Friday, April 3, 2026

& JULIET

 


&JULIET.

Music and lyrics by Max Martin and Friends. Book by David West Read.

Directed by Charlotte Morphett, James Colhurst-Close. Choregraphed by Charlotte Morphett and James Colhurst-Close. Musical director Callum Tolhurst-Close. Set design Charlotte Morphett and James Tolhurst-Close. Costume design  Fiona Leach. Lighting design Jacob Aquilina. Sound design Telia Janson.

Band: Conductor/keys Callum Tolhurst-Close. Assistant Musical Director Sam Hutchinson. Keys 2 Thomas Tregenza. Guitar Juniper Dixon. Bass Lizzy Collier. Drums Brandon Reid. Violin Laura Lay.

Cast: Juliet- Chloe Stevenson, Anne Hathaway-Vanessa Valois, William Shakespeare-Jackson Gibbs ,Angelique – Katie Lis, May-Joshua Kirk, Francois Tate Sissian, Lance - David Santolin, Romeo – Mackinley Brown.

Shakespeare’s Players: Caitlin Bissett, Amy Campbell, Charlotte Cox, Grace Forbes, Deborah Greenbaum,  Tori Hunt.Charlotte Jackson,Darcy Kinsella,Melissa Markos,Kara Murphy, Lara Pulciani,Milly Ratcliffe,Sam Thomson,Rachel Thornton, Alyssa Wallace.

Reviewed by Peter Wilkins

 

Mackinley Brown as Romeo. Chloe Stevenson as Juliet in &JULIET
I have always come to expect a high octane, pulse pumping production from a Free Rain musical. & Juliet, currently performing at the Q Theatre is no exception. It explodes with youthful energy from a young and enormously talented cast. What is different however is this jukebox musical’s upside down take on William Shakespeare’s tragic tale of the two star-crossed lovers. Romeo and Juliet has been a popular favourite with theatre and film makers. Think of Zefferelli’s elegant 1968 film or Baz Luhrman’s dynamic take on the classic play set in the volatile suburbs of LA. Think of Bell Shakespeare’s many contemporary versions. But with Max Martin and Friends’ music and lyrics and a book by David West Read &Juliet twists the tragic tale for a 21st century audience and asks What If?  What if Juliet (Chloe Stevenson) doesn’t die? What if Romeo does? And what if Anne Hathaway has her way and gets to write her version of events without the will of husband  Will (Jackson Gibbs)? And there you have the premise of a new and ingeniously quirky version of a tragedy turned into a romantic comedy.

 

Jackson Gibbs as William Shakespeare. Vanessa Valois as Anne Hathaway

 Joshua Kirk as May. Tate Sissien as Francois and David Santolin  as Lance in & JULIET 

You’ll have to go to the show To find out what happens when Juliet heads to Paris with her nurse Angelique (Katie Lis) and friends gay May (Joshua Kirk) and April (Vanessa Valois) or when Francois du Bois (Tate Sissian) finds true love with a kiss from May or Angelique tumbles under the bedclothes with Francois’s widowed Dad, Lance (David Santolin) and when Romeo (Mackinley Brown) resurrects. If you’re into a night of fun filled reinvention of the Romeo and Juliet story from a powerfully feminist point of view then you may be assured of seeing Shakespeare’s play in a very different light and what next – Cleopatra and Antony?, Cressida and Troilus? and what may then happen to all the Henrys, and eponymous male titles like Othello, King Lear, Macbeth, Hamlet and the Two Gentlemen of Verona?



Juliet and friends go to Paris
Co-directors Charlotte Morphett and James Tolhurst-Close’s set design already sets the scene for a full on American pop musical . A juke Box stands stage right. One can just see the members of the band behind two large backing flats covered with scrawled text. Jacob Aquilina’s lollypop pink lighting design highlights &JULIET  like a neon sign above a Diner Car. Players enter during the acknowledgement of Country. Two jerk into a hip hop routine. Another backflips.  Another slides into a break dance belly wave. Suddenly as if charged with electrifying energy  the ensemble’s chorus of Shakespeare’s Players burst into life with the show’s opening number Larger Than Life. And in that moment I know that