THE WHARF REVUE - BACK TO BITE YOU.
Devised and performed by Jonathan Biggins, Drew Forsythe and Philip Scott with Katrina Retallick. Sydney Theatre Company. The Playhouse Canberra Theatre Centre. September 13 – 24 2016.
Reviewed by Peter Wilkins
Drew Forsythe. Phillip Scott and Katrina Retallick in The Wharf Revue - Back to Bite You. Photo by Brett Boardman |
Fifteen years on and the Wharf
Revue team is kicking proverbial political butt harder and better than
ever. Satire slicker than sleight of
quip. Able to cut down to size with a single verbal swipe. Bawdy, brazen and brilliantly funny,The Wharf
revue revelling in its ridicule takes Canberra by storm, and audiences only too
familiar with the political shenanigans on the hill, lap up the lampoonery with
squeals of delight as the political peregrinations of the past year are paraded
with blistering affrontery.
Katrina Retallick and Phillip Scott in The Wharf Revue - Back To Bite You Photo by Brett Boardman |
Phillip Scott and Jonathan Biggins in Ancient Rome 2016 Photo by Brett Boardman |
Scott once again takes delight in
fitting his lyrics to popular tunes from musicals. Retallick makes the most of Don’t Rain on My Parade from Funny Girl
as a feisty, forceful Hillary Clinton. Biggins as Higgins channels Rex Harrison
with his rendition of Why Can’t The
English Learn To Speak as he attempts to train Bill Shorten (Forsythe) to
speak.
Jonathan Biggins. Katrina Retallick. Phillip Scott and Drew Forsythe in Ancient Rome 2016. Photo by Brett Boardman |
It was inevitable that the team
would not be able to resist lampooning Trump. Biggins again triumphs in his
impersonation of the flamboyant GOP with foot in the mouth disease. Every
politically incorrect utterance; every racist remark; every blinding flash of
foolishness is compacted into Biggins’ speech. I am puzzled that such a focus
on Trump should occupy a large part of the final minutes of the show, and that
the finale of this snappy revue should be on the American situation. Is it a
mark of the lost opportunity to bring Australian politics to a damning finale?
Is the material so lacklustre that there wasn’t that special moment? There are
some magic moments such as Biggins’ Fan Dance, the confrontation between
Pauline Hanson (Forsythe), Jacqui Lambie (Retallick) and Brandis (Scott) and
video references to Bob Hawke (Forsythe), Ben Chifley (Forsythe again) and
Julia Gillard ( a guest return by Amanda Bishop and her mysoginy speech) And
yet, we are left with another swipe at
Trump Tower politics.
Phillip Scott and Katrina Retallick as Hillary Clinton. Photo by Brett Boardman |
Similarly, I couldn’t find the
need for Carry On Up The Exit with
Sid James (Forsythe), Barbara Windsor (Retallick), a voluminous Hattie Jaques
(Scott) and a somewhat less than convincing Kenneth Williams (Biggins). Even
those familiar with the madcap characters of the Carry On series might find it
difficult to see the point of this typical university revue script.
Not so the beautiful, sensitive
and intensely moving tribute to Bob Ellis, recently arrived in Heaven and
pondering upon his fate and his loss. It is a beautifully expressed tribute to
this curmudgeonly commentator on society and the nation’s matters. A brief reference
to Richard Neville and we are reminded of the loss of those who made a
difference and have passed on. It is time to pause and take a pensive break
from the hilarity of ridicule and the lampoonery of the vices and follies of
those who determine the state of the nation.
Katrina Retallick. Jonathan Biggins. Phillip Scott and Drew Forsythe in The Wharf Revue - Back To Bite You Photo by Brett Boardman |
The Wharf Revue – Back With a Bite probably has more sting than
bite, although audiences may take it as they might. Revue is after all a moving
feast and Canberra is the perfect place to try out before taking it home to
Sydney. What is guaranteed is a night of sheer entertainment and the chance to
laugh at folly, marvel at the wit and wisdom of four performers who have honed
their skills to create satire that is cleverly crafted, brilliantly performed
and an hilarious glimpse of the absurdity of democracy’s inconsistencies.