn't a spare seat tonight and there are only a few left for tomorrow and Saturday night. So book for the Saturday matinee now or miss out.

5 Pounds of Rep starts this week

5 Pounds of Rep
Owl and the Pussycat
to 14 December
5pound.com.au




Last year, 5 Pound Theatre transformed themselves into Australia's only working repertory theatre for 5 weeks and presented 5 shows in 5 weeks with 5 actors and 5 directors. It was mad and exciting and produced some incredible theatre in a very short time.

And they're doing it again this year with actors Tim Wotherspoon, Freya Pragt, Brendan Hawke, Lelda Kapsis and Keith Brockett.

Week 1:  13–16 November. Noises Off by Michael Frayne, directed by Jason Cavanagh

Week 2: 20–23  November 20-23rd. Because of Reasons by Robert Reid, directed by Petra Kalive

Week 3:  26–31November. Gilbert and Sullivan Cabaret Review, directed by Fiona Scott-Norman with musical director Karin Muizneiks

Week 4: 3–7 December. The Tempest by William Shakespeare, directed by Daniel Lammin

Week 5: 11–14 December. Sex Diary of an Infidel by Michael Gurr, directed by Marcel Dorney

You can book tickets at 5pound.com.au