Saturday, June 21, 2025

The Lodge, & Am I In Your Way?

Visual Art Exhibition Review | Brian Rope

The Lodge | Amala Groom

Am I In Your Way? | Raquel Ormella

Canberra Contemporary | 3 May – 12 July 2025

Readers who are not familiar with Australia’s national capital city and, in particular, the design and purpose of its central area might like to look at TheWalter Burley and Marion Mahony Griffin Design Drawings of the City of Canberra and/or read material about the design, such as thisWikipedia article.

Am I in your way? extends Raquel Ormella’s career-long focus on the visual cultures of protest and resistance. This exhibition takes as its starting point the location of the Canberra Contemporary gallery in which it is on display - at the centre of the Parliamentary Triangle looking out onto Lake Burley Griffin and across it towards and beyond the base of that triangle - as a site to consider past and present formations of national identities. 

The work activates the view down Walter Burley Griffin’s designed sightline between Parliament House and the Australian War Memorial, passing through the centre of the International Flag Display on Commonwealth Place. Drawings, flags and performance works in the exhibition look at how political protestors have used their bodies as direct forms of passive disruption. 

Inked messages on the front or reverse of, or alongside, found vintage Canberra postcards are both entertaining and significant. Likewise, messages on created banners both challenge and amuse us.

Raquel Ormella, 'One bomb vs many' 2025, installation view, 'Am I in your way_', Canberra Contemporary, 2025, ink on found vintage Canberra postcards, dimensions variable. Photo by Brenton McGeachie

Raquel Ormella, 'Am I in your way_', 2025, installation view, Canberra Contemporary, 2025. Photo by Brian Rope

Raquel Ormella, 'Am I in your way_', 2025, installation view, Canberra Contemporary, 2025. Photo by Brenton McGeachie_2

Raquel Ormella, 'future history #1', 2025, installation view, 'Am I in your way_', Canberra Contemporary, 2025,  nylon, 90 x 170cm. Photo by Brenton McGeachie

In an environment where attitudes towards legitimate disruption and protest are changing, this exhibition is a timely exploration of an emerging criminalisation of what might simply be no more than an inconvenience for passers-by or bystanders.

The second exhibition being shown in the adjacent gallery space is The Lodge, named after the Prime Minister’s residence. It is the third moving image work in Amala Groom’s Raised by Wolves series exploring the relationship between alchemy (spirit) and science (matter), following the belief that life is a marriage of these forces, with the human being as the ultimate construct between them.

This excellent 11:11 minutes single-channel video work connects strongly with Groom’s personal history of direct action at the Aboriginal Tent Embassy located within the Parliamentary Triangle, and her many years of political engagement both inside and outside the walls of Parliament House. Her returning to Ngunnawal country to film this artwork is important; it is both ceremonial and cyclical. In doing so, she has reactivated her ancestral songlines (the Aboriginal walking routes that crossed the country, linking important sites and locations), and this resultant autobiographical (in nature) work is a reweaving of both history and the future.

Wearing a typically long and white wedding dress, Groom herself symbolically weaves and unravels a red rope (commonly used as a symbol of protection, unity, and unbreakable bonds) along Anzac Parade, embodying both the colonial structural constraints Indigenous people faced (and still do) and the profound role ancestors play in spirituality, offering guidance and a sense of belonging. The work culminates in her transformation; empowered by the campfire that burns constantly at the Tent Embassy, she is seen running through Parliament House then ultimately vanishing into the bush as a sovereign Wiradyuri woman.

