The
Courtyard Studio, Canberra Theatre Centre, 15th to 19th
January.
Reviewed by
Bill Stephens
Canberra
burlesque artist, Rachel Reid, who performs professionally as Jazida, has the
distinction of being the first Government funded burlesque performer to have been awarded grant
funding by the ACT Government to develop her show.
Unusual but not surprising,
given that Jazida has already received international recognition, having
performed at the Burlesque Hall of Fame in Las Vegas in 2018. She was a
featured artist for the 2019 Australian Burlesque Festival and the
representative Australian Headliner for the Perth International Burlesque
Festival.
An obviously
accomplished burlesque performer, her toolbox includes a repertoire of stylish routines,
a wardrobe of spectacular costumes and wigs, and in addition to her dancing,
singing and acting skills, she’s a dab hand at conjuring and gymnastics. Her
makeup is a work of art in itself.
However, as
is the tradition with burlesque, each of her routines is a complete performance
in itself, and her intricate costumes require even more time to get into, than
they take to get out of. “Catch Jazida”
is an imaginative attempt to devise a full-length showcase for her skills, that
doesn’t require a large supporting cast.
Artemis Seven and Jazida |
The concept
for “Catch Jazida” is a tongue-in-cheek parody in which the story-line follows
a film noir style narrative in which Jazida portrays a thief on the loose who’s
been accused of stealing a large sum of money. She’s pursued throughout by a
private detective,(Morgan Heath-Williams, who works professionally as Artemis
Seven), who provides an amusing linking narration between routines, clears away
strewn costume components, and at the end of the show performs a gymnastic duet
with Jazida, leading to the final denouement.
Along the
way, Jazida performs a series of striking striptease routines, among them, a
spectacular fan-dance with feather fans decorated with LED lights, a Mae West
routine in which she riffs on about various alcoholic drinks, a circus routine,
and most memorably, an oriental routine involving dangerous looking shiny metal
blades.
However, as
inventive as the various routines are, each has its own inevitable conclusion,
and seen in succession, tend to become repetitive. As well, the relationship
between the routines, the narration and filmed sequences, is often puzzling.
All of which, together with the makeshift setting, missed sound and lighting
cues, and untidy exits and entrances, stamps “Catch Jazida” as a work in
progress, and certainly one which would benefit from the services of an
experienced director.
Never the
less it should be noted that the supportive first night audience found almost
every utterance cause for loud guffaws and rewarded the performance with a standing
ovation.
Following
its short Canberra season, “Catch Jazida” is already booked for seasons in
Adelaide and Perth, so if this sounds like your sort of show, then don’t miss
this opportunity to “Catch Jazida”.
This review first published in the digital edition of City News on 16.01.20