Sunday 24 April 2022

Dear Ida by Lisa Petty, La Mama, Digital, 24 April, 2022 ***

THEATRE

At La Mama Courthouse, during April 2022 

Virtual season 23 April to 7 May 2022

Reviewer: Kate Herbert  - review of recorded show

Stars: ***

This review published only on this blog. KH

Cast: Dear Ida- pic from virtual season

Dear Ida is a performance about the positive and often healing role of dance halls and dancing during World War II in Australia, all presented as a collage of verbal and physical stories based on oral histories gathered by the writer and director, Lisa Petty.

The play interweaves scenes and monologues about public and private attitudes and behaviours related to the dance halls, including scenes featuring young women doing their dull, daily chores, excitedly singing popular, wartime tunes, preparing for dances and attending the dance halls.

Friday 22 April 2022

Half Steam Ahead! by Con Coutis, April MICF, 21 April 2022 ***1/2

COMEDY

Part of Melbourne International Comedy Festival 2022

At Butterfly Club from 4 to 20 April 2022 (Season finished)

Reviewer: Kate Herbert This review of recorded show from season

Stars: 3***1/2

 This review published only on this blog. KH

Con Coutis in Half Steam Ahead!
Full Steam Ahead! is Con Coutis’s clever, solo, comedy show that takes the piss out of cruise ships and lots of other topics.

 

Coutis vividly creates the environment of a cruise ship on which he is the resident stand-up comedian and constructs a loose through line by interspersing short, snappy snatches of a stand-up routine amongst a bunch of quirky sketches and character bits.

Thursday 14 April 2022

The Gala Part One, MICF_REVIEW_ ABC IVIEW, 11 April 2022 ****

COMEDY

Part of Melbourne International Comedy Festival 2022

Filmed at Palais Theatre, St Kilda, 29 March 2022

Gala is screening on ABC IView in 4 parts

Reviewer: Kate Herbert - review of Part 1 of series of 4

Stars: ****

This review published only on this blog. KH

Frank Woodley & Colin Lane in Moby Dick

 

This first episode of The Gala, Melbourne International Comedy Festival 2022, hosted by Steph Tisdell, has a lot of stand-ups – and then there’s Lano And Woodley who wipe the floor with everyone before them.

 

As the last act, Lano and Woodley take the stage and the audience by storm, leaving the rest of the pack far, far behind. Their excerpt from their 2022 work, Moby Dick, shows everyone else how to do comedy that is not stand-up, is not all about Covid, and doesn’t feature ‘Does this happen to you, too?' gags.

Wednesday 13 April 2022

In Blood, DIGITAL SEASON, Zachary Kazepis, 13 April 2022 ***

 THEATRE

Written, devised, scored and performed by Zachary Kazepis

At La Mama 5-10 April 2022

Digital season follows live season:  https://watch.lamama.com.au/pages/home

Reviewer: Kate Herbert  Review of digital season recorded on 9 April 2022.

Stars:***

This review published only on this blog. KH

Zachary Kazepis- In Blood- pic Darren Gill


In Blood depicts a young man, hand-cuffed, with his face and hands smeared with blood, seated at a table or pacing the confined space as he relates the story of his short, disappointed life that brought him to this dark moment.

 

Zachary Kazepis is alone on stage as he tells episodes from the young man’s childhood to an unseen listener. We hear of his beloved Grandma, his uncle and their arrival in this small town to live in a blue, fibro house. He is bullied by other boys and by the school principal until the hate and rage rise inside him.

Unravel_Reckoning, Susan Bamford Caleo & Elissa Goodrich–DIGITAL–12 April 2022 ****

THEATRE WITH MUSIC

Created and Performed by Susan Bamford Caleo and Elissa Goodrich  

 At La Mama Courthouse Theatre 

Virtual Season: Apr 5 - Apr 19, 2022

Reviewer: Kate Herbert  

Review of  live recording on Friday 1 April 2022 at La Mama Courthouse Theatre, Carlton

Stars:  ****

This review published only on this blog. KH

Unravel_Reckoning_L-R: Susan Bamford Caleo, Elissa Goodrich, pic by Darren_Gill  

 

Unravel_Reckoning is a wrenching reinterpretation through voice, physicality and percussive music, of the story of Medea, the ancient Greek woman, sorceress, wife and mother who murdered her own children when her husband, Jason, married a younger woman, a princess. 

