Thursday 15 December 2011

Scared Speechless article, published March 9, 2008


 March 9, 2008

Note: I wrote this article in March 2008 but perhaps it is still relevant. KH

Is theatre scared speechless in the 21st century?   

We are increasingly seeing the emergence of theatre without words. The international theatre marketplace has an impact upon the form of theatre, and touring to major international festivals or non-English speaking countries is great motivation to communicate through wordless theatre.

'Performance' may be a more appropriate name for this work which is often a hybrid incorporating theatrical styles and conventions such as narrative, character, set design and dramatic development with visual and digital arts, puppetry, dance and circus.

European House – A Prelude to Hamlet without Words by Teatro Lliure in Barcelona, places a replica of a three-storey European home on stage. Inside, Hamlet’s family enact their wordless lives after Hamlet’s father’s funeral.

Theatre without words is not new. French mimes, by definition, use no speech as do masked performers. Director, Jerzy Grotowski, began a theatrical revolution with inarticulate grunts, intense physicality and symbolism being key components.

Gillian Cosgriff, Waitressing... and other things I do well, Dec 14, 2011 ***1/2


By Gillian Cosgriff, Produced by Luckiest Productions 
Chapel off Chapel, 14-23 December 2011
Reviewer: Kate Herbert on Dec 14, 2011
Stars: ***1/2
Gillian Cosgriff in Waitressing... and other things I do well

Cute as a button 24-year old, recent WAAPA graduate, Gillian Cosgriff’s one-woman cabaret show, Waitressing ... and other things I do well, is a little gem. Judging by the quality of this performance, Cosgriff does many things well.


In her first solo show, Cosgriff proves an impressive, incisive lyricist, songwriter (think Eddie Perfect minus the punchy political themes), a highly capable pianist, singer and comedic performer. The performance gods have been kind to her.

Cosgriff’s songs and script deal with universal themes that should resonate with most audiences: working in dead-end jobs to make ends meet, being sacked or quitting, dealing with demanding customers, love obsessions, long-distance friendships conducted over Skype, and chasing your dreams.

One song in particular, where Cosgriff draws distinctions between being a performer and being a builder, is a particularly poignant highlight.

The show is a tad long with a couple of flat spots, a few songs have clever lyrics but forgettable tunes and the ‘poor me’ angle gets tired quickly.

When I Fall In Love, Dec 14, 2011 ****1/2


When I Fall In Love: The Nat King Cole Story
Performed by Bert LaBonte, Written by Ross Mueller, Produced by Luckiest Productions

Chapel off Chapel, Prahran, Dec 14 to 23, 2011

Reviewer: Kate Herbert on Dec 14, 2011

Stars: ****&1/2

Bert LaBonte in When I Fall In Love: The Nat King Cole Story


Bert LaBonte launches a charm offensive on us with this homage to legendary, black singer, Nat King Cole, who attributed his silky tones to the three packs of Kool cigarettes a day that eventually killed him.

When I Fall In Love is a musical journey through Cole’s life from his humble, Alabama childhood as the son of a preacher, to playing jazz piano and singing in bars, his television show and rise stardom, his womanising and failed marriages.

LaBonte’s sensitive, restrained performance is an effective interpretation rather than an impersonation of Cole’s character and songs, although his subtle, rich and warm tones often capture the precise timbre of Cole’s idiosyncratic voice.

LaBonte narrates Cole’s life and infuses his own heart-felt passion into Cole’s soulful songs, including a treasure chest of timeless tunes: Nature Boy, Mona Lisa, Unforgettable, Autumn Leaves, Smile and Fascination.

Ross Mueller’s clever, poetic script is the glue between the songs and provides a picture of Cole’s life from a third person perspective.

Friday 9 December 2011

The Christmas Show, Dec 9, 2011 ***

The Christmas Show, by Ready-Set-Go

Dec 7, Clocktower Centre, Moonee Ponds; Dec 9, Whitehorse Centre; Dec 10, Kingston City Hall; Forum Theatre, Dec 16 & 17: all at 10am & 2pm, December 2011

Reviewer: Kate Herbert on Dec 9, 2011 at Whitehorse Centre

Stars:***

  Santa, Trilly the Christmas Tree, Rooby the Reindeer & Mrs Claus


It’s always the children that provide the review for a pre-schoolers’ production and the littlies seem to be attentive and having fun with songs, characters and story during The Christmas Show.



