Playback (Or a play about but not starring a famous politician) by Tom Glassey.
Directed by Craig Alexander. Cast Andrea Close and Tyler Jenkins. Caroline O’Brien (Voice of Debt Collector). Lighting and Stage Design Veronique Bennet. Costume Design Leah Ridley. Luke Patterson Videographer and Editor. Diana Nixon Voice Coach. Development Consultant Ross Mueller. A Street produced professional theatre production. Developed through The Street’s Resident Theatre Production. Street Two. The Street Theatre. May 22-31 2026. Bookings: www.thestreet.org.au
Reviewed by Peter Wilkins
Tom Glassey’s writing is razor sharp, pointed with knife-edged perception and the thrust of opinion. His new play Playback (Or a play about but not starring a famous politician), developed through the Street Theatre’s Resident Theatre Production is finely honed satire, subtle yet undeniably resonating with uncomfortable truth. The plot is purposefully unambiguous. An ambitious young man (Tyler Jenkins) worms and lies his way into securing a job as a videographer for Deborah Grant (Andrea Close), a former broadcaster, edged out in favour of a new and younger breed and now the producer of her political podcast Proper Gander. Maybe Glassey’s intent is not so subtle after all. Grant is after a scoop, hot on the trail of political obfuscation and discombobulation. She has managed to secure an interview with Scott Morrison after his valedictory speech to the Parliament . Morrison is the perfect target for her campaign to exhaust and assassinate, to expose the perpetrator and exonerate all responsibility from those presumed guilty before being proven innocent.
Tyler Jenkins in Tom Glassey's Playback (Or a play about but not starring a famous politician
Part documentary, part political drama, part investigative journalism Tom Glassey's Playback(Or, a play about but not starring a famous politician) rattles the saber, slices through the dramatic events of Scott Morrison’s time in office and grapples with the motives and ethics that resulted in disastrous consequences for ordinary Australians. Glassey’s play is an attempt to elicit answers and cut a swathe through the mediocrity of a man whose complexity became the root cause of inane judgement and contradiction. As a Press Gallery journalist and podcast enthusiast, Glassey’s insightful perception of the motives and manipulation of political opportunism feeds an engaging and thought-provoking one act reality doco. It is made even more riveting by the fact that in Playback(Or, a play about but not starring a famous politician) the past is no foreign country. The past remains presently raw, charred by the ashes of the 2019 bushfires, buffeted by the accounts of lost souls and refugee boats cast against the rocks and victims of government actions that fail to protect. Videographer Luke Patterson unearths footage that utters condemnation in its images.
And yet, Glassey’s play is not solely
cast in acrimonious condemnation. Confusion befuddles any partiality. We see the child actor in film footage of a
young Morrison playing Oliver alongside his father as Fagin. We see the devoted groom with his beloved
bride Jenny. We see the adoring family
man. We see the devout man of God. We see the man espousing virtuous values in
his Maiden speech. It is here that we see Glassey’s search for answers as he
attempts to reconcile with the man who doesn’t hold a hose, goes on holiday as
Cobago burns, helps his kind and turns his back on others, destroys lives with
the law and holds multiple portfolios. Glassey’s crafting of his drama is
masterful, leading us towards empthy one moment while casting us into doubt the
next. One man is neither wholly good, nor bad. And yet Jenkins’s enigmatic Man
is entirely single-minded in his ambition. Close’s Deborah Grant is obsessed
with discovering that one question that will destroy any doubt in the cat and
mouse game of political journalism. Glassey is careful to avoid prejudicial
condemnation and yet his play leaves little doubt of calumny.
Andrea Close as podcaster Deborah Grant
A wave of anger consumes me at the announcement of a Robodebt victim’s death. The emotion has been building during the seventy-minute drama. Director Craig Alexander directs his excellent cast with purposeful intent, allowing an audience to reflect in the pauses and differentiate Jenkins’s quirky and ambitious zeal with Close’s vulnerability as she strives to hold on to past professional dominance. Power shifts and we see Grant grapple with personal and professional challenges. Close and Jenkins are superbly cast. The generational difference is expertly played with believability that gives the production authenticity. The Street’s Resident Theatre Production initiative offers an outstanding opportunity for the development of new works with a consultant, in this case Ross Mueller, to guide the process.
I leave the theatre with more questions than answers. And yet Glassey’s play does raise one lasting question “What is legacy and how can it be defined?” For me this is the one query that made Playback (Or, a play about but not starring a famous politician) a must see production.
Photographs by Nathan Smith Photography







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