Amala Groom, The Lodge 2025 production still, single channel video. Image credit Ryan Andrew Lee_10

Amala Groom, The Lodge 2025 production still, single channel video. Image credit Ryan Andrew Lee_2

Amala Groom, The Lodge 2025 production still, single channel video. Image credit Ryan Andrew Lee_4


Amala Groom, The Lodge 2025 production still, single channel video. Image credit Ryan Andrew Lee_7

In this work, Groom has reclaimed what we might think of as “the heart of the Australian state” created by all who came after those we now refer to as our First Peoples. For many, many years previously the area of country now within the Parliamentary Triangle was a sacred place used by those First Peoples for corroborees and tribal indigenous gatherings. Visitors to the exhibition should view the entire video, waiting as necessary to watch it from the start, taking in its significant messages, thinking about the significance of various shapes they see, and admiring the very professional performance and film quality. Then read the artist statement and the exhibition essay to understand more fully what they have viewed.

These two exhibitions both present profound and important messages. Together the messages are enhanced and strengthened.

This review is also available on the author's blog here.

Friday, June 20, 2025

THE QUEEN'S NANNY

 


The Queen’s Nanny by Melanie Tait.


Directed by Priscilla Jackman. Assistant director Miranda Middleton Set Designer – Michael Hankin Costume Designer – Genevieve Graham Lighting Designer – Morgan Moroney Composer & Sound Designer – James Peter Brown  Dialect & Voice Coach – Jennifer White  Movement Coach – Tim Dashwood Stage Manager – Sean Proude Assistant Stage Manager – Madelaine Osborn Costumer Supervisor – Lily Mateljan  Cast Matthew Backer as J and all other characters Briallen Clarke as Marion Sharon Millerchip as Elizabeth. Ensemble Theatre.The Playhouse. Canberra Theatre Centre. June 19-21 2025. Bookings 62752700

 

Reviewed by Peter Wilkins

 

Sharon Millerchip as the Queen Mother, Briallen Clarke 
as Marion Crawford. Matthew Backer as J in The Queen's Nanny

 

It would not be too far-fetched to regard the story of Marion Crawford as the tragedy of a common woman. Crawford, or Crawfie as she was affectionately known by royalty and the palace staff was the Royal Governess to Lilibet, the future Queen Elizabeth and her sister Princess Margaret from 1933 to 1949. In 1949 after seventeen years of loyal and dedicated service to the crown, Crawfie was given a pension and rooms with her husband George Buckley in Kensington Palace.

Briallen Clarke is Marion Crawford

Her offense was not against the Gods but against the Royal Family when, on an editor’s request she wrote articles for a woman’s magazine, revealing insights into the life of the royal family, ironically in the first instance with the agreement of the Queen Mother. An American publisher offered her $85,000 to write a book,The Little Princesses, which became a best seller and  roused the ire of the Queen Mother, who saw this as a complete betrayal of confidence and trust. Crawfie, who retired on the money with her husband to Aberdeen became a vilified outcast, never to have contact with the Royals again. An intelligent, educated woman and loyal servant to the crown and the princesses in her charge died alone in 1988.

Sharon Millerchip is the Queen Mother

 

Playwright, Melanie Tait has succinctly and empathetically told Crawfie’s story in a ninety minute drama that spans the euphoria of her status to the domestic and financial struggles, once out of service and the consequences of her actions to resolve the struggles by accepting the book offer. Using only three actors to tell her story, Tait has constructed a roller coaster of emotional responses. What begins as a warm-hearted glimpse into Crawfie’s early engagement and her relationship with the Queen Mother and her penchant for Dubonnet darkens with the onset of war and erupts with tragic overtones as Tait unravels the personal consequences of Crawfie’s innocent actions. Tait tells the story through the drama without judgement. It is left to the audience to judge the character of Sharon Millerchip’s steely and superior Queen Mother or Briallen Clarke’s progressive, devoted and finally ostracized Marion. Matthew Backer with chameleon agility sketches distinctly crafted characters such as J, the Aussie journalist ,Ainslie the Butler, the American Editor, George Buckley, Princess Elizabeth and the narrator of the drama. All three actors have been brilliantly cast and Priscilla Jackman’s direction keeps the audience glued to the performance from the light-hearted opening to the sorrowful conclusion to this woeful saga of Britain’s first royal commentator.

