Wednesday, April 2, 2025

ADELAIDE CABARET FESTIVAL 2025


 

Adelaide Cabaret Festival 2025. 

Artistic director Virginia Gay. Executive Producer Alex Sinclair. Adelaide Festival Centre. June 5-21 2025 Bookings: adelaidecabaretfestival.com.au

Previewed by Peter Wilkins

 

Virginia Gay  Artistic Director
Photo Cludio Raschella

Australia’s premier cabaret festival kicks off to a glittering start with a Variety Gala on June 5th in Adelaide’s prestigious Festival Theatre. It is difficult to believe that the first Adelaide Cabaret Festival opened twenty five years ago, the brainchild of the late Frank Ford and under the artistic direction of the inaugural director Julia Holt. Since then the Cabaret Festival has grown into the largest international cabaret festival in the world. As well as attracting phenomenal talent from around the country many of the world’s greatest cabaret artists have appeared at this jewel in the Adelaide Festival Centre’s festival crown. From around the world people flock to Australia’s festival state to soak up the atmosphere in intimate, cosy and thrilling cabaret venues.

David Campbell
After hosting her first successful festival in 2024, the inimitable and incandescent Virginia Gay returns to present a programme worthy of this milestone occasion. ”For me it’s a huge honour to have the guardianship of the festival when it is celebrating such an extraordinary anniversary.” Gay tells me. ”What I want to do is to honour our legacy act, the act that has made us. The act that has changed us.”

After 25 years, Gay is in no doubt about what cabaret is and her voice sparkles with excitement. “Cabaret is mischief, wit, sass, celebration of community and just a little whiff of chaos” she says with a twinkle in her voice. “That to me is everything that cabaret is and does. What is exciting about my cabaret festival,” Gay says, “is that it has a place in the global firmament of arts festivals. International stars are excited to come here and work with us. It is so thrilling and is a testament to the Artistic Directors who have come before me.”  The list is a roll call of Australia’s brightest cabaret talent including David and Lisa Campbell, Kate Ceberano, Ali MacGregor and Eddie Perfect, Barrie Humphries, Julia Zemiro and to give it that touch of international pizzazz Alan Cumming. The roll call of artists is too long to mention but over the past twenty years they have defined the nature of cabaret, stamped it with their phenomenal talent and turned Adelaide into the epicentre of everything that makes cabaret the thrill that it is.

Carlotta Photo Claudio Raschella

As a salute to the origins of the Adelaide Cabaret Festival, Gay has invited the one and only Carlotta to open the 2025 festival. Carlotta opened the very first festival and now, a quarter of a century later and at the unstoppable age of 81, Carlotta will return to introduce artists and audience alike to the 25th anniversary festival.. The past, the present and the future will be the cornerstones to Gay’s selection of artists. Performers like Bernadette Robinson, piano man Trevor Jones , Reuben Kaye and David Campbell will be familiar favourites from previous festivals.

 

Jessica Mauboy Photo Peter Brew Bevan

Newcomers like Jacob Collier and Demi Adejuyigbe and The Burton Brothers will bring their international acts that are changing the present and the young aspiring cabaret artists of Class of Cabaret will launch the art form into the future. Gay reminds me that “cabaret is irreverent, it is sexy, it is fearless. It is not afraid to speak uncomfortable truths and hold power to account.” That is why artists like Rizo and Reuben Kaye play an integral role in the cabaret festival. “There is no separation between audience and performer in this show. At any second Reuben Kaye is going to have his head in your lap. And that is cabaret my friend!”

The twenty-fifth anniversary cabaret will be a showcase of familiar faces, new talents and future stars of the cabaret stage. Best newcomer at this year’s Edinburgh Fringe, American writer, comedian, filmmaker and performer Demi Adejuyigbe promises the most perfect, hilarious and insane show at the festival. Time Out called Demi Adejuyigbe is Going to Do One (1) Backflip both ramshackle and slick, the future of Musical Comedy. Audiences are asked to expect the unexpected.  Adejuyigbe has the kind of charisma that could power a city. While playing Cyrano in Cyrano de Bergerac in Edinburgh during her UK tour, Gay could not get a ticket to Demi’s sold out show. She had to wait until the London performances to get to see this new cabaret sensation.

