Thursday 30 August 2018

Review - Scaramouche Jones

Arts Centre Melbourne Wander productions
Colin Friels 
in
Scaramouche Jones
By Justin Butcher

Performed by Colin Friels
Directed by Alkinos Tsilimidos
Set and Costume designer - Richard Roberts
Lighting Designer – Matt Scott
Sound Designer – Tristan Meredith

18 - 25 August 2018

Scaramouche Jones is a wonderful opportunity to see veteran actor Colin Friels convey a complex character with splendid insightful skill. 

 In a very short eighty minutes Friels captures and reels in his audience and entrances with stories of character the fictional clown Scaramouche, who has lived an exceptional life that highlights extraordinary events and happenings of the 20thCentury. 

Too seldom now days we, as audiences, get the chance to watch our own ‘Theatre Royalty’ perform live for us.  In the intimate space of the Fairfax with his marvelously trained body and voice Friels is able to convey rich and detailed nuance that brings an audience to its feet for a standing ovation.

Last seen, last year, in Melbourne in The Faith Healer, an outstanding production from Belvoir Street, Melbourne Audiences are privileged to be able to watch Friels this year.

Friels does not seem to be ‘acting’ and certainly does not work with self-conscious flourish but rather lets Butcher’s very fine writing do its work through his well-modulated voice of resonant timbre.  

Son of a gypsy prostitute and an Englishman, the fictional, Scaramouche has lived a complex adventure.  He wears his seven white masks like the seven ages of man and gains each like a marvelous gem of wisdom honed through profound, challenging and yet at times tawdry experience.  There is much wonder, joy and many opportunities for laughter.

The set by Richard Roberts hints of circus and perhaps a ship.   To my mind it is a little dull, not that this is of great importance.  Although I am left with a nagging feeling that the space could be used to better advantage. Friels costume also by Roberts has a lovely understated elegance about it and is beautifully proportional clown costume.

The lighting changes on opening night were a bit clunky and obvious.  This is something that I believe I have experienced recently in the Fairfax and am wondering if technical difficulties are being experienced.

Small concerns aside, this is a splendid opportunity to watch, marvel at and support one of our seasoned ‘National Treasures’ in Colin Friels.

Suzanne Sandow
(For Stage Whispers)

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