The show features a simple story about Santa losing his memory and his on-stage friends and audience helping him regain his memory by providing him with Christmas Cheer.



Before the story starts, a perky, engaging girl in a Christmas outfit engages the audience, tells the children about the characters and teaches them dance moves.

Tuesday 6 December 2011

Top Shows 2011, Kate's Rant & What's Coming 2012



By Kate Herbert
Friday, December 16, 2011

Note: This article was published in print and online in Herald Sun on Friday, December 16, 2011,
without Kate's Rant included. Pity!

MY 5 TOP SHOWS IN 2011 are mostly from other countries or major companies.
 
Anthony Black’s exceptional, solo performance in Invisible Atom (Canada) is a testament to the power of the actor in this inexorable, poignant, ironic tale about a man’s journey from security toward an inevitable calamity. *****

 Aftermath (USA, Melbourne Festival) is delicate, beautiful, painful theatre based on touching interviews with Iraqi refugees that reveal their resilience, grief and simple joys. It is simply staged but boasts subtle, rich performances and unembellished characterisations.

The Scahubuhne production (Berlin, Melbourne Festival) hurls Ibsen’s Hedda Gabler, into the 21st century with impeccable, nuanced acting, seamless direction and a stark, contemporary design that conjure a claustrophobic, fraught world of human drama. *****

In the compelling, challenging Howie The Rookie (Red Stitch), Mark O’Rowe’s Irish vernacular lingers between vulgarity, comedy and lyricism, vividly portraying a poverty-stricken, urban landscape, violent, unpredictable, hilarious characters and muscular, with barely-contained physicality and poignant performances. ****1/2

With its dexterous direction and formidable cast, the impressive production of Clybourne Park (MTC), Bruce Norris's insightful, acerbic play about bigotry in Chicago in 1959 and 2009, highlights Norris’s consummate dialogue and plotting and his astute, socio-political observations. ****1/2

I’d like to commend Silent Disco , Meow Meow’s Little Match Girl (Malthouse ) and Liza on an E for their imaginative and energetic productions that all warranted ****1/2.

I also really enjoyed:  
Apologia  (MTC) ****
Namitjira  (Malthouse) ****
I am Playing Me  (Butterfly Club) ****

Court in the Act (Rod Quantock) ****
Smoke and Mirrors (IOTA-Spiegeltent) ****

Now read my rant about what I want in the theatre in Melbourne in 2012 - and beyond....

HERE'S WHAT I'M WISHING TO SEE to in our theatres in 2012

·      More new, Australian plays that are fully developed before they hit the stages of major theatre companies (Why not wait to programme them until they are ready?)

·      Greater respect for the work of, and more shows produced by mid- or late-career writers and directors (Is everyone in their 40s or 50s dead suddenly?)

·       Productions programmed on their merit, not simply because the creator/writer is well-known or part of the inner circle (or a shameless self-promoter)

·       Fewer shows by over-rated writers, directors or companies that are promoted beyond their capabilities, competence and quality (Who is commissioning the bad ones or putting them into production before they are cooked?)

·        Fewer funding grants to absurd theatre projects (e.g. “I stand on my head in bucket of water on the top of a building reciting Ovid and Derrida to Arctic Monkeys’ soundtrack”. “Great! Here’s $100,000.”)

·        More original works that are not simply a rehash of someone else’s work (book, script, movie, songs etc.) or a deconstruction of a master work (“Chop it up. It’ll look like art.”)

·        More openings of major, new musicals in Melbourne (The city that flocks to the theatre).
(And I'll keep adding tho the list!)

I think I have Buckley’s of getting my New Year’s wish.

WHAT IS THERE TO LOOK FORWARD TO in the theatres in Melbourne in 2012?

We chanted and cheered at the multitudinous musicals opening in Melbourne early in 2011 but, if you look at the 2012 calendar, you’ll see that Sydney grabbed the big ones – a foolish idea because Melbourne rushes out to see shows while Jersey Boys ran in a smaller theatre in Sydney, Rock of Ages cancelled its Sydney season and went straight to Brisbane, and the NSW government gave cheques to big producers to open in the harbour city. They’ll learn.

Sydney opens Legally Blonde and An Officer and A Gentleman, but stay calm – we still landed a few big productions.

The spectacular How to Train Your Dragon, from Dreamworks and Australian animatronics company, Global Creatures (creators of Walking With Dinosaurs), has its world premiere here in March. It looks like a crowd-puller to beat Grand Finals with its flying, fire-breathing dragons and world-class circus artists.