The Burton Brothers Photo Simon McCulloch

Also new to the festival is six times Grammy award winning multi-instrumentalist and composer Jacob Collier. In an Australian exclusive Collier will wow audiences with improvisation, genre bending songs and audience participation. It promises to be a two night stand only to remember. For a deliciously absurdist dose of comedy, audiences won’t want to miss The Burton Brothers – 1925. Real life brothers , the Burton Brothers will present an hilarious sketch comedy show set entirely in the year 1925. The Great War is over, the Jazz Age is in full swing and their two part harmony jazz classics herald in a new age of optimism. “It’s very, very funny.” Gay says. Award winning singer, comedian and screenwriter Frankie McNair brings her alter ego, ageing lounge singer Tabitha to the 2025 Adelaide Cabaret Festival. Described by Gay as a Melbourne superstar, she also claims that there is no one more fearless than McNair “ an alternative comedy wunderkind”.

An anniversary as significant as this year’s cabaret festival has an obligation to salute the past, applaud the present and imagine the future. ”What is truly exciting and such an honour when you have this position,” Gay says,”is to look towards the future and say what cabaret could be.” More than ten years ago, David and Lisa Campbell introduced the Class of Cabaret to the Adelaide Cabaret Festival. Twenty young people are selected to write their own material and work with industry mentors and leadership to devise a show of 65 minutes.

Class of Cabaret 2024
This year their efforts will count towards their HSC results, but that is unlikely to affect their bravery and daring to forge a new future in cabaret. “It is the show most guaranteed to make me cry.” Gay tells me. ”Tears of pride are so strong. I can see them putting their heart on the line and speaking honestly with authenticity. We really need storytellers like that. We go into the future to empower the next generation of storytellers. We say to them your voice is important. You can change the world!” Gay says to these 16 and 17 year old cabaret artists of the future “You are going to change the world and make it funny and fabulous and deeply, deeply attractive. That’s cabaret.”  It is a bold message of hope and optimism for the next generation.

The interview is coming to an end but I have time for one final question. “What can audiences expect from the 25th anniversary festival?” Gay is quick to answer. “People can expect a rollicking good time, authenticity and immediacy and mischief and they can probably make a couple of new friends over a couple of glasses of very nice champagne. And that my friend is cabaret!”

 

 

 

The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time

Wajanoah Donohue and ensemble in Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time. Photo: Chris Baldock


The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time. Based on the novel by Mark Haddon; adapted for the stage by Simon Stephens. Mockingbird Theatre Company, Canberra, at Belconnen Arts Centre, March 20 – April 5 2025. 

Reviewed by Frank McKone April 1 

 CAST: Christopher (at certain performances) – Wajanoah Donohoe Christopher (at certain performances) – Ethan Wiggin Siobhan – Leah Peel Griffiths; Ed – Richard Manning; Judy – Claire White Ensemble – Travis Beardsley, Callum Doherty, Peter Fock, Meg Hyam, Anthony Mayne, Tracy Noble with a special appearance from Phineas Baldock 

PRODUCTION TEAM: Director/Designer – Chris Baldock; Assistant Director – Stephanie Evans Stage Manager – Rhiley Winnett Lighting Design – Rhiley Winnett and Chris Baldock Projections Design – Matt Kizer; Projection Realisation & Operation – Rhiley Winnett Music Composer – Matt Friedman; Costumes and Props – Chis Baldock and cast Autism Lived Experience Consultants – Jacob Alfonso and Jennyfer Lawrence Taylor Rehearsal Prompt – Liz St Clair Long 

The calculation of the square of the hyptenuse of a right angled triangle is the image which informs this thoughtful presentation of The Curious Incident of The Dog in the Night-Time. 

 Though the drama of the life of Christopher John Francis Boone, accurately characterised by Wajanoah Donohoe, is not exactly exciting in a conventional theatrical way – since the central character has no empathetic capacity – we find ourselves watching the story play out at some ‘distance’ emotionally. Rather like Christopher himself, we seem to be objectively observing a documentary about adults as parents and neighbours, including their rearrangements of sexual relations, and how difficult life therefore is for a seriously autistic child, at the stage of achieving the highest score possible in Mathematics on his way from high school to university. Intellectual determination to complete his knowledge of mysteries, from who killed the dog in next door’s garden to the explanation of Pythagoras’ theorem is the central feature of Christopher’s life. 

