Sophie Jones - Kate Smith - Abbie Smith - in Highway of Lost Hearts. |
Written by
Mary Anne Butler – Directed by Adam Deusein
Music by
Smith and Jones – Designed by Annemaree Dalziel.
Lighting and
Technical design by Becky Russell.
The Q –
Queanbeyan Performing Arts Centre, June
6th & 7th,2024.
Performance
on 6th June reviewed by BILL STEPHENS
The voices
belong to duo Smith and Jones (Abby Smith and Sophie Jones) who not only composed the haunting songs which punctuate
the play, but also perform them superbly, moving through the play like a ghostly Greek chorus,
the songs commenting and providing context for the events.
This
production of Mary Anne Butler’s evocative one-woman play is the work of Lingua
Franca, a Bathurst-based theatre group committed to presenting work by
regionally based professional artists.
Directed by
Adam Deusien, who in 2012 co-founded Lingua Franca, with Alison Plevey,
well-known in the Canberra region for her work as a dance artist and founder of
the professional dance ensemble, Australian Dance Party, this production was
first presented by Lingua Franca in 2021. With the assistance of Arts On Tour,
this 2024 remount is being presented in The Q, as part of tour through regional
and city New South Wales.
Kate Smith in Highway of Lost Hearts
The production showcases tour-de-force performance by Kate Smith, best known as a comedian, but here revealed as an actress of depth and sensitivity with her portrayal of a self-aware woman who decides on an unusual strategy to cope with her grief.
Playwright
Mary Anne Butler’s writing is poetic and perceptive. Her observations of
Australiana are astute and authentic. The device of a trip through familiar
contemporary country towns provides her with the opportunity to comment on
attitudes and events that are intrinsically Australian revealed through the
strengths and weaknesses of her character’s responses to her situation.
A reference
to the Peter Falconio event highlights the sudden realisation of her vulnerability
on a lonely country road. How she copes with roadkill; the request for assistance from a stranded
aboriginal couple, or opportunistic
advances from strangers; all events
which could have been horror stories,
but as depicted with the theatrical skills of director Deusien, actor Smith and musicians Smith & Jones, challenge
each member of the audience to examine their own responses to these situations.
Deusien has
kept a tight rein on Smith’s well- honed comedic instincts, allowing her
nuanced delivery of Butler’s text to shine. Designer Annemaree Dalziel has
costumed Smith in earthy, no-nonsense travel clothes and surrounded her with a minimalist setting in which every item has a purpose and enhanced by Becky
Russell’s evocative lighting design, captures the loneliness of the Australian
outback.
Then there’s
the master-stroke, a character never seen by the audience but so skilfully
conjured up by writer and actor that it almost steals the show; that extraordinarily
perceptive dog.
A compelling
demonstration of the strengths of regional theatre, Lingua Franca’s production of
Highway of Lost Hearts is a surprisingly uplifting play given a thoughtful
production guaranteed to warm the hearts of those lucky enough to experience it
during this current tour.
Images by Hanna Grogan
This review also published in AUSTRALIAN ARTS REVIEW. www.artsreview.com.au