Late in 2012 at the Arts Centre we will see the poignant, epic and multi award-winning West End production of War Horse, about a boy and his horse during World War One, with startling animatronics (Global Creatures again) and production by National Theatre, Britain.

In May at the Regent, the beloved, red-headed, orphan Annie makes a come back with Anthony Warlow as the charismatic Daddy Warbucks and Nancye Hayes as villainous Mrs. Hannigan.

An Australian production of A Chorus Line finally hits our stages in February at Her Majesty’s with its toe-tapping tales of dancers vying for roles in a Broadway musical. Josh Horner returns to Oz to play Zach, the formidable casting director.

The three Artistic Directors replacing Simon Phillips at the MTC for 2012 (Robyn Nevin, Pamela Rabe, Aidan Fennessy) will make interesting viewing as will Red, a Tony award winner about renowned, visual artist mark Rothko looks compelling and Queen Lear, with Robyn Nevin as a female Lear and the classic Australian play, Summer of the Seventeenth Doll makes a come back to the MTC.

Malthouse hosts a few 2011 Sydney successes including reconstituted version of Ibsen’s Wild Duck that won awards and hearts at Belvoir Street, and Thomas Bernhard’s The Histrionic from Sydney Theatre Company.

There’ll be more to see, so stay posted.

By Kate Herbert

(Note : Apologies.  I was in error when I originally stated, in my first draft, that Jersey Boys closed early. It closed on Sunday, Dec 18, 2011 and ran for 14 months.)

What's on in Melbourne in 2012?


What's coming in 2012?
By Kate Herbert

This article was published in Herald Sun on Friday, December 16, 2011

Note : Apologies.  I was in error when I stated that Jersey Boys closed early. It closes on Sunday, Dec 18, 2011 and ran for 14 months. 


WHAT IS THERE TO LOOK FORWARD TO in the theatres in Melbourne in 2012?

 We chanted and cheered at the multitudinous musicals opening in Melbourne early in 2011 but, if you look at the 2012 calendar, you’ll see that Sydney grabbed the big ones – a foolish idea because Melbourne rushes out to see shows while Jersey Boys ran in a smaller theatre in Sydney, Rock of Ages cancelled its Sydney season and went straight to Brisbane, and the NSW government gave cheques to big producers to open in the harbour city. They’ll learn.

Sydney opens Legally Blonde and An Officer and A Gentleman, but stay calm – we still landed a few big productions.

The spectacular How to Train Your Dragon, from Dreamworks and Australian animatronics company, Global Creatures (creators of Walking With Dinosaurs), has its world premiere here in March. It looks like a crowd-puller to beat Grand Finals with its flying, fire-breathing dragons and world-class circus artists.

Late in 2012 at the Arts Centre we will see the poignant, epic and multi award-winning West End production of War Horse, about a boy and his horse during World War One, with startling animatronics (Global Creatures again) and production by National Theatre, Britain.

In May at the Regent, the beloved, red-headed, orphan Annie makes a come back with Anthony Warlow as the charismatic Daddy Warbucks and Nancye Hayes as villainous Mrs. Hannigan.

An Australian production of A Chorus Line finally hits our stages in February at Her Majesty’s with its toe-tapping tales of dancers vying for roles in a Broadway musical. Josh Horner returns to Oz to play Zach, the formidable casting director.

The three Artistic Directors replacing Simon Phillips at the MTC for 2012 (Robyn Nevin, Pamela Rabe, Aidan Fennessy) will make interesting viewing as will Red, a Tony award winner about renowned, visual artist mark Rothko looks compelling and Queen Lear, with Robyn Nevin as a female Lear and the classic Australian play, Summer of the Seventeenth Doll makes a come back to the MTC.

Malthouse hosts a few 2011 Sydney successes including reconstituted version of Ibsen’s Wild Duck that won awards and hearts at Belvoir Street, and Thomas Bernhard’s The Histrionic from Sydney Theatre Company.

There’ll be more to see, so stay posted.

By Kate Herbert

Kate's top shows of 2011, Dec 6, 2011



My 5 top shows of 2011
 By Kate Herbert
(Note: This article was published in Herald Sun on Friday, December 16, 2011, in print and online)
MY 5 TOP SHOWS IN 2011 are mostly from other countries or major companies.
 