So, physically, Baldock and the Design Team have us sitting in straight rows on three sides of a square, watching highly stylised acting-out of the story, in terms of choreography and costume design, surrounded by large rectangular projections of words, and even mathematics, and images of practical things like trains which illustrate the action in a Christopher-like way. 

And then we discover the final ruse. We are watching in real time Siobhan and Christopher creating a play for us to understand what happened in the past, especially including how difficult Christopher’s built-in need to only always speak the truth had been for his parents, and the reasonable resolution of their lives which was achieved. So the play within a play parallels what the theatre company is doing – artfully creating the words of a novel in living form. 

This extra level is emphasised in Baldock’s production by the abstract white costuming for the Ensemble, rather than having the characters dressed in normal street clothes. This play is not presented as ‘naturalism’, but in a form designed to illustrate the issue of how being autistic, despite one’s intelligence, is fraught with difficult situations and often unfair treatment – even when other people understand that you can’t not behave in the frustrating, for them, way you do. 

 Rather than presenting this now famous play with the razzamatazz of the Grand Tour by the National Theatre of Great Britain which I reviewed (on this blog) June 2018, Baldock brings the play down to size, and in doing so leaves me with a more simple focus on the issue as it is for so many people ‘on the spectrum’. 

And Wajanoah’s explanation of the proof of the Pythagoras theorem – after the curtain call, as if he was Christopher but somehow out of role – was terrific. Thank you, Mockingbird.

Monday, March 31, 2025

SONGS OF ELTON AND GEORGE - Canberra Theatre

 

Tim Campbell & Anthony Gallea

Devised and performed by Anthony Callea and Tim Campbell

Lighting by Cam McKaige – Sound by Paul Bailey

Backing vocalists: Susie Ahern, Rocky Leprevite

Musicians: Sax: Tim Wilson – Drums: Carlo Parisi – Keys: Robbie Amato

Bass: Kim May – Guita:  Cory Jach.

Canberra Theatre: March 29. 2025 – Reviewed by BILL STEPHENS


Susie Ahern - Anthony Callea - Tim Campbell - John Foreman performing
"Songs of Elton and John" in Hamer Hall, Melbourne - Photo: Sam Tabone.

An enthusiastic Canberra audience sustained their extraordinary record of sold-out performances by Anthony Callea and Tim Campbell with their show “The Songs of Elton and George”.

After playing three sold out performance in the Hamer Hall in Melbourne and two in the Sydney Opera House in 2024, with John Foreman and the Australian Pops Orchestra, Callea and his husband, Tim Campbell decided to embark on a 32-date tour of major venues across Australia running from February to June this year; most of which are already sold out even though touring with a much smaller band than for their Hamer Hall and Sydney Opera house concerts..

Callea and Campbell are no strangers to sold out shows having already performed 27 of them across the country in 2023 with their “Up Close and Unpredictable” tour.

So, what’s the secret of their success? 


Anthea Callea performing "Songs of Elton and George" in the Sydney Opera House
 Photo - David Hooley 


Well to begin with, both are power-house singers. Callea is an Aria Award winning artist, who first came to fame as the runner-up in the 2004 edition of Australian Idol. His debut single, The Carol Bayer Sager/David Foster/Tony Renis/Alberto Testa song The Prayer became the second highest selling Australian single of the 2000’s. 

Over the last twenty years Callea has honed his skills to forge a multi-award winning career performing in concerts, musicals and special events for the likes of Queen Elizabeth 11 and Luciano Pavarotti. Artists with whom he has toured include Celine Dion, Whitney Houston and Diana Ross.

Tim Campbell’s career is no less illustrious, ranging from starring roles in television series including Home & Away and House Husbands, hosting national prime time shows, among them Celebrity Singing Bee and Wheel of Fortune and starring in major stage musicals, Wicked, Rent and Shout!

These national tours allow them to combine their complimentary talents with excellent production values and disciplined direction to present crowd-pleasing performances which showcase their impressive individual performance skills.


Anthony Callea & Tim Campbell performing "Songs of Elton & George" in the Sydney Opera House
Photo: David Hooley

Callea and Campbell also have another ace up their sleeve in that their seventeen-year relationship has mellowed into an easy-going onstage partnership that allows both to make each other the butt of their good-natured humour.

