Written by Charles Dickens
Adapted by Nelle Lee
Directed by Michael
Futcher
Shake & Stir
Theatre Co.
Canberra Theatre to
24 December.
Reviewed by Len Power
21 December 2022
The perfect show for the Christmas season, ‘A Christmas
Carol’ has it all – a good, classic story, fine acting and breath-taking,
elaborate staging.
Ebenezer Scrooge, in his quest for wealth, has lost the spirit of Christmas, becoming an embittered, lonely recluse. One evening, close to Christmas, the ghost of his deceased former partner, Jacob Marley, appears before him in chains and warns him he is likely to suffer the same fate when he dies. One by one, the ghosts of Christmas Past, Christmas Present and Christmas Yet To Come make him see the error of his ways and rejoin the human race in celebrating Christmas.
Charles Dickens wrote the novella, ‘A Christmas Carol’, in 1843 after reading a parliamentary report on child labourers which particularly moved him. He, himself, had been a child labourer and he drew on that experience as well as those of his disabled nephew, the desperate struggles of the poor people at the time and the renewed Victorian interest in Christmas. The story has remained popular ever since and various movies and theatre productions have retold the story in their own way.
Shake & Stir Theatre Co.’s production uses all the technical wizardry of the modern theatre to tell this story. The supernatural element of ghostly apparitions and story flashbacks make this a difficult story to present convincingly but the company succeeds marvellously.
Eugene Gilfedder as Scrooge with members of the company
Josh McIntosh's set for 'A Christmas Carol'
A great family show, ‘A Christmas Carol’ is true to Dickens’ source novella and is magically and memorably told.
Photos by David Fell
Len Power's reviews are also broadcast on Artsound FM 92.7 in the ‘Arts Cafe’ and ‘Arts About’ programs and published in his blog 'Just Power Writing' at https://justpowerwriting.blogspot.com/.