Matthew Backer as Lilibet. Briallen Clarke as Crawfie
In an era when tabloid revelations are de rigeur and newsstands are filled with preposterous articles about members of the Royal family, Crawfie’s insight into the habits and lives of the Royal Family at the time may appear innocuous. Because of the Queen Mother’s later insistence on signed non-disclosure statements by all appointed staff members, there can be no insider exposés, and we are left at the end of The Queen’s Nanny with the question, “Was Marion Crawford the victim of deception and injustice?”


Is naivety and the grasp of opportunity her fatal flaw? Whether a Monarchist or a Republican, Ensemble’s skilfully staged production will provoke response as much about Crawford’s story as about the role and the responsibility of the media in reporting on the lives of celebrities. It is still very much a story for our time. Don’t miss it.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

THE QUEEN'S NANNY


Written by Melanie Tait

Directed by Priscilla Jackman

Presented by Ensemble Theatre

The Playhouse, Canberra Theatre Centre to 21 June

 

Reviewed by Len Power 19 June 2025

 

A thriving industry has grown up to feed the public’s fascination with the lives and activities of the Royal Family. The play tells the story of Marion Crawford, a young Scottish woman, who became nanny to the young princesses Elizabeth and Margaret in the 1930s.

She worked for the Royal Family until 1949, building an intimate and trusted relationship with the princesses and the Queen Mother. For her long and faithful service, she was given a grace and favour house in London.

Upon her departure from her job, she agreed to author The Little Princesses, a book which told the story of her time with the family. Although she had been given tentative approval by the Royal Family to publish her story, the family ostracised her after the book appeared under her own name. No member of the family ever spoke to her again.

Australian playwright, Melanie Tait, imagines the details of the relationship of Crawford with the Royal Family showing how they depended on her to raise the princesses well. The family’s later actions and lack of feeling for this woman who had devoted the best years of her life to them, gives the play a poignant edge. Much of the humour of the play is at the expense of the royal characters. It could be argued that Tait is a bit tough on them, but it is certainly entertaining and funny.

The play has been given an excellent production by the Ensemble Theatre. It has been directed with imagination and flair by Priscilla Jackman. Of the cast of three, Matthew Backer darts in an out of character playing 8 roles, including the young Princess Elizabeth, Bertie, the later King George VI, and Crawford’s husband, George Buthlay. Backer’s performance in all of these roles is outstanding.


Matthew Backer (various roles) and Briallen Clarke (Marion Crawford)

Briallen Clarke makes Marion Crawford instantly likeable with her direct and down-to-earth Scottishness. Her strong performance in this large role is at time humorous as well as touching and finally memorable.


Sharon Millerchip (Queen Mother)

Sharon Millerchip’s great sense of timing gives her character of the Queen Mother both a formidable, steely presence as well as some of the best funny moments of the play.

While Tait’s play succeeds in the telling of this woman’s story, the play ends with a discussion about Australia’s place in the Commonwealth. While it’s a point continually argued about, it feels awkwardly placed in this play.

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/.

  

The Queen’s Nanny, by Melanie Tait. Directed by Priscilla Jackman. Ensemble Theatre. The Playhouse, Canberra Theatre Centre. June 19-21. Reviewed by Alanna Maclean.

Matthew Backer with Briallen Clarke as Marion - 'Crawfie'.

I’m old enough to have encountered the Crawfie stories, I think in an odd little magazine called Sunny Stories, probably in the early 1950s.

We never heard tell of the upset that publication of tales of the early years of Princess Elizabeth and Princess Margaret caused and soon moved on to the excitements of Journey into Space and Jet Morgan. 

However, it’s clear from Melanie Tait’s imaginative and sensitive  play about the woman who took care of the early upbringing of both the Queen and her sister that here’s a story that’s been waiting to be told. 