 

The most famous version of Medea’s gruesome story is the Ancient Greek play by Euripides, but this performance, created and performed by Susan Bamford Caleo and Elissa Goodrich, has no linear narrative thread.

Monday 11 April 2022

Censored -WTF?! Show, 10 April 2022 ***

COMEDY

Censored – What the Fuck Show

At 1-23 April 2022 at Club Voltaire Nth Melbourne

Melbourne International Comedy Festival (MICF) 

Reviewer: Kate Herbert This review of recorded live performance on 1 April

Stars:  ***

This review published only on this blog. KH

L-R: Mick Moore, JNewtz, Milton White- The Putin Song- pic by Michael Reynolds

If your pet hates include Woke culture, Cancel culture, the rise of choose-your-own gender pronouns and other sacred cows, then the WTF Show?! Censored may be just your bag.

 

The show comprises a program of three solo comedians, Milton White, JNewtz and Mick Moore, followed by the same trio doing a series of live and recorded comic sketches, some of which are funnier than others.

Sunday 10 April 2022

Interview with Anthony Wong: Asian-Australian actors & cross-cultural casting 21 Nov 1994

NB: I wrote this article in November 1994, almost 30 years ago. Perhaps some things have changed? KH

Written by Kate Herbert 21 Nov 1994

This article published in The Melbourne Times around late Nov or early Dec 1994

 

Sydney-based actor, Anthony Wong believes having no positive roles models is discouraging for aspiring young Asian actors. "Imagine going to a movie house and seeing someone who looked like yourself portrayed as an idiot, raped of their dignity and dehumanised and multiply that by thirty years and that's what my experience has been like. It has a really damaging effect on your self-esteem."

 

Wong is a Chinese-Australian who has lived here all his life and speaks a negligible amount of Chinese. He admits he feels like an outsider on many levels. "When I go see Australian movies ... there are many aspects of Australian culture I relate to and then again I'm excluded on all other levels."

 

He recently went to the Hong Kong film festival and found "it was so wonderfully validating seeing Asian actors and actresses in lead roles playing complex people." Simultaneously, because of the specifically Hong Kong Chinese culture, there are other levels on which he felt excluded. "It's very odd having one foot in each camp."

 

Australia may have integrated the concept of a multicultural, multi-racial, multi-lingual community into our daily lives, but the film and television industries have not yet caught up. With Justine Saunders and Lydia Miller, Wong met with several commercial television executives earlier this year to discuss increasing cultural diversity on Australian television to represent the reality in the community. The reponse was almost ridiculously narrow-minded.

 

“’Commercial television isn't meant to be reality. It's meant to be fantasy.’ And I looked at Justine and Lydia and we said, 'How come your fantasy is Anglo-Saxon? White, middle-class and heterosexual.' They didn't have an answer for that."

 

Wong suggests that television executives and casting agents point the finger at training institutions that produce few trained actors from cultures from other than WASP backgrounds. Strangely, television has a habit of using untrained and often incompetent kid-models in its soaps these days, so this argument hardly counts.

 

"Every justification is pulled out of the cupboard to justify maintaining the status quo.

'We won't be able to get the people. The Australian public just don't want to see Asians or Kooris. They want to see their own people'." Apart from the fact that Australians are ‘these people’, Wong believes this argument is also fallacious.

 

"Look at the success of Annette Shun Wah and the commercial success of The Joy Luck Club, The Wedding Banquet, Dragon, Farewell My Concubine, The Last Emperor. Mainstream films with lead Asian actors will strike a chord with Western audiences so this a totally outmoded notion."