In the case of Callea, this comes as something of a surprise, as he gets little opportunity to reveal this side of his personality on his television guest appearances which tend to focus on his artistry as a vocalist.

In trawling through the repertoire of Elton John and George Michael, which is the focus of “The Songs of Elton and George,” both artists have mined a fertile selection of excellent contemporary songs to create this entertaining evening of song.

Neither attempt to imitate the artists they have chosen to celebrate, but instead, put their own stamp on each song, with the support of excellent musical arrangements from their superb five-piece band and backing singers, Susie Ahern and Rocky Leprevite.

Attention to striking costuming and lighting design also set their show apart from many on the touring circuit, exemplified by Callea’s first entrance in a blaze of Swarovski diamantes to sing George Michael’s Father Figure, followed by Campbell, only slightly less extravagantly costumed, to sing Elton’s John’s  Yellow Brick Road, then joining Callea in a duet for George Michael’s Jesus to a Child, with Callea finishing the set with  stunning versions of George Michael’s  I Can’t Make You Love Me and Kissing A Fool.

The concert continued in in this vein, with the audience reacting vociferously as song after favourite song featured, with the choices of costuming becoming the basis of much of the humour; Campbell preferring more conservative choices to Callea.

Both backing singers got a moment in the spotlight with Rocky Leprevite joining Campbell for a medley of Elton John favourites, Tiny Dancer, Rocket Man and Daniel, and Susie Ahern joining him for George Michael’s, I knew You Were Waiting.


Anthony Callea & Tim Campbell performing "Songs of Elton and George" with the Australian Pops Orchestra in the Sydney Opera House in 2024. Photo: David Hooley.


Guitarist Cory Jack joined Callea for a stripped back version of Elton John’s Candle in the Wind which should have been a highlight but unfortunately suffered from the over-amplification of the guitar, a problem which seemed to creep in during the latter section of the concert when the band tended to drown out the singers.

However, Callea and Campbell have devised a winning formula, which will serve them well while-ever they maintain their production standard, with the songs of carefully selected artists providing them with endless repertoire on which to exercise their individual talents for imaginative re-invention.

Meanwhile, this is a concert you should not miss when it comes your way. That is, if you’re lucky enough to find a ticket.



    This review also featured in AUSTRALIAN ARTS REVIEW. www.artsreview.com.au

Sunday, March 30, 2025

The Glass Menagerie - Ensemble Theatre

 

The Glass Menagerie by Tennessee Williams.  Ensemble Theatre, Sydney, March 21 – April 26, 2025.
Presented by special arrangement with The University of the South, Sewanee, Tennessee.

Reviewed by Frank McKone
March 29

Cast & Creatives

    Tennessee Williams. Playwright. ...
    Liesel Badorrek. Director. ...
    Danny Ball. Cast - Tom Wingfield. ...
    Blazey Best. Cast - Amanda Wingfield. ...
    Bridie McKim. Cast - Laura Wingfield. ...
    Tom Rodgers. Cast - Jim O'Connor. ...
    Grace Deacon. Set & Costume Designer. ...
    Verity Hampson. Lighting Designer.
Photos by Prudence Upton

Blazey Best, Bridie McKim, Danny Ball
as Amanda Wingfield, daughter Laura, son Tom
The Glass Menagerie, Ensemble Theatre 2025
Photo: Prudence Upton

Do your very best to get to Sydney’s Ensemble Theatre, on the Harbour at Kirribilli, no matter what the weather, for their production of Tennessee Williams’ The Glass Menagerie.  You have till April 26th.  It’s a classic.

How ironic is my shock as actor Tom Rodgers, as the smartly brylcreemed “gentleman caller” Jim, clumsily trying to dance with crippled terribly shy Laura, knocks over and smashes her beautiful but fragile glass model rearing horse (or rather, unicorn).  The whole audience gasped as one; and were horrified again as her brother Tom (Danny Ball in a consistently steady performance) threw another handful of precious glass, smashing it into the image of the face of his father; and like me were in tears for Bridie McKim’s delicately played Laura, left alone in her crippled world.