There are only three actors on a set by Michael Hankin that is full of  visual surprises. Little houses (didn’t the princesses have a house that was sized only for children?), a miniature palace, a tiny train high in the air. Among these a tribe of characters move, most of whom are performed by a very busy Matthew Backer. He switches from occasional narrator or passing character to stuttering Bertie (who will become George VI) to a snobby (and camp) servant to Elizabeth (who will become the Queen Mother) to Crawfie’s eventual  husband the feckless George and to an utterly charming and steady Elizabeth (who will become Elizabeth II), whatever her age.

Sharon Millerchip as the Queen Mother

That leaves Sharon Millerchip as the Queen Mother and Briallen Clarke as Marion Crawford, both powerful characters in their own way. But the royal juggernaut represented by Millerchip’s hard drinking, charming but forceful queen is going to outweigh the sterling metal of the Queen’s Scottish nanny, given an incisive and perceptive performance by Clarke. 

It’s a duel and power is on the side of the royals. And hindsight, given the scandals and royal tragedies of the ensuing decades, is bound to colour the audience’s perception of events. 

It’s all beautifully done and well worth a visit to the Playhouse for what is a very brief season. 

Thursday, June 19, 2025

A DOLL'S HOUSE, PART TWO. Reviewed by Peter Wilkins

Lainie Hart as Nora, Rhys Robinson as Torvald
in Lucas Hnath's A Doll's House, Part 2

 

Dolls House 2 by Lucas Hnath. 

Directed by Joel Horwood. Set design Tom Berger. Lighting design Lachlan Houen. Sound design Neville Pye. Costume design Helen Drum. Properties Coordinator Rosemary Gibbons. Stage manager Carmen King. Production Manager Liz de Toth. Set Coordinator. Russell Brown OAM Canberra Repertory Theatre. June 13-28 2025. Bookings 62571950.

 

Elaine Noos as Anne-Marie. Lainie Hart as Nora


 


It is said that when Nora Helmer slammed the door on her exit in Henrik Ibsen’s play A Doll’s House and decided to leave her husband Torvald and her children in search of her independence and true identity it was the loudest door slam in the history of the theatre. In our modern day and age such an act begs the question “What happened to Nora?” Playwright Lucas Hnath has written an intriguing and illuminating account of Nora’s imagined return after an absence of fifteen years. Now a highly successful writer, writing under a pseudonym, she has been exposed as Nora Helmer by a judge who threatens to reveal that she has been acting against the law because she is not legally divorced. It may seem a rather tenuous argument in the light of contemporary expectations, but it serves to reinforce the oppressed status of a married woman at the turn of the twentieth century. Nora (Lainie Hart), having assumed that Torvald (Rhys Robinson) had filed a divorce when she left is therefore forced to return to request a divorce from Torvald to escape the consequences of her legally illicit behaviour in the intervening years.

Elaine Noon (Anne-Marie), Anna Lorenz (Emmy), Rhys Robinson (Torvald)
To a modern audience, Hnath’s premise may require a willing suspension of disbelief, although it quickly becomes evident that Ibsen’s critical account of the woman’s subservience and powerlessness in his A Doll’s House is still the case at the time of Nora’s return in Doll’s House, Part 2. Nora, although now an independent and highly successful woman writer is still bound by a patriarchy that denies her free will. Hnath’s Doll’s House Part 2 ‘s polemic contends that the circumstances of Henrik Ibsen’s original play persist. In confronting the struggle, Hnath’s Nora provides a prophesy of change and a strong feminist voice for the future. There is no need for the door to slam at the end of the ninety-minute play. For today’s enlightened audience Nora’s dream for change has become a reality. The difference that remains between her and Torvald is that she can imagine that change. Torvald can’t. and there’s the rub.