Anthony Black’s exceptional, solo performance in Invisible Atom (Canada) is a testament to the power of the actor in this inexorable, poignant, ironic tale about a man’s journey from security toward an inevitable calamity. *****

 Aftermath (USA, Melbourne Festival) is delicate, beautiful, painful theatre based on touching interviews with Iraqi refugees that reveal their resilience, grief and simple joys. It is simply staged but boasts subtle, rich performances and unembellished characterisations.

The Scahubuhne production (Berlin, Melbourne Festival) hurls Ibsen’s Hedda Gabler, into the 21st century with impeccable, nuanced acting, seamless direction and a stark, contemporary design that conjure a claustrophobic, fraught world of human drama. *****

In the compelling, challenging Howie The Rookie (Red Stitch), Mark O’Rowe’s Irish vernacular lingers between vulgarity, comedy and lyricism, vividly portraying a poverty-stricken, urban landscape, violent, unpredictable, hilarious characters and muscular, with barely-contained physicality and poignant performances. ****1/2

With its dexterous direction and formidable cast, the impressive production of Clybourne Park (MTC), Bruce Norris's insightful, acerbic play about bigotry in Chicago in 1959 and 2009, highlights Norris’s consummate dialogue and plotting and his astute, socio-political observations. ****1/2

I’d like to commend Silent Disco , Meow Meow’s Little Match Girl (Malthouse ) and Liza on an E for their imaginative and energetic productions that all warranted ****1/2.

I also really enjoyed:  
Apologia  (MTC) ****
Namitjira  (Malthouse) ****
I am Playing Me  (Butterfly Club) ****

Court in the Act (Rod Quantock) ****
Smoke and Mirrors (IOTA-Spiegeltent) ****

Next read my rant about what I want in the theatre in Melbourne in 2012 - and beyond....

By Kate Herbert

Friday 2 December 2011

Strands, Peta Brady, Dec 1, 2011 ****


Strands 
By Peta Brady, produced by La Mama 
La Mama Theatre, Dec 1 to 18, 2011
Reviewer: Kate Herbert on December 1, 2011
Stars:****
Wilhelmina Stracke and Peta Brady in Strands

IN STRANDS,  Peta Brady’s beautifully crafted little gem of a play, Brady and Wilhelmina Stracke create the poignant, wryly funny and private world of two adult sisters, one of whom is intellectually disabled and the other damaged by their tough childhood.

Hope (Stracke) and Destiny’s (Brady) life together is lived in a capsule and Brady and Stracke fully inhabit these two fragile but adorable personalities with all their flaws, shared memories and confusion about the world into which they were born.

Stracke is mesmerising as sweet, loving and generous Hope, the baby sister who was born with Foetal Alcohol Syndrome and, as she describes it, holes in her brain.

It is rare to see an actor capture with such truth and sensitivity the details of intellectual disability, perseveration, mood swings and childlikeness without parody or patronising.

Brady’s older sister, Destiny, is brittle, nervy, rake thin, resentful of their alcoholic mother’s abandonment of them and perpetually struggling with her role as Hope’s surrogate parent and her own need for independence.

Until this watershed day Hope lived with their loving Nan, but Nan’s recent death means that Hope must leave Nan’s supportive home to live ‘with other Nans’ in a nursing home.

As they pack Nan’s house into two boxes, Hope, like a sweet and demanding child, begs for just one more story from Destiny – the repository of her family memories – and pleads to live with Destiny and her cat.

Nan is only present in a jar of her ashes but Destiny soothes Hope by play-acting as Nan in her wig and spectacles.

Their mother’s expressionistic painting captures the only lasting image they have of their family and a glossy violin is Hope’s great joy.

There is only one brief section in the middle when the rhythm of the script falters a little, but this is quickly forgotten as the story shifts its focus and surges to its endearing ending.


Sue Jones directs her actors with subtlety and delicacy, and we grow to love this wounded pair and to cheer for the survival of Hope and Destiny’s tender and moving relationship.