Bridie McKim and Blazey Best
The Glass Menagerie, Ensemble Theatre, 2025

 
Bridie McKim as Laura and Tom Rodgers as Jim O'Connor
in The Glass Menagerie, Ensemble Theatre 2025

Why is the power of this wonderful Ensemble Theatre production, so ironic?  On the very day as I watched The Glass Menagerie, in The Saturday Paper, Rick Morton was quoting from “the questionnaire sent by US officials to Australian researchers and institutions, seeking to determine whether their work complied with Donald Trump’s promise to cut funding from projects that support a ‘woke’ agenda.”

“Can you confirm that this is no DEI [diversity, equity and inclusion] project, or DEI elements of the project?”

How even more ironic is it that Tennessee Williams’ character, gentleman caller Jim, is described by brother Tom when they were at high school, as so popular that within five years he could have become the President of America!  And now, at 22, like Tom, he works in an Amazon-like warehouse, and is soon to marry Betty.

So sorry, Laura.  

As I write, the Australian Broadcasting Commission is reporting on the problem of “boys’ culture” made so much worse by social media today. Has nothing changed since 1944?  Then, Tennessee Williams sent the boys like Laura’s father in the Depression and now her brother in wartime off to seek “adventure”, leaving their women frantic – like her mother, Amanda Wingfield, played to perfection by Blazey Best.  

So the final irony as I see it is that theatre, as produced by Ensemble Theatre, shows us the heights of human empathy in the teamwork of wonderful actors, and of human intelligence and understanding in the work of director Liesel Badorrek and her team of designers, set makers and stage managers, in presenting a great American tragedy of failing human relationships, just as true in this century as a century ago.

Theatre may be an illusion, but this work reveals the truth of how our real world is still no more than a collection of beautiful but yet so fragile possibilities, so easily accidentally knocked over – or so deliberately smashed by Presidents seeking adventure.  

Tennessee Williams saw World War 2 as the result of economic depression – a way of escape for the boys (though, in another irony not covered in his play, often a way into work for women, at least while the fighting continued).  It’s not unreasonable to expect that tragedy may be repeated in World War 3.  The Glass Menagerie is not just, as Ensemble Theatre says, “Williams’ timeless portrait of a shattered family” but an image of a shattered humanity.

Unfortunately President Donald Trump’s approach to theatre on The Apprentice surely means he sees Tennessee Williams as ‘woke’; and his performance in the White House attempting to intimidate President Volodymyr Zelenskyy – who actually ironically has been a seriously successful professional satirical comedian – showed Trump to be the worst kind of ham actor, dangerous because he has no self awareness.

So we ordinary people are left like Laura to a seemingly unfulfilling future.  But the strength of Ensemble’s production of The Glass Menagerie can be measured by the depth of the silence achieved by Danny Ball and Bridie McKim in the moment which ends the play.  Theatre of this outstanding quality makes life worthwhile, no matter what.

Bridie McKim as Laura
in The Glass Menagerie, Ensemble Theatre 2025
Photo: Prudence Upton


 

 

 

 

 

Saturday, March 29, 2025

THE CURIOUS INCIDENT OF THE DOG IN THE NIGHT-TIME - Mockingbird Theatrics - Belco Arts

Ethan Wiggin (Christopher)


Based on a novel by Mark Haddon – Adapted by Simon Stephens

Designed and directed by Chris Baldock – Assistant Director: Stephanie Evans.

Lighting Design: Rhiley Winnett & Chris Baldock – Composer: Matt Friedman.

Projections Design: Matt Kizer - Projections realisation & operation: Rhiley Winnett.

Costumes and properties: Chris Baldock & cast – Stage Manager: Rhiley Winnett

Rehearsal Prompt: Liz St Clair Long.

Presented by Mockingbird Theatre – Belconnen Arts Centre – March 20 -April 5, 2025.

Performance on 26th reviewed by BILL STEPHENS


Claire White (Judy) - Ethan Wiggin (Christopher)


To mark its first official production as theatre-company-in-residence in the Rehearsal Room at the Belconnen Arts Centre, Mockingbird Theatrics is presenting this season of a compelling adaptation by Simon Stephens of British author, Mark Haddon’s novel. The play deals with the experiences of a fifteen-year-old boy, Christopher, who’s afflicted with Asperger Syndrome and traumatised by the discovery of his neighbours dead dog on his front lawn.