Lainie Hart as Nora. Anna Lorenz as Emmy
Hnath has constructed his play as an argument. Scene one is Nora’s scene and we hear her argument. Scene Two introduces the perspective of the housemaid Anne-Marie (Elaine Noon). Scene Three introduces Torvald’s confusion and perplexity. We meet Nora’s daughter Emmy (Anna Lorenz) in Scene 4 and finally Nora and Torvald come to an understanding and conclusion to the debate. If it were not for the fact that director Joel Horwood has chosen an excellent cast, the play could become tediously didactic, but Horwood’s cast imbue their argument and opinion with articulately fleshed out character. Tom Berger’s carefully and cleverly designed set avoids any superfluity, while retaining a sense of period and middle class affluence which allows an audience to focus entirely on the contrasting arguments. The design is ideally complemented by Helen Drum’s costumes, Lachlan Houen's atmospheric lighting and Neville Pye’s blend of classical and contemporary sound design.

Horwood’s direction is purposeful, focusing clearly on his actors to play out their attitude. Hart’s Nora is effervescent. There is still the girlish playfulness of Ibsen’s songbird, but it is now imbued with the confidence of the successful and independent woman. Hart is an actress who never fails to captivate. Robinson’s Torvald captures the conservative conditioning of his gender, social standing and bewildered resistance to change perfectly. Elaine Noon’s housemaid Anne Marie is the paragon of loyal servitude. Noon’s traditional foil perfectly captures Anne Marie’s acceptance of her lot with a strength of conviction and duty. As Nora’s daughter Emmy, Anna Lorenz is her father’s daughter, engaged to a bank clerk and content to enter marriage. Lorenz combines Nora’s intelligent and independent strength of character with her father’s observance of social expectation. At times her speed of delivery lost the sense of dialogue but the characterization was entirely convincing.

All in all, Rep’s production of Dolls House, Part 2 is a meticulously and insightfully staged performance of Hnath’s absorbing conjecture. Knowledge of Ibsen’s original drama may heighten appreciation of the relationship between the circumstances that drove Nora to leave Torvald and her journey of independence in the intervening fifteen years. However, it will not detract in any way from the enjoyment and engagement with this thought-provoking and stimulating night at the theatre.

Photos by Ross Gould

 

Wednesday, June 18, 2025

A Doll’s House, Part 2 by Lucas Hnath. Directed by Joel Horwood. Canberra Repertory Canberra Rep Theatre. Until June 28. Reviewed by Alanna Maclean.

 

 This is the ultimate sequel. What happened after Nora went out that door at the end of Ibsen’s original A Doll’s House?

She went on living and after some initial struggles, quite successfully too, turning herself into a writer with a heart for women’s issues.

In this sequel she returns because she needs husband Torvald to complete a proper divorce. She’s moved on, he’s hung on. Then there’s her daughter Emmy who hasn’t figured gender issues out yet, very self assured but on the cusp of a marriage which might confine her as Nora’s did. 

And the housekeeper and maid of all work, Anne Marie, who was left to cope with Nora’s three children at the expense of her own family, has a lot of strong words to say about all of this.

Lainie Hart is a powerful and assured Nora, Elaine Noon is caring and perceptive as Anne Marie, Anna Lorenz makes daughter Emmy clear eyed and strong and Rhys Robinson as Torvald is still wonderfully struggling to understand why Nora left.

It’s a no interval fast running piece, full of fierce language and done on a set by Tom Berger that is spare and stark and elegant.  A long staircase, tall back lit windows, minimal furniture and of course the famous door is about all. And it is enough in this play which comes straight to various points in a series of terse scenes, encouraging all kinds of thoughts about the issues. Which are far from outdated.

Saturday, June 14, 2025

A DOLL'S HOUSE, PART 2

 


Written by Lucas Hnath

Directed by Joel Horwood

A Canberra REP production

Canberra REP Theatre, Acton to 28 June

 

Reviewed by Len Power 13 June 2025

 

When Nora famously slammed that door at the end of Henrik Ibsen’s acclaimed play, ‘A Doll’s House’, we were left wondering about Nora’s fate in such an inhibiting and disapproving society of the time.

