GATZ
Created and performed by Elevator
Repair Service. Her Majesty’s Theatre. Adelaide Festival. March 13-15 2026. Text The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald.
Director John Collins. Associate Director Steve Bodow. Producer Hanna Novak.
Original Set Design Louisa Thompson. Costume Design Colleen Werthmann. Lighting
Design Mark Barton. Sound Design Ben Williams. Sound System Designer and
Engineer Jason Sebastian. Production Stage Manager Maurina Lioce. Company
Manager Becky Hermenze Production Manager Libby JVera.
Cast: Nick: Scott Shepherd, Jay:
Jim Fletcher, Lucille: Maggie Hoffman, Jordan: Susie Sokol Daisy: Lucy Taylor,
Tom: Gary Wilmes, George: Frank Boyd, Myrtle: Laurena Allan, Catherine: Kristen
Sieh, Chester: Vin Knight, Michaelis: Gavin Price, Ewing: Mike Iveson, Henry C.
Gatz: Terence Crawford.
Images Mark Barton
Reviewed by Peter Wilkins
| Jim Fletcher (Jay) and Scott Shepherd (Nick) in GATZ |
Elevator Repair Service’s production of Gatz offers a master class in directing and acting. The very name of the company suggests something different, a way of looking at the world that will give us a different perspective on others and ultimately on ourselves. This is why Elevator Repair Service’s reading and performing of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s elegiac comment on morality, wealth and privilege in his classic novel The Great Gatsby is such a revelation. It opens our eyes in a way that it is impossible for us not to engage with Scott Fitzgerald’s story of the privileged and moneyed people of East Coast Long Island. But this is no mere staging of a well-known novel. Director John Collins with his remarkable cast and creatives present designer Louisa Thompson’s ordinary rather bland set of an office with cheap furniture, an old typewriter and early computer. Shelves are stacked with boxes alongside a filing cabinet. It presents an image far removed from the home of self-made millionaire Jay Gatsby. A man enters the office. He moves to the table and attempts to switch on his computer. It doesn’t respond and a technician appears to carry it away to be fixed. The man reaches for a book and begins to read.: “In my younger and more vulnerable years my father gave me some advice that I’ve been turning over in my mind ever since. ‘Whenever you feel like criticizing anyone,’ he told me, ‘just remember that all the people of this world haven’t had the advantages that you’ve had.’ ”
| Jim Fletcher as Gatsby in GATZ |
These are the opening lines of The Great Gatsby, spoken by narrator, Nick Carraway, who is writing a book looking back on the events of twenty years earlier, when he knew Jay Gatsby, Tom and Daisy Buchanan, Jodie Baker, poor George and Myrtle Wilson. For the next eight hours, minus a ninety-minute dinner break and two short intervals actor Scott Shepherd continues to read the text. Apart from moments when life in the office intrudes on his reading actor Scott Shepherd is subsumed in the role of Carraway and the story is as much about him as about the other characters. As Shepherd reads the narrative, dialogue is picked up by the other people in the office who then assume the roles of the characters. Gradually office life and Fitzgerald’s world merge and as they do the audience becomes totally immersed in the complex and fractured lives of the characters. All the while, Nick’s self-reflection becomes a window to Gatsby and Daisy’s tortured love, Buchanan’s arrogance and garage owner Wilson and his entrapped wife Myrtle’s struggle to survive.
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| Scott Shepherd as Nick and Susie Sokol as Jordan in GATZ |
The decision to read every word of the novel, ironically perhaps enriches the experience. It embellishes the lives of the characters through Nick’s eyes and Shepherd’s reading of Scott Fitzgerald’s description of both the characters and the world they inhabit. Nor does the single office set detract in any way from the shifting locations. Whether it be the drunken scene in a New York Hotel turned violent, the lavish parties in Gatsby’s huge mansion, Wilson’s run down garage or the grave site, the production is a vivid enactment of the descriptive prose and dialogue of F Scott Fitzgerald’s story. So much so that we accept that Daisy (Lucy Taylor) and Gatsby (Jim Fletcher), seated on two office chairs, are in Gatsby’s car or the couch becomes Gatsby’s swimming pool. Not a word of Scott Fitzgerald’s novel remains unspoken or unread. The actors morph convincingly from office workers to distinct and perfectly captured characters in Fitzgerald’s epic saga. There are moments of hilarious comedy when Michaelis (Gavin Price) plays the piano, moments of violence when Buchanan (Gary Wilmes) assaults Myrtle (Laurena Allan),moments of love’s complexity between Carraway and Jordan Baker, the golfer (Susie Sokol)
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| Vin Knight (Chester), Scott Shepherd, Susie Sokol in GATZ |
Gatz is a labour of love and intense scrutiny. The idea has percolated down the years and various casts have contributed to its development. Director John Collins has scrutinized every moment, every action and reaction. Not a moment passes without meaning. The timing of response to Shepherd’s narration is impeccable. There is a tone to the reading and to the actors’ delivery that echoes through time. Listening to Fitzgerald’s text transports us to the early years of the twentieth century. The voices of the actors resonate with the individual emotions of their characters. A gesture defines the office worker in action and response, never intruding on our belief in Fitzgerald’s characters.
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| Scott Shepherd as Narrator and Nick Carroway in GATZ |
“On your imaginations work” implores the Chorus in Shakespeare’s Henry V. Elevator Repair Service’s performance of Gatz ignites our imagination, and we see as if by magic every moment of this evocatively told story. Shepherd closes the book and delivers Carraway’s words by rote. Gatsby’s father Henry C Gatz (in a moving performance by local South Australian actor Terence Crawford) appears for his son’s sparsely attended funeral. We too are witness to the moral of a story in which the promise of greatness or the fulfillment of hope is so easily vanquished by the failings of the human spirit.
Elevator Repair Service’s Gatz is a
revelation, engrossing, powerfully told and leaving us, like Nick, with “the
capacity to wonder.” The greatness of Gatz is in the production’s gift
to theatre and the work of America’s great observer of human nature and its
power to destroy and divide. The performance, sadly exclusive only to the
Adelaide Festival is incentive enough to immediately read or reread F Scott
Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby.
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