SHIT! by Patricia Cornelius, NEON MTC
At MTC Southbank Theatre, The Lawler
From June 26 to July 5, 2015
I have
not yet seen this show but it is at the top of my list. I was not reviewing it
for Herald Sun. Dee and Cornelius are two of my favourite theatre makers. See
it! KH
Cast: Peta
Brady, Sarah Ward, Nicci Wilks
Director Susie
Dee
Set and Costume
Designer: Marg Horwell
Lighting
Designer: Rachel Burke
Sound Designer:
Anna Liebzeit
Production/Stage
Manager: Bec Moore
Producer: Ebony
Bott
From Media Release
MTC NEON
'Long-time collaborators Susie Dee and Patricia
Cornelius present SHIT, a new play about women and girls who defy gender
demarcations and transgress the boundaries and restraints of social order and
expectation.
'When a girl spits, or swears, or screams, or shouts,
or pulls down her pants to ‘moon’ someone from a car, or she laughs too loudly,
or she’s too shrill, or she pulls up her t-shirt and flashes her tits, or she fights,
really fights, head butts and
with her fists, or she fucks too
much or cuts her hair too short, and wears too much lipstick or none at all, or
tells everyone she’s got a dick and she’s not a girl at all, all we want to do with
this girl is lock her up and throw away the key. Out of control girls, angry,
nasty girls are a sight to behold. They’re terrifying, electrifying, they’re
everything girls shouldn’t be, and we hate them.
'This is a work about these girls. Their names are
Billy, Bobby and Sam. There’s not a single moment when the three young women
transcend their ugliness. There’s no indication of a better, or in fact any,
inner life.
'Dee and Cornelius said, ‘A team of ten female theatre
makers have come together to create a work about women that are rarely seen on
the stage. We want to empower these women with a vitality and drive and allow
them the chance to come back at a world which despises them.’
'Susie Dee and Patricia Cornelius have made work
together for about 30 years.
'Susie has directed Patricia’s plays: Max, Taxi, The
Berry Man and Savages. They first
worked together as actors in Cornelius’ Lilly and May which toured nationally
and overseas. They both come from a very visceral and physical approach to a
theatre which is equally rigorous and vital in the language it uses and in what
it has to say about the world.
'This production contains powerfully offensive language.'
from Media Release MTC NEON
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