By Kate Herbert 

Writer: Peta Brady
Cast: Peta Brady & Wilhelmina Stacke
Director: Sue Jones
Dramaturg: Catherine Hill
Designer: Belinda Wiltshire
Stage Manager: Bec Etchell

Thursday 1 December 2011

The Story of Mary MacLane By Herself, Nov 30, 2011 ***


The Story of Mary MacLane By Herself 
Text by Bojana Novakovic, from writings by Mary MacLane
Music By Tim Rogers, produced by Malthouse Theatre
Beckett Theatre, Malthouse, Nov 30 to Dec 11, 2011
Reviewed by: Kate Herbert on Wed, Nov 30, 2011
Stars:***
Published in Herald Sun and online on Fri, Dec 2, 2011

 Andy Baylor, Dan Witton, Tim Rogers, Bojana Novakovic: The Story of Mary MacLane By Herself, Photo:Jeff Busby

IN A NUTSHELL, Canadian-born diarist, Mary MacLane, the subject of this play, is a narcissist of the first order who had some success in the early 1900s with her confessional and controversial, memoir writings.

Bojana Novakovic, directed by Tanya Goldberg, resurrects MacLane’s fiery, self-indulgent, often maudlin writings and massages them into a loose, autobiographical rant accompanied by songs and music performed by Tim Rogers, Andy Baylor and Dan Witton.

On a distorted, Victorian melodrama-style stage, designed by Anna Cordingley, Novakovic, clad only in flimsy, silky undergarments, addresses us directly, obsessing about death, lovers, lesbianism, the devil and cold baked potatoes – her comfort food.

Novakovic embodies Mary as a dislikeable, egotistical, young woman who believes only in her own genius and the world’s lack of appreciation of her talents. MacLane has plenty in common with the naval-gazing bloggers and twitterings on 21st century, digital media.

Perhaps she was a “mental freak or a literary fraud”, as one reviewer suggested, but she is in vogue again a century later.

Rogers conducts proceedings like a snake-oil salesman or Music Hall compere, introducing Mary, guiding her through monologues or intervening when she becomes hysterical.

Rogers has energy and presence, leading the musicians as if they are a Greek Chorus commenting on the action through recitative, playful tunes and lyrics such as the grabby tune, I Don’t Know Why?

Rogers (guitar), Witton (double bass) and Baylor (violin) also underscore Mary’s emotional state with evocative music, but Witton’s exceptional vocal skill was surprisingly underused.

After an initial frisson of interest in Mary’s ramblings, the middle of the play is slow, repetitive and ineffective.

However, the final scenes depicting Mary’s slide into depression and mania are more compelling, despite Novakovic lacking vocal control in more manic moments.

By Kate Herbert

Wednesday 30 November 2011

Musical Works, Nov 30, 2011 **


Give My Regards To Broady 
Music, Lyrics & Book by Karin Muiznieks, Music by James Simpson
Housewarming: A New Musical: by Apollo Productions
Theatreworks, St. Kilda, Nov 27 to Dec 10, 2011
Reviewed by: Kate Herbert on Nov 29, 2011
Stars:**

MUSICAL WORKS OFFERS A DOUBLE BILL of short, new Australian musicals, the first of which is Give My Regards to Broady, by Karin Muiznieks and James Simpson, and the second is Housewarming: A New Musical.

The most successful component of Give My Regards to Broady is the range of classic, music theatre songs and it would be best served by ditching everything but the songs and getting a writer to develop a strong story around the catchy tunes.

The self-referential story deals with two wannabees, Karin (Claire Healy) and James (Leigh Jane Booth), trying to write the next big musical.

This shares something with [title of show], the hit, US musical about two guys writing a musical about writing a musical.

However, this production, directed by Scott Gooding, is let down by a sketchy narrative, a lack of dramatic development, thin characters, clumsy dialogue and laboured gags.

The singers work hard to pump energy into cheesy dialogue but are most effective and entertaining when singing.

We’re Gonna Make It, sung by Healy and Booth, is a perky anthem for young hopefuls and, in Melbourne Cup, Healy’s bright tones blend well with Joe Kosky’s rich voice.

Many songs reference local topics. North Vs South, sung by Healy with Lauren Murtagh, is a song-battle about the rivalry between those living north or south of the Yarra, while Suburban Love talks wittily about Melbourne’s suburbs.

The show needs a title song and a clear narrative through-line to give the songs a framework on which to hang.


Stars:**

Friday 25 November 2011

Grey Gardens, Nov 24, 2011 ***


Grey Gardens 
Book by Doug Wright, Music by Scott Frankel, Lyrics by Michael Korie
Produced by The Production Company
Playhouse, Victorian Arts Centre, Nov 24 to Dec 4, 2011
Reviewed: Kate Herbert, November 24, 2011
Stars:***
Published in Herald Sun on Monday Nov 28, 2011
 
Nancye Hayes & Pamela Rabe in Grey Gardens, The Production Company, Melbourne

If you missed the unsettling documentary, Grey Gardens, this Tony award winning musical adaptation captures the essence of the riches to rags story of Jacqueline Kennedy’s eccentric, formerly wealthy cousin, ‘Little’ Edie Bouvier Beale (Pamela Rabe) and aunt, Edith Bouvier Beale (Nancye Hayes).

