Blinky Bill is on the Loose.
Adapted from the stories by Dorothy Wall by Bob Kimber. Music and lyrics by Michael Mills and Bob Kimber. Musical direction by Michael Mills. Choreogaraphy by Carol Wellman-Kelly. Costume and Props by Bianka Kennedy and Kate Prescott Kobug Theatre Company in association with Theatrebugs and Heap Good Productions. Directed by Michael Eustace. The Wetlands Amphitheatre. Adelaide Botanic Gardens. March 13-21 2021.
Reviewed by Peter Wilkins
Dorothy Wall’s
iconic classic children’s character,
Blinky Bill is delightfully brought to life in the Kobug Theatre Company’s
production of Blinky Bill is on the Loose.
Bob Kimber’s adaptation offers young and old alike a theatrical treat. With
catchy songs by Michael Mills, lively, snappy choreography by Carol Wellman
Kelly and directed by Theatrebugs director, Michael Eustace, Blinky Bill is on the Loose Again begins at the very beginning when his loving
Mum Mrs. Koala (Claire McEvoy) urges Blinky (David Salter) to venture forth and
learn about the world around him. Watched over by George the Galah (Ali
Clarke), a voice high in the Gum Tree above, Blinky sets forth to meet on his
wanderings Go-Go Goanna (Jamie Hornsby) and Angelina Wallaby (Chloe Bremner).
The versatile cast also double as other characters throughout the play as the
venerable Professor Wombat, Spotty Frog, Miss Greenlegs, Bobbin the Bilby and
her father Reginald Bilby and his companion, Lady Beatrice Bandicoot. Quick
costume changes in front of the audience keep the action alive and on the move.
The young audience is constantly reminded that the actors who sit in full view
when not on stage are playing their beloved characters.
Salter’s Blinky
Bill is the young koala with a blink and a wide eyed naivety, not yet the
cheeky Blinky of later adventures, but an innocent susceptible to the big wide
world of bush flora and fauna. Kimber’s script remains true to Dorothy Wall’s
characters with the exception of his own invention, the mean and nasty Vandals,
Axe ( Jamie Hornsby), the destroyer of the trees and koala habitat, Flame (Chloe
Bremner), the perilous bushfire that ravages the countryside each Summer season
and Mrs. Grab with her moneybag (Claire McEvoy), the avaricious developer who
drives the koala from its habitat. Sinister and dangerous, the trio of villains
teach the young and unschooled Blinky the dangers of the bush and the threat
that exists to conservation of our precious natural environment. Blinky learns
the importance of friends on whom he can trust and rely on to rescue him or
instruct him in the ways of the bush. When he discovers that he is unable to
swim while attempting to cross a river, it is his friend Angelina Wallaby
(Chloe Bremner) who is there to haul him from the water. Kimber’s script has achieved
a fine balance between the importance of lessons that he learns, the friends
that he meets and the dangers that he faces in a story to keep the young
audience captivated from beginning to end.
From musical director Michael Mill’s opening foot tapping, catchy number of On The Loose Blinky Bill on the Loose romps along, bursting with the colour and movement of Carol Wellman Kelly’s bright and bouncing choreography and Michael Eustace’s clever comic business with just the right dash of slapstick and a good dose of care for the adventurous koala. In a show that avoids any vestige of patronizing moralizing, Kobugs Theatre Company involves the audience in participation that keeps them engaged and involved as they earnestly warn Blinky Bill of the Vandals and gleefully join in the chorus of Hip Hop Clippity Clop under the direction of Mrs. Spotty Frog. An excellent, multi-talented cast sing, dance and act their way into the hearts of the audience, bringing Dorothy Wall’s story to life in this appealing adaptation while actively encouraging us to care for the plight of the koala. As Blinky faces the dangers of the bush, we are aware of the need to protect this iconic and beloved Aussie animal from natural and human dangers.
Blinky Bill is on the
Loose is a cheery, fun-filled co-production of Koala Life and Eustace’s
Theatrebugs Drama Academy and deserves to be let loose on audiences of young
and old koala lovers everywhere.