 

When the industry does use Asians on screen, Wong believes they fall into four recurrent stereotypes. Firstly, the enemy: members of the Japanese Yakuzah or Chinese Triad. Then the exotic, delicate beauty we can admire from afar or those who are easy sex objects. There is the image of the sage old man with a goatee who quotes Confucian wisdom and lastly, the demeaning roles of servants and house boys "who get tapped on the head and bring in the tea."

 

"I know Asians who are television producers, fashion designers, Justices of the Peace, choreographers. Where are these people on our screens?", asks Wong.

 

It is now time, after years of acceptance, to act politically and publicly on this issue.

From the beginning of his acting career Wong decided to deal positively with a work environment which cast him as an outsider. Being negative “would have been suicidal psychologically… Eleven years down the line I cannot deny there are glaring inequalities...It is important for someone to speak up."

 

Wong praises Melbourne theatre director, Bruce Myles, who employed what has become known as "Colour-Blind Casting" when he cast Wong in Louis Nowra's The Temple, last year. The role of Nick Albert was obviously not Asian but even so, one Melbourne critic described him as "Laurie Blake's Japanese adviser." Do all Asians look alike to him?

 

A further criticism by Wong of Western screen representations of Asians is that they over-sexualise Asian women and under-sexualise the men. "Asian women are portrayed to be disempowered sex objects and the Asian men are portrayed as almost devoid of sexuality...It's a very powerful way to strip an entire race of its power."

 

It is unacceptable for Caucasians to play Asians, says Wong, "given the situation that there's a lack of equality in Australian casting. My principle, my philosophy is that all actors, regardless of race or sexual preference or anything, should be able to play a diversity of roles. If we had a truly egalitarian society where I could go for the kinds of roles that Russell Crowe goes for, for example. I would say 'Go for it!'" Which, of course, is a scenario which remains in an ideal world.

 

Emotionally, his response is different. "I've seen too many white actors play Asians in such demeaning, demoralising, dehumanising ways that I 'd have a pretty negative reaction unless they were going to play an Asian character with incredible truth and complexity."

 

It is the dreadful stereotype of the buck-toothed Charlie Chan which has exacerbated the problem and trivialised a whole race. But a stereotype is often the basis of comedy.

 

“In Wogarama, I was playing a stereotype”, says Wong. 'However, I've done enough other things in my career to counter-balance that. It's always a question of balance...If we had Asians in regular complex roles in film and television, then a stereotype would mean very little."

 

The Media and Entertainment Arts Alliance, Actors Equity division has attempted to set up a series of guidelines encouraging producers of Commercial television to diversify in its casting and production. According to Wong, it acts more as a reminder than as a policy. Once again it is up to the people in power to implement the suggestions.

 

Wong sees Asian actors being employed as "otherness machines" or to portray a particular issue. "It's as if the Asian characters are wearing a placard saying, “I'm Phillipino" or "I'm a battered Chinese housewife" and often the program does not encourage you to see beyond the placard."

 

There is little exploration of the Asian Australian experience on an urban level. "A recurrent theme in film is World War Two Burma railway and Japanese brides," says Wong.

 

Is there an Australian soap which has Asian next-door neighbours?

 

Recently, Wong talked about the issue on Radio National program, Arts Today, and was invited to speak at a cross-cultural casting forum at The National Performance Conference in Melbourne in October.

 

Wong describes being an Asian actor in the west as "like going to a banquet and the Maitre D' says to you, 'You're not to eat anything except the prawn crackers.'...And most of the time you're not even invited to the party. So", he says with a wicked giggle, "I just gate crash."

 

The protest about the non-presence of Asians on screen is not a sudden event. "It's been building up over generations...Asians have been living in the West for many years integrating the ideas of democracy, self-assertion, political activism. "Certain world events - e.g. Tien A Min Square and the emergence of Michael Chang as a top tennis player – have had implications.

 

"It's not any one event that triggers it. It's like the 100th monkey syndrome ...It's all gathering in the collective unconscious and then it bursts in one part of the world and people are inspired by that to then take up their own political activism."