Christopher has an extraordinary brain, is exceptional at maths, but ill-equipped to interpret daily life. He’s never ventured beyond the end of his road alone and detests being touched. He distrusts strangers but nevertheless sets out on a mission to discover who killed his dog. His detective work, forbidden by his father, takes him on a frightening journey that turns his world upside down.

First seen in Canberra in 2018, in a production by the National Theatre of Britain, the extraordinary technical demands required to present this play appeared so daunting that it was surprising that a local company would attempt to mount it.

Yet Mockingbird Theatrics has taken on the challenge and delivered a remarkable production, directed by Chris Baldock, which while not as lavish as the British production, certainly rivals the impact of that earlier production, assisted in no small part by the intimacy of the venue, and the virtuosity of Matt Kizer’s video design.

This production is extraordinary in several aspects, but the remarkable clarity with which the play depicts the thought processes of the person at the centre of the play as interpreted through Kizer’s design and Baldock’s resourceful direction, provides a fascinating insight into his condition.


Ethan Wiggin (Christopher) during "The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time)

 For this production the role of Christopher is shared by two different actors at different performances. At the performance under review, the role of Christopher was remarkably interpreted by Ethan Wiggin, a relative newcomer to Canberra with an impressive background in theatre in Perth.

Christopher uses mathematics as his mechanism for expression. His world is depicted as a black box in which the walls and floor are covered with grids on which he scribbles equations to explain his thoughts, only occasionally breaking the fourth wall to talk to the audience direct.

His relationship with his estranged parents, played affectingly by Claire White and Richard Manning, is sometimes brutal, and it seems that the only person he really trusts with his innermost thoughts is his therapist, Siobhan, empathetically portrayed by Leah Peel Griffiths.


Leah Peel-Griffiths (Siobhan) and company.

Apart from Christopher, Baldock has all his actors wear white, requiring his talented ensemble, Travis Beardsley, Callum Doherty, Peter Fock, Meg Hyam, Anthony Mayne and Tracy Noble rely on voice and attitude to portray the variety of characters that Christopher meets on his journey.

This they achieve brilliantly, but despite the efforts of the strangers Christopher encounters on his journey, all efforts to break through his defences by other people are rebuffed.

Yet so clearly are Christopher’s thought process depicted that it’s impossible not to be drawn into siding with him and empathising with his apparent intransigence

This inaugural production by Mockingbird Theatrics is an exciting example of clever theatre-making at its best.

The inventiveness of Baldock’s direction and the imaginative way in which his stage design embraces technology to enable complicated mathematical equations and shifts in perspective to become thrilling theatrical experiences in the intimate confines of what was previously The Belconnen Arts Centre Rehearsal Room, augurs well for the success of this Belco Arts initiative.


                                                       Photos by Chris Baldock.


   This review also published in AUSTRALIAN ARTS REVIEW. www.artsreview.com.au

 

Friday, March 28, 2025

GUYS & DOLLS - Handa Opera on Sydney Harbour

 

Angelina Thomson as Miss Adelaide in the HOSH production of "Guys & Dolls"


Music & Lyrics by Frank Loesser – Book by Jo Swerling and Abe Burrows.

Directed by Shaun Rennie – Musical Director & Supervisor – Guy Simpson.

Choreographed by Kelley Abbey – Set Design by Brian Thomson.

Costume Design by Jennifer Irwin – Lighting design by Bruno Poet.

Sound Design by Jim Atkins – Presented by Opera Australia.

Fleet Steps, Mrs Macquarie’s Point 21 March – 20 April 2025.

Opening night performance on 21st March reviewed by BILL STEPHENS.

Cody Simpson (Sky Masterson) and the guys performing Luck Be A Lady in "Guys and Dolls".

 
Although it won a Tony Award for its first Broadway staging in 1950, and is regarded as a Broadway classic, the musical “Guys and Dolls” still seemed an unusual choice by Opera Australia to be given the HOSH treatment.

The choice of former Artistic Director, Jo Davies, who was also scheduled to direct it, the musical was inspired by the stories of Damon Runyan which famously features cartoonish gangsters, gamblers and other characters who inhabited Runyan’s version of the New York underworld and who speak in a unique comic dialect that mixes highly formal language and colourful slang..