The action in Lucas Hnath’s 2017 play, set 15 years later, gives us an opportunity to revisit Nora as she suddenly returns to the house of her husband, Torvald. Assuming she has been long divorced, she was shocked to find that her husband never filed the divorce papers officially, leaving her open to legal action for signing contracts, something a married woman was not allowed to do in that era. She has only returned to persuade her husband to file those papers.

This one act play in four parts focusses on each of the four characters in the play – Nora, her husband Torvald, the maid, Anne Marie, and Nora’s now grown-up daughter, Emmy.

The role of Nora, one that most actresses would aspire to play, is given a fine, multi-layered performance by Lainie Hart. Presenting as a strong, confidant woman determined to live her own way, her delivery of the dialogue and body language give hints that life has been a struggle. We know that attitudes will not change in her lifetime and Hart shows glimpses of the pain involved in her brave struggle. It’s a thoughtful and believable performance throughout.

Rhys Robinson gives a finely detailed performance of Torvald as an inhibited, emotionally damaged man who clearly has never moved on from his marriage to Nora or changed any of his attitudes that contributed to Nora’s leaving.

Emmy is played by Anna Lorenz as a young woman who seems to have her mother’s emotional strength but surprises both us and Nora with her determination to be married and live by the rules of society that Nora long ago rejected. Lorenz gives a strong performance in the role.

Elaine Noon is very effective as the long-serving maid of the household who finds herself torn between the demands of her job and her own feelings.

The suitably austere set was designed by Tom Berger and has a fine lighting design by Lachlan Houen. Helen Drum has provided attractive period costumes.

Director, Joel Horwood, has produced a tight show where the character work is highly detailed. Keeping the language contemporary added to the accessibility of this production which works on all levels.


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/.

 

 

Wednesday, June 11, 2025

Present Laughter by Noel Coward. Directed by Karen Vickery. ACT Hub. June 4-14. Reviewed by Alanna Maclean

Jarrad West as Garry. Photo Jane Duong

This is a long but rather magnificent 1940s play by Noel Coward about the theatre and the people in it, most notably the egotistical Garry Essendine (Jarrad West), pretty clearly based on Coward himself. 

There’s been a bit of editing and the gender of some of the roles have been swapped, and it’s a lengthy evening but there is much to enjoy.

Garry’s on his way to Australia (Africa in the original play) for a theatre tour but his life is being complicated by various would be lovers, and his separated but not divorced wife Liz (Crystal Mahon) seems still very much a controlling force in his life.  He’s not getting any younger either, and there’s a certain angst about that.

There is a degree of elegance in the setting and a lot to appreciate but I’m not sure that the gender changes always work for the play, despite a luminous performance by Callum Doherty as David, the very young thing who falls under Garry’s spell early in the piece. 

From left, Joanna (Karina Hudson) and  Crystal Mahon   as Liz. Photo Jane Duong,

Tracy Noble is brisk and efficient as Monica, Garry’s secretary, keeping the paperwork and the people under control.  Crystal Mahon is calm as Liz, still in Gary’s life, organising and advising  but never quite getting round to a divorce. Joe Dinn as Morris  and Amy Kowalczuk as Henrietta bring to bustling life two more of the entourage without which Gary cannot operate. The urbane Fred (Leonidas Katsanis) takes a calm control over day to day domestic worries and the sinister Swedish Miss Erikson (Jenna Roberts) takes what looks like a slapdash anecdote laced control of the cleaning.

Apart from the idealistic David the other visitors include the frankly predatory Joanna (Karina Hudson), and the harbinger of future styles of theatre, Roland Maule (Michael Cooper), who writes plays of a sort that don’t chime well with the style of Garry.

West does a great job as the exasperated self centred Garry, who has to referee and survive all of the resulting chaos.

The set (Karen Vickery and Michael Sparks) bristles with silver, multiple doors, alcohol, and opportunities to light up a cigarette.

It’s a show that proves that Noel Coward is always worth revisiting.

Alanna Maclean