Showing posts with label Lithuanian Club. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lithuanian Club. Show all posts

Thursday, 6 October 2016

Review - Salvation Amy

Salvation Amy

Melbourne Fringe Festival Hub - Lithuanian Club - South Melbourne

Drawn to Salvation Amy by what is written in the publicity blurb – I was not disappointed.  It has the potential to become a burly, bawdy, darkly funny and sating Cabaret offering.   However on opening night the early parts of Amy Bodossian’s performance lacked confidence and subtlety through, what I assume were, first night nerves mixed with a sense of panic. 

As the evening drew on most of the audience was engaged with, and enjoying Ms. Bodossian’s performance.   I am confident this show will be developing and vastly enrich as I write.  I highly recommend it for its ingredients of courageous performer and writer, excellent supportive musician (David Seedsman) and insightful director (Merophie Carr).    Good recipe, stunning ingredients, what seems to be missing is just a little more time for everything to fully congeal.   

Bodossian’s suggestive, tantalizing and sometimes downright shockingly crude material is in need of a more relaxed and canny presentation.  The outrageously suggestive can be devilishly delightful but needs to be sold with atmosphere, style and confidence.  Certainly the lights were far too bright and stark to begin with - not a shadow to hide in.   If the material is going to strip the performer of social niceties - then the audience is gong to feel stripped and exposed as well.

As courageous entertainer Amy’s songs are rich and gusty and she could fill a much larger venue such as a Spiegeltent.  Her Accompanist David Seedsman fluidly and supportively does ‘beautifully underscore’ Ms. Bodossian’s lovely singing of some pretty wacky but fascinating material.

As a developing writer, poet, singer and entertainer who is able to play with the provocative it would be great if Ms. Bodossian dealt less in reinforcing conventional sexual mores, but rather responded to them with some refreshing feminism – clarify what she is trying to say and in doing so add a dash more irony – and really let it rip.

Suzanne Sandow
(For Stage Whispers)

Footnote:  I am bemused that this year this is not the only show offering ‘a free ticket’ to reviewers as if it were a gift.  Also gifts are the hours spent dwelling on, thinking about and writing on shows.

Second Footnote:  Also unfortunately on the first night of this show there was a glitch at the box office that held six patrons in wait for over 10 minutes, rendering at least three of us late for the beginning of the performance.  Disappointing and disrupting for the performer, I would imagine, as two of us were reviewing.  There seem to be heaps of volunteers about but not enough cohesion.  Funnily I remember feeling much the same thing about this venue at the time of last years Fringe.


Monday, 15 October 2012

Review - A Guide to Unhappiness


A Guide to Unhappiness
Written and performed by Sunny Leunig and Jono Burns
Music Performed by Sara Retallick, Directed by Anne Browning, Produced by Kylie Risson 
The Loft
Lithuanian Club Errol Street North Melbourne
9 to 13 October 6.45



This delightful funny and moving fifty-minute performance comes highly recommended by me as fully entertaining, lyrical, funny and perceptive.  It could be equally at home in the Comedy Festival as the Fringe.

The show opens with a family film projected onto a sheet then the lively Jono Burns introduces Sunny Leunig with energetic enthusiasm and then Burns introduces Sara the Magician’s assistant.  She is then, astonishingly, cut in half by Leunig.  Sara Retallick presents as a dour young woman (sad sack Sara) as an amusingly contrasting foil when required and then works as the main musician.

Although the overall narrative, a personal story from Leunig, has a profound universality about it, there are some thin moments and comments that come across as glib adlibbing that could be more carefully scripted.

Directed with a very competent and even hand by Anne Browning it does slump a little in energy and focus at times.  It is not perfectly tuned like a performance by Ms Browning or her partner Peter Houghton.  This I sense is more due to the relaxed (generational) attitude of the performers than the expectations of a director.  Primarily it is an opportunity for the three young talented and experienced, but as yet not particularly disciplined, performers to further explore the heady complexities of working with an audience.  Having said that I also want to say their work is lovely.

There is much magic in Guide to Unhappiness as well as serendipity and syncopation in the story and performed magic by Sunny Leunig who is without question an interesting young person.  Mostly this magic is surprising and stunning with the exception of some clumsy work early on that could be put down to nerves.  As for costume (Chloe Greaves) Leunig’s pants could be a bit more stylish. There are some delightful effects such as the projection of images on a suitcase lid (Joseph Leunig Noster) and the set prop of a tarot card.

My criticisms are superficial and designed to be helpful. 

Suzanne Sandow
(For Stage Whispers)