Monday 29 September 2014

Review - Marlin

Marlin
By Damien Millar

Presented by Arena Theatre Company and
Melbourne Theatre Company

Director – Christian Leavesley, Designer – Marg Horwell, Lighting Designer – Rachel Burke,
Sound Designer Jethro Woodward, Composer – Wang-Zheng Ting, Puppetry - Rob Matson

The Lawler
September 25 to 11 October - $25 a ticket

Very much like a handsomely presented picture book, Marlin is a series of stunning images that come to life on stage through the stylish design of Marg Horwell.  It is the story of a Grandfather and Granddaughter working together to save the life of a Marlin and navigate the difficulties and dangers they encounter at sea in a small boat.

Christopher Bunsworth plays Thomas Grogan a great crusty, old, sometimes a bit cantankerous Grandfather and Ashlea Pyke his lively Granddaughter Billy.  Their relationship is not idealized but quirky and real and both fragile and strong.  Jacob Williams is the puppeteer he also plays a benevolent ghostly presence and an eccentric nun to great effect.

The Marlin puppet itself is glistens with life (Rob Matson).

Humour abounds - the kind of humour that kids like.   Ashlea Pyke as Billy is particularly cheeky and wacky at times and convincingly young.  In this intense and riveting hour of entertainment there is also suspense and danger and heaps and heaps of foam.

Marlin is superbly lit by Rachel Burke and underscored with music composed by Wang-Zheng Ting that is moving and directly affirming of the emotional content and poetic form of the whole.

The subject matter undoubtedly surrounds grief and loss – so kids recently bereaved could probably do with a little guidance and the opportunity to debrief after seeing this excellent work.

Top Notch Theatre for Kids!


Suzanne Sandow
(For Stage Whispers)

Wednesday 10 September 2014

Review - Waking Up Dead

Waking Up Dead
By Trudy Hellier

Directed by Susie Dee

Performed by Caroline Lee

At fortyfive downstairs
4 to 14 September

Waking Up Dead is an exploration of the toxic effect of grief mixed with betrayal.  It is about a woman who discovers, in the wake of her husband’s murder, the life she has been living is not the construction she has invested in.

How deeply and satisfactorily one responds to this play will be individual it is an organic work that has been launched with integrity but three consummate talented women for a thinking audience.  My response is mixed.

There is a real courage involved in exploring and teasing out the events of our communal experience of shocking scenarios such as the murder of Herman Rockefeller a Melbourne millionaire who was living a double life.  With short gaps of time from the experience to the representation on stage the exploration can be very raw and risky compared to the more prescribed examination of something that is more fully resolved and framed in narrative by ‘the fullness of time.’

Trudy Hellier a successful actor has turned her hand to writing and she obviously has significant talent.  This is particularly evident in the early text of Waking Up Dead where the grieving widow (Caroline Lee) literally illustrates the era of her young life around the time she met her late husband.  There is a delightful poetic nature to the writing and performing of the early part of the work that doesn’t seem to be there towards the end as things flail and the protagonist’s perceptions and life fall apart. 

Suzie Dee’s staging is inspired and as director she appears to have set a strong framework that is perhaps clearer to the performer than the audience.  Sound bites (Ian Moorhead) are ambiguous and exactly where this woman is and whom she is talking to is hazy, it could be to the audience, it could be to the police it could be to herself, or perhaps it is all three?  

Caroline Lee is a consummate actor who embodies the characters she plays with convincing fineness.  She allows us into the crushed world of a woman who has lost herself, a woman humbled and reduced by the humiliation of betrayal and shattered by shock.  It would be very difficult not to be convinced by Lee’s poignant depiction of the characters melt down and fragile sensibilities.

However in examining the detrition of the surviving partner, in this generic story, I am not sure the work explores or even really touches on what we are most interested in.  I think it is actually the sensational that draws us to these stories not the fragmentation of a person who has been deceived through an amazing capacity for denial.  And yet self-denial is surely a universal characteristic and should therefore be an excellent subject for Theatre.

As a description and embodiment of a melt down it is perceptive, sad and fascinating.

On the whole something has not quite jelled – yet – or didn’t jell for me on opening night.  This work has left me questioning - floundering a little - though that may well be its intent.

Beautiful acting and clever direction and an extremely interesting story all come together strongly – but do they hit the mark?


See what you think!


Suzanne Sandow
(For Stage Whispers)

Review - The Harbinger


The Harbinger
Written and Directed by David Morton and Matthew Ryan, Puppetry and Stage Designer – David Morton, Lighting Designer – Whitney Eglinton, Sound Designer - Tone Black Productions, Costume Designer – Noni Harrison.
Performed by Kathleen Ion, Barb Lowing, Emily Burton, Anna Straker and Giema Contini.
This exceptional work is basically a delightful telling of a Fairy Tale for adults.  Rural towns in Victoria are very privileged to have the opportunity of such a magical evening of entertainment it is not to be missed if you get the chance. 
Set in a conventional theatre space that is the apartment of a very old man (large puppet operated by three puppeteers).  He is totally immersed in completing his life’s work, an act of love.  A young girl enters his apartment escaping from the hostile world outside.  What ensues is the unfolding of a story that is captivating, most particularly, because of the way it is presented by puppeteers who work with deft skill and exquisite deference to their puppets.  All design elements come together to form a crisply presented extremely well crafted whole.
On the night that I saw this work at Gas Works the audience was silent and entranced through out and the foyer was abuzz with charmed and satisfied patrons at the end of the performance.
Don’t miss it if it is coming to an Arts Centre near you and be grateful for an astute Arts Officer if your Council is bringing in this magical, moving night of Theatre.
Suzanne Sandow (For Stage Whispers)

9 September 2014, West Gippsland Arts Centre
11 September 2014, Colac Otway Performing Arts Centre
13 September 2014, Hawthorn Arts Centre
16 September 2014, Plenty Ranges Arts Centre
20 September 2014, Healesville Memorial Hall
23 September 2014, Forge Theatre and Arts
24 September 2014, John Leslie Theatre, Sale


1-4 October 2014, Street Theatre, Canberra
7 October 2014, Australian Theatre for Young People


9-10 October 2014, Gold Coast Arts Centre