 

The movement to improve the status of Asian actors in screen and theatre is further advanced in America. Asian-American actors such as John Lone, Joan Chen, B.D. Wang who won the Tony award for M. Butterfly, Jason Scott Lee and Brandon Lee have raised the profile of the Asian actor. Much of the credit is due to the Asian-American Theatre which has pressured organisations and unions to political action. Remember the kerfuffle when Jonathon Pryce was to perform the Asian-American role in Miss Saigon In New York?

 

"Hollywood cannot be complacent anymore. They cannot expect that they can release a movie dragging the old Asian stereotypes out of the closet....and expect the Asian-American community to bow down and accept that." There was vigorous protest in the Asian-American press about The Shadow starring John Lone, which featured a 'Confucius says' kind of thing", explains Wong.

 

In the U.S., much of the action has been initiated by the Theatre community rather than the screen world and theatre in Australia, says Wong, has been much more willing to accept a range of actors. Theatre is where Wong has had most success breaking the straight jacket of stereotyping. But he believes it is in film and television "where you build a public profile, where you learn you reach a position of recognition, where you can put bums on seats - and that gives you the power to make better decisions in theatre. Screen being a popular medium is where the impact must be felt."

 

What are our solutions to this problem which is essentially a symptom of short sightedness on the part of directors, producers and writers who are not representative of our whole community? Do we legislate? Invoke Equal Opportunity laws and Affirmative Action clauses?

 

Wong believes this can create new problems. It could disguise the problem. There is a quota system in the United States which, says Wong, forces producers to employ Asian, Black, Hispanic actors but they can use them in token roles.

 

"Extras are black or Asian, but the main cast stays white. "The producers can sit back glowing with politically correct pride saying, ’We've done our bit. We've been progressive in our casting’ when all you have seen is an Asian cook in the background frying the dim sims.

 

"Maybe we need an Asian-Australian theatre or specific funding from Australia Council to fund specifically locally produced work by local Asian dramatists. "

 

We are all affected by the portrayal by the media of a world populated almost exclusively by the Blond and the Beautiful. But how would one feel growing up watching a screen which does not even acknowledge the existence of your race or else represents your racial group as appalling stereotypes?

 

It is always a matter of placing members of a particularly invisible group in the arts in positions of creative power: writer, directors, producers, funders. There has been a move by women artists to penetrate the predominantly male arts bureaucracy which is very slowly affecting the marketplace.

 

Australia does not have a David Henry Hwang (U.S.-Chinese writer of the award-winning M. Butterfly) nor does it have an Asian-Australian Theatre Company. A good model adn precursor would be the developing Koori performance culture with the evolution of the Black Swan Theatre Company, Jack Davis' and Sally Morgan's plays and the Aboriginal and Islander Dance School in Sydney.

 

Again, at the hands of Myles, Wong played Toni, a male prostitute transvestite, in Michael Gurr's Award winning play, Sex Diary of an Infidel.

 

"Playing Toni was a huge breakthrough for Australian theatre 'cos here was an actor who on the surface appeared to be a sleezy sex object in some people's minds and turns out to be the angel of the piece."

 

Wong has been cast in a number of roles in which he is playing sexually assertive characters which, he believes, goes against the stereotypical attitudes to the Asian male. In the Chinese erotic poetry in Gastronomica, as The Swan for South Australian Theatre Company, as Toni and as David in Unidentified Human Remains. "I find it delicious," he quips cheekily.

 

Training institutions can take initiative by taking affirmative action by targeting applicants from Asian cultures rather than pleading 'nobody applied'. Wong expressed concern that "NIDA [National Institute of Dramatic Art, Sydney] is supposed to be colour blind but it had never been colour-blind."

 

It seems that it is information that the community needs. If we are not Asian-Australians, we probably do not even notice the problem. "It's not important enough. It's not in people's consciousness," says Wong. Our theatre and television industry is Anglo-centric. Not until people get up in arms, hit the press in force, make the public sit up and take notice, will the situation change. So, start talking about it - Now!