The musical is set in Grey Gardens, a 28-room mansion in the Hamptons during two time periods: 1941 when it was elegant and luxurious, and 1973 when Edie and Edith were living in squalor in the dilapidated, filthy mansion, overrun with cats and facing a Board of Health action.

By splitting the action into two periods, playwright Doug Wright allows comparison of their privileged, hopeful past with the grim reality of their squalid future.

Grey Gardens has some great songs and delicious characters, but the second half is the more compelling.

Scott Frankel’s music balances peppy show tunes with poignant ballads and Michael Korie’s skilfully crafted, witty and rapid lyrics encapsulate the peculiar behaviour and bizarre quotes from the real women.

Pamela Rabe plays Edith in 1941, but is more effective, entertaining, sympathetic and detailed as Edie in 1973, so we forgive her vocal, upper register limitations.

Rabe is hilarious singing Revolutionary Costume and totally inhabits Edie with her oddball habits, observations and speech patterns and weird costumes constructed from old clothing.

However, Rabe lacks vocal control singing the restrained, emotional ballad, Another World.

Nancye Hayes is suitably demanding, obsessive and irrational as Edie’s mother, Edith, and she sings a fine version of The Girl Who Has Everything.

Liz Stiles is a playful Young Edie with a bright vocal tone, James Millar is comically camp as Gould, while Bert LaBonte, Alex Rathgeber and John O’May are capable in other roles.

Grey Gardens has some great songs and delicious characters, but the second half is the more compelling with its disquieting view of this fractious, co-dependent relationship.

Monday 21 November 2011

Day One. A Hotel, Evening, Nov 18, 2011 **1/2


Day One. A Hotel, Evening 
By Joanna Murray-Smith
Produced by Red Stitch Actors’ Theatre
Red Stitch Actors’ Theatre, November 16 to December 17, 2011
Reviewed by: Kate Herbert on Sunday November 20, 2011
Stars: **1/2
Published in Herald Sun on Nov 23, 2011
 Sarah Sutherland, John Adam, Dion Mills, Kate Cole in Day One. A Hotel, Evening by Joanna Murray-Smith,. Red Stitch
Complicated romantic entanglements provide rich hunting grounds for moviemakers and playwrights, including Shakespeare and Moliere. Joanna-Murray-Smith’s play, Day One. A Hotel, Evening, is a peculiar collision of French farce, screwball comedy and modern rom-coms (romantic-comedies).

However, there are no happy relationships, happy individuals, nor even a happy outcome for the three morally repugnant, dislikeable couples in Murray-Smith’s story.
  
Madeleine (Kate Cole) and Sam (Dion Mills), Stella (Sarah Sutherland) and Tom (John Adam), and Rose (Anna Samson) and Ray (Ryan Hayward) all live twisted, duplicitous love lives. Tom has an affair with both Madeleine, his best friend’s wife, and with Rose, who is, in turn, involved with Sam. Meanwhile, the two who aren’t cheating, Stella and Ray, plan their violent revenge. Got all that?

Despite some deficiencies in the script and direction, there are some fine performances from a skilful cast, with the standout being Sutherland who captures perfectly the farcical, broad, comic style in her portrayal of hysterical artist, Stella.

Murray-Smith’s writing delivers some smart, witty observations about inner-urban, moneyed couples, but the language is often convoluted, dense and difficult to follow, frequently sounding like commentary rather than theatrical dialogue.

Gary Abrahams’ direction exacerbates the problem with actors’ speeding through lengthy, verbose speeches as if they consumed too many espressos between the 20+-plus, short scenes.

The ethical ambiguity of this play is highlighted when Ray, a professional killer, utters the most intelligent and sincere observations about the nature and importance of love. The intention may be to amuse with satirical commentary on modern life but the production lacks any emotional engagement, which leaves us feeling disconnected and dissatisfied.

