House of Rot: Grey Gardens.
Directed by Dino Dimitriadis. Musical
direction by Victoria Falconer. Costume design Nicol & Ford. LiGhting
Benjamin Brockman. Dramaturg Leila Enright. Performed by Paul Capsis and Adam
Noviello. Produced by Dino Demitriadis and Victoria Falconer. Green Door
Theatre Company. Adelaide Cabaret Festival. Adelaide Festival Centre. Space
Theatre. June 13 – 14 2026
Reviewed by Peter Wilkins
A grey mist envelops the four black chairs at the front of the stage of the intimate Space Theatre. Shafts of light stream through the mist upon musical director Victoria falconer at the piano in the shadows. Slowly she begins to sing the haunting melody of Windmills of Your Mind, images whirling and turning, spinning and circling in the confusions of the mind. House of Rot: Grey Gardens is loosely based on the controversial cult documentary about a mother and daughter living in poverty within the grey walls of Grey Gardens, the home of Edith Ewing Bouvier Beale and her daughter Edith Bouvier Beale, known as “Big Edie” and “Little Edie”. What is extraordinary is that they were the aunt and cousin of Jacqueline Kennedy and members of the socialite Bouvier family. Green Door Theatre Company has woven the story of the two eccentrics, living in a racoon and flea infested house, surrounded by detritus and infected with the scourge of poverty and dehumanization. This is the scene that Green Door Theatre Company have turned into a compelling, discomforting and bizarre cabaret.
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| Paul Capsis |
House of Rot : Grey Gardens is not a play about a house in disrepair with no running water and piled high with decaying rubbish. It is about the identity and relationship of two eccentric women, “Big Edie” played by Paul Capsis and Adam Noviello as “Little Edie”. In long black slips they conjure an image of deprivation. Capsis is the mother, wiry and wild, screaming against the terrors of her isolation. Noviello, willowy and hooded in monastic mystery with a voice that echoes through the caverns of the heart and soars on the wings of angels fears the tragic fate of daughters who become their mothers in a world of decay that is their destiny.
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| Adam Noviello |
Becket meets Artaud in a scenario shrouded in fear. Like Vladimir and Estragon they search for meaning, with snippets of songs of affirmation (I Am What I Am) from La Cage A Folle, songs of dependence (Tea For Two), songs of independence (You Can’t Take That Away From Me.) Noviello’s rendition of In Your Head (Zombie) is an agonizing wail against the forces one can’t control, a protest that storms on unrequited. Capsis’s Beautiful Dreamer offers a world beyond the reality. I’ll Be Your Mirror Big Edie sings, reassuring in her voice, ominous in her control, driven by fear, resolved by pain and determined no to let go. The rubbish of their life becomes the refuse of their entrapment.
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| Victoria Falconer |
Capsis and Noviello are superb, each one another’s foil and yet utterly entwined. Capsis is electrifying in his passion. Noviello galvanises with stillness and entices with song that erupts from some unfathomable depth of feeling. Together, they joust at the windmills of our mind, provocative and compelling, inviting us to look beyond the surface and deep into the heart and mind of the human condition.
Green Theatre Company has advised
that House of Rot:Grey Gardens, premiered at the Adelaide Cabaret
Festival is still a work in progress. With performers like Capsis and Noviello
and with musical accompaniment by Falconer House of Rot : Grey Gardens
is cabaret with clout that will haunt you long after you have left the theatre.

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