 

 

KATE HERBERT 21 November 1994

Friday 8 April 2022

Sisters & Night by Raimondo Cortese, REVIEW of VIDEO- 8 April 2022 ***1/2

THEATRE – Archival video

 Sisters & Night - two short plays by Raimondo Cortese

By Metanoia Theatre Production

At The Bergy Seltzer, Brunswick until Sun 27 March 2022. 

This review of video of performance on 16 March 2022

Reviewer: Kate Herbert (of video performance)

Stars: ***1/2

This review published only on this blog. KH

Miles Paris, Yogashree Thiru in Sisters (pic from video)

Sisters, written by Raimondo Cortese, is an intimate snapshot of siblings, Michelle (Miles Paris), and her sister, Tess (Yogashree Thiru), as they lounge around in Tess’s home, bickering and laughing as they evidently waiting for someone to arrive.

 

Cortese’s writing, combined with Greg Ulfan’s unobtrusive direction, creates a conversation that is fragmented, rambling, fluctuating from calmness and warmth to heightened agitation, with sudden bursts of anger that flare up and then pass as quickly as they arise. 

 

Tess swigs on a wine bottle, getting progressively more drunk, vocal and sweary as Michelle waits and watches, offering to clean, asking leading questions about Tess’s business and their mother’s involvement in it.

 

They alternate between praise and criticism of each other or defensiveness and self-criticism. There are long pauses, sudden changes of subject, musings and challenging as they talk about mum, men, strangers, business, study, sex, ageing bodies, disappointment, failed dreams and expectations. 

 

Their conversation is peppered with off-stage characters, including Max, Tess’s young son, Max’s father and his mates, the sisters’ mum who casts a cloud over Tess’s world, and a bevy of other characters.

 

The pair only infrequently look at each other, which is perhaps a sign that they do not need social niceties and courtesies that are owed to non-siblings, or it may be that both sisters are preoccupied with their own thoughts, insecurities and anxieties.

 

This is a well-performed, deftly directed and cleverly written 30 minute play that should see the stage more often.

 

Sisters is accompanied in the double bill by Night, another Cortese play, that depicts two women at a night club and is performed by Miles Paris and Kathleen Lee.

 

 by Kate Herbert 

 

Directed by Greg Ulfan

With Miles Paras, Yogashree Thiru, Kathleen Lee

Music by Chris Bolton

Lighting by Shane Grant

 


 

Stories About My Body by Morgana O’Reilly -REVIEW- 7 April 2022 ***1/2

Melbourne International Comedy Festival 2022

At Malthouse Theatre from 13 to 24 April 2022

This review is of a video of the performance filmed in New Zealand on 26 March 2022.

Reviewer: Kate Herbert

Stars: ***1/2

This review published only on this blog. KH

Morgana O'Reilly, photo by Amanda Billing

In her solo comedy show, Stories About My Body, Morgana O’Reilly is charming, relaxed, animated and engaging and her stand-up material is confessional and pacey.

 

Her performance style is skilful, showing her actorly technique, and her comedy routine has dynamic range, emotion, truth-telling, confessional details and even some factoids and quotes from writers.

 

O’Reilly explains her 13-year-old self’s dreams and anguish about her body at that age. She then then bounces to the present and her 36-year-old self, now a mother, actor and adult woman who is more accepting of her body. ‘My body is a friend,’ she says.

 

Her comedy is warm and playful and includes bits about boobs and stretch marks and vaginas and conception and dopamine and pretty feet and ankles and other bodily bits and functions.

 

O’Reilly jests about her boobs changing after feeding two babies in the past seven years, but she seems amazed and happy and proud that she has made two other whole bodies. So she should be!

 

What follows is more episodes from her life, including the hunt for work in New York City and her subsequent experience with foot fetishists – remember, she has very pretty feet – and their very specific peccadilloes.

 

Next come tales of burgeoning love and then her stories of childbirth, which are vivid and funny but perhaps a little laboured. Apologies for the bad pun.

 

O’Reilly played a character on Neighbours but that period in her life is almost totally omitted from this hour of cheerful comedy. Perhaps TV work will be the fodder for episode 2.

 

By Kate Herbert