31 March 2021

Guest Review: Moth

Moth
Dancehouse

18 March 2021
Dancehouse
to 21 March
www.dancehouse.com.au

Review by Courtney Beaumont

Moth. Photo by Gregory Lorenzutti 


What flame are you drawn to? What gives you life and, paradoxically, death?

MOTH at Dancehouse explores the cyclical experience of life through precise looping choreography, transformative costume design and exemplary cohesive lighting and sound production. 

Like moths to the flame, three dancers (Emily Shoesmith, Mel Tan and Aimee Schollum) contort and twist, fluttering towards the literal and figurative light. Searching for synchronicity within themselves, the performers move in unity as they discover the light. Director, choreographer and performer Aimee Schollum,from New Zealand, creates a devastating and raw world of destruction that explores the futility of life and the beauty that can be found in it. MOTH follows Schollum's first full length work, Sonos, which won Best Dance at the 2018 Melbourne Fringe. 

The choreography is exceptional – immersive, dynamic, meditative and stressful at times as it explores the metamorphosis of the moths, who move with malleable self-assurance, unaware of their own mortality. With precise unity in movement, they are drawn to a shared flame. As it expands, they discover their personal lights, which prompts the audience to contemplate their own flames. 

 The repetitive, looping choreography combines bodily sounds of percussion, along with the droning original sound design by Tamara Violet Partridge. The sound design lends itself greatly to the raw, pack mentality of the moths and follows the life cycle of the moth. When danger arrives the design is heightened with sound that ignites the primal instincts of flutter and panic. 

Amelia Peace’s costume design is transformative as it breathes with its own sound throughout the work. The costumes first swamp the performers, in brown and dust-stained shapeless gowns that move with the performers. Throughout the performance the costumes slowly are removed along with the moths’ metamorphosis. 

The haunting world of MOTH will have you living and dying with the moths, and meditating on what it is to experience life, despite its futility. Beauty can be found in its cyclical and mesmerising transformation of life, death and rebirth.


Courtney Beaumont is a Melbourne based writer, with a background in theatre and performance. She has worked in production for 10News, as well as reporting for the Herald Sun in urban affairs. She currently writes independently and is an active part of the Melbourne theatre community.



Review: Colour-Fool

Colour-Fool
ButohOut! 2021 New Ab/Normal

28 March 2021
Dancehouse
to 28 March
www.dancehouse.com.au

ButohOut! 2021 New Ab/Normal

My review is on artshub.com..au

09 March 2021

Review: The Human Voice

The Human Voice
Periscope Productions
and Choral Edge
4 March 2020
Meat Market Stables
to 13 March

The writers of 'The Human Voice'. Photo by Sarah Walker
Jean Tong, Georgia Symons, Thomas De Angelis, Lewis Treston, Ang Collins, Fiona Spitzkowsky


Periscope Productions developed the idea of a multi-writer production based around the theme of telephone conversations before 2020. So, while The Human Voice's relevance of using technology to communicate rings loud and clear, the work never loses its initial intent or feels like a reaction to lockdown.

The company, who began at Melbourne University student theatre in 2012, were inspired by a 1930 play by Jean Cocteatu and wanted to explore how we talk to each other on telephones. Voice-to-voice; intimacy without without video or emojis.  Are we more honest when all we have are our voices or does it make it easier to hide what we should say or want to say?

Director Benjamin Sheen invited six of Australia's most-exciting emerging writers – Ang Collins, Fiona Spitzkowsky, Georgia Symons, Jean Tong, Lewis Treston and Thomas De Angelis  to write around the theme. 

The six works are performed by an ensemble of equally-as-exciting performers – Amarachi Okorom, Alex Hines, Chris Wallace, Felicity Steel, Cait Spiker, Mason Phoumirath, Ross Dwyer, Senuri Wagaarachchi – and supported by a live choir – Choral Edge (musical director and composer: Juliana Kay; composer David Keefe; movement director Jessica Dick, who also directed two of the pieces). 

Its disparate elements could feel mismatched, but its unexpected synergy is invigorating, engaging and exciting. 

The audience are initially split into two groups who are divided by a curtain. It's clear that there is a stage and performers on each side. The first short works are phone conversions. Everyone can can hear both sides of the conversation, but can only see one side, as the speaker eye rolls, chair stretches or goes on doing the dishes. As there are laughs from the audience watching the other person, it's easy to imagine that their actions might also not mesh with their words.

Each has written a work that could easily stand alone but is supported by and made stronger by those surrounding it. There's the awkward and comfortable love of talking to family, the "are they really?" of phone sex, the "what-if?" ease that not being physically seen, the freedom of confessing to a stranger, the jealousy of someone calling your person too often, to a sci-fi tension-filled thriller with tins and strings, and the inevitable questions of what happens when people are in the same space again.

Themes of communication easily connect the works, but the theatricality of having a live choir brings more layers of connection. At first the choie can only be heard, but the gut-felt power of humans singing together builds as they get closer and are eventually an integral part of the performance.

Hearing human voices can get us through the worst of times and make life feel normal, but being in the same room as other people is how we make theatre. The Human Voice incorporates many independent theatre voices and by exploring one way that we communicate, it finds many ways to connect with all the humans who see it.

04 March 2021

Review: Runt

Runt
Dee/Cornelius/Wilks
2 March 2021
fortyfivedownstairs
to 7 March

Nicci Wilks 'Runt' Photo by Pier Carthew

This is a something special.

Review: We’re probably really really happy right now

We're probably really really happy right now
Theatre Works and Public Service Announcement Theatre Co
25 February 2021
Theatre Works
to 6 March

www.theatreworks.org.au


 

'We're probably really really happy right now' Photo by Pia Johnson

My review in Time Out.