By Kate Herbert

Sunday 20 November 2011

Bad Blood Blues, Nov 19, 2011 ***


Bad Blood Blues
By Paul Sirett
Chapel off Chapel , 11 to 26 November, 2011
Reviewed by: Kate Herbert on November 19, 2011
Stars: *** 

Published in Herald Sun on Nov 23, 2011
Glenda Linscott & Blessing Mokgohloa in Bad Blood Blues. Photo by Simon Parris
More than 60 million Africans carry the HIV / AIDS virus and women are a disproportionate percentage of sufferers. Paul Sirett’s Bad Blood Blues is set against this terrifying reality.

Workaholic medical researcher, Clare (Glenda Linscott), is conducting a double-blind, drug trial in an undisclosed African country to test the effectiveness of two anti-retroviral treatments – including AZT – on a group of HIV-infected, African women.

Clare’s marriage to her project is almost derailed by her unexpected sexual relationship with 22-year old Patrice (Blessing Mokgohloa), whose initial, boyish innocence masks a deeper, sinister agenda about his sister who is an AIDS sufferer and participant in Clare’s trial.

Patrice’s deception and manipulation of Clare is the catalyst for the characters to explore and debate some weighty ethical issues arising from the conduct of drugs trials in third world countries.

The initial awkwardness between the characters gives way to a more relaxed communication only to explode into a passionate, then angry relationship.

This 70-minute production, tightly directed by Chris Parker, boasts fine performances by Linscott and Mokgohloa and is accompanied by the soulful, live guitar of David Marama.

Mokgohloa shifts cleverly from formal student to smart manipulator and Linscott gives Clare the edge of desperation of a driven, lonely woman masking her pain with overwork and alcohol.

If you like thought provoking, issues-based theatre, this production raises moral, ethical and political issues and questions the first world’s treatment of the developing world.

Friday 18 November 2011

The Importance of Being Earnest, Nov 17, 2011 ***1/2


The Importance of Being Earnest 
By Oscar Wilde, Melbourne Theatre Company
MTC Sumner Theatre, November 17 to January 14, 2012
Reviewed by Kate Herbert on November 17, 2011
Stars: *** 1/2
Published in Herald Sun on Nov 21, 2011

 Emily Barclay, Geoffrey Rush, Patrick Bramall in The Importance of Being Earnest. Photo by Jeff Busby
Oscar Wilde is considered one of Britain's great, comic playwrights, and his renowned comedy of manners, The Importance of Being Earnest, is like two hours of Victorian stand-up comedy –witticisms come thick and fast with little physical action.

In this production, Simon Phillips’ swansong for MTC, Geoffrey Rush is uncannily convincing playing the doughty, elderly dowager, Lady Bracknell, with truthfulness, impeccable comic delivery and a supercilious tone – all while wearing an impressive, aristocratic gown. But, I can't help craving just a little more parody of the character.

‘In matters of grave importance style, not sincerity, is the vital thing,’ quips Gwendolen and Wilde’s plays are fine examples of style over content with their farcical plots, witty banter and two-dimensional characters.


Listening to relentlessly witty repartee can be tiring and this production often flags. On opening night, the actors seemed  a little uncomfortable with the style, the dynamic range felt limited and the rhythm and pace unbalanced, but these issues may improve with more shows.

Patrick Brammall and Toby Schmitz are an effective comic, double act as the two young toffs who assume different identities in town and country and awkwardly both end up called Earnest. Schmitz’s clumsy, blustering, clownish John Worthing is counter-balanced by Brammall’s egotistical, confident, entitled snob, Algernon.

Christie Whelan is elegantly snobbish as Gwendolen, finding subtle, physical comedy despite her restrictive, albeit gorgeous gowns. Emily Barclay is pert and funny as Cecily, Worthing’s hopelessly romantic, opinionated young ward.

Bob Hornery delights in hamming up the two butlers– the smug, efficient Lane and doddering, old Merriman – and steals the stage during scene changes.


Jane Menelaus and Tony Taylor play the unrequited, middle-aged love match, with Menelaus suitably prim, dowdy and spinsterly as Miss Prism, while Taylor’s addled and socially awkward Canon Chasuble stops short of the character’s requisite, droning dullness.

A highlight is the late Tony Tripp’s outsized, picture book design of Aubrey Beardsley drawings (realised for stage by Richard Roberts).

Wilde’s play is a wicked, social satire on the hypocrisy of Victorian society, its values and class system but perhaps its style craves some adapting to the 21st century theatrical climate.

By Kate Herbert
Stars: ***1/2