The score contains several memorable songs, but after 75 years, the book is dated and the world that Runyan celebrated is long gone. How the show would have presented had Davies remained to direct it as originally planned, will never be known, but her contribution to the concept is acknowledged in the printed program.

However, on her sudden departure, Opera Australia entrusted the directing responsibilities to emerging young director, Shaun Rennie, who has been hitting sixers with his productions over the last couple of years, and surrounded him with a team of the best musical theatre creatives in the country, including Musical Director, Guy Simpson, Choreographer, Kelly Abbey, Set Designer Brian Thomson and costume designer Jennifer Irwin, and a fresh young cast of accomplished singers, dancers and actors.

Despite the fact that most of the action for the musical takes place in a third-rate cabaret and a charity meeting room, Brian Thomson, a veteran in creating spectacular outdoor settings for HOSH, outdid himself with a set that, for the first time for a HOSH production, has the orchestra in full view of the audience, positioning them high above the outdoor stage behind a dropdown street sign. For his centrepiece, Thomson devised an oversized yellow New York taxicab which offers a surprise at every turn.



              Guy Simpson conducting the orchestra for "Guys & Dolls" - Photo: Neil Bennett

Guy Simpson took advantage of his large orchestra’s exposure by providing them with fresh new arrangements, including exciting new backings for the Cuban scene, and turning the title number Guys and Dolls, originally a duet, and Luck Be a Lady into spectacular full-stage production numbers.



Jason Arrow (Nicely Nicely Johnson) - Joel Granger (Benny Southstreet) - John Xintavelonis        (Harry the Horse) and the guys in "Guys & Dolls" - Photo: Neil Bennett


Unarguably the best commercial dance choreographer in the country, Kelly Abbey is renowned for the originality and virtuosity of her dance creations. Those who saw her stunning dance segments for the HOSH production of “Carmen” are unlikely to forget them.

However, for this production of “Guys and Dolls” Abbey has exceeded even those, by gathering together a team of extraordinary dancers, and pulling out all stops to create a series of spectacular dance numbers that not only show off the highly polished techniques of her dancers but also revels in the opportunities offered by Jennifer Irwin’s colourful 50’s inspired costumes, to fill the vast HOSH stage with riotous colour and movement.



      Angelina Thomson and the Hot Box Girls perform Bushell and a Peck in "Guys & Dolls"


But it is still the Director who has the responsibility of focussing and organising all these disparate elements so that the actors charged with telling the story, don’t get lost among all the activity on the vast stage. It is in this that Rennie excels.

Working with a dream cast of skilled musical theatre performers , none of whom would have been born when the musical was created, let alone participated in a crap game, Rennie draws on the brilliance of lighting designer, Bruno Poet, and the sound design skills of Jim Arkins, to create inventive blocking to both showcase his performers and captivate the audience with the storytelling.

His cast work hard to make their characters believable, but with “Guys and Dolls” this is a tall order, because, with the exception of Sky Masterson and Sarah Brown, the other roles are written as caricatures intended to be performed by actors skilled in the art of old-fashioned vaudeville comedy schtick.

Although the skill of clever schtick for actors is rapidly disappearing, Rennie’s cast endeavour to replace it with youthful enthusiasm.

Following her recent showstopping turn in “Candide” at the Sydney Opera House, the role of Sarah Brown offers Annie Aitken little opportunity to display her vocal and comedic brilliance. Her renditions of I’ll Know and I’ve Never Been in Love Before are prettily sung, but conventional.

Her only opportunity to display her comedic talents came with If I Were a Bell but due to the restrictive nature of the role, her interpretation of this song felt rather too forceful, even charmless, as were her over-enthusiastic responses to Sky Masterson in the Cuban scene.

Elsewhere her performance was nicely judged, even affecting, particularly in her duet with Cody Simpson, I’ve Never Been in Love Before, and her responses to More I Cannot Wish You sung by Tony McGill as Arvide Abernathy.



      Tony McGill (Arvide Abernathy) - Annie Aitkin (Sarah Brown) in "Guys & Dolls.


Surprise casting,and making his Australian musical theatre debut as Sky Masterson, Cody Simpson brought a youthful charm and fine voice to his role. He was given strong support from Bobby Fox as Nathan Detroit and Jason Arrow as Nicely Nicely Johnson, displaying his versatility, fresh from touring the country in the title role in Hamilton, along with Joel Granger (Benny Southstreet), Kieran McGrath (Rusty Charlie), John Xintavelonis (Harry the Horse) and Doron Chester (Big Julie), particularly during the spectacular staging of Luck Be a Lady.


                 
     Angelina Thomson (Miss Adelaide) & Bobby Fox (Nathan Detroit) in "Guys and Dolls".


But it is Angelina Thomson who steals the show with her exuberant performance as the long-suffering Miss Adelaide. Perhaps best known for her television role in the TV series Home and Away, Thomson has already appeared in a succession of musicals. However it is this exuberant performance as Miss Adelaide, which she smashes out of the ballpark with her accomplished singing, dancing and acting, particularly in Bushell and a Peck and Take Back Your Mink that will undoubtedly mark Miss Adelaide as her breakout role.


Whether or not “Guys and Dolls” is among your favourite musicals, this HOSH production is a rare of example of where the production, rather than the show itself, becomes the star, and how a talented director gifted with brilliant creatives and enthusiastic cast can transform a potential disaster into a diamante incrusted silk purse.


                                    Unless marked otherwise, all photos by Carlita Sari.




     This review also published in AUSTRALIAN ARTS REVIEW. www.artsreview.com.au

Thursday, March 27, 2025

The Moors

 

The Moors by Jen Silverman.  Lexi Sekuless Productions at The Mill Theatre, Canberra, March 26-April 12, 2025.

Reviewed by Frank McKone
Opening Night March 26.

Cast

Agatha: Andrea Close; Marjory: Steph Roberts; Huldey: Rachel Howard
Emilie: Sarah Nathan-Truesdale
Moorhen: Petronella van Tienen; Mastiff: Chris Zuber

Contingency Moorhen: Rachel Pengilly (playing 21 March and 5 April)
Rehearsal contingency: Alana Denham-Preston

Production Team

Writer: Jen Silverman: Director: Joel Horwood
Production Designer: Aloma Barnes
Sound Designer: Damian Ashcroft; Lighting Designer: Stefan Wronski
Set Construction: Simon Grist
Production Stage Manager: Lexi Sekuless; Shadow Stage Manager: Ariana Barzinpour
Programming support: Timmy Sekuless and Zeke Chalmers
Photographer: Daniel Abroguena
Producer: Lexi Sekuless Productions
Major partner: Elite Event Technology; Principal Sponsor: Willard Public Affairs



Wuthering!  

See The Moors at The Mill to experience the heights of wuthering.  And indeed the depths of sister Agatha’s withering stares.  I think Andrea Close truly deserves a Julie Bishop Oscar [ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a7n2s6m-HbE  ]  

No wonder Emilie goes bonkers with her hatchet, and kills the conniving Agatha to death.  Living in The Moors with this simulation of the surviving Brontë sisters, Charlotte, Emily, and Anne (Maria and Elizabeth died young), as well as their brother Branwell, chained in the attic, would send anyone round the bend.

Navigating Joel Horwood’s precision directing makes watching The Moors’ twists and turns exciting, like driving an obstacle course in a time trial in an electric car that can accelerate from stop to 100ks instantly.

If you are expecting an unconventional 19th Century romance of the Jane Eyre, Wuthering Heights and Tenant of Wildfell Hall kind (the Brontës were never ordinary in their prudish time in history), then strap your seat belts on for a wild ride through Jen Silverman’s half-satirical yet still seriously enlightening exposition of life – like the one we all live daily – in a frighteningly unpredictable world.  

Kindness, empathy and self-awareness is what we need to learn in our relationships, beautifully represented – and wonderfully sensitively performed – in The Moors by Petronella van Tienen as the tiny Moorhen and Chris Zuber as the massive Mastiff: the Dog who thinks he is God.

Somewhat on the opposite of life is Steph Roberts’ maid Marjory – in her way as rational as Emilie tries to be; while Rachel Howard’s Huldey remains innocent and naïve through it all.

You can’t not enjoy the laughter and even the groans in The Moors experience – and you will certainly appreciate the thinking and skills that go into such stmulating theatrical fare.

Another excellent Mill Theatre production.  I don’t need to say, “Don’t Miss”.



https://sites.google.com/lexisekuless.com/mill-theatre-at-dairy-road/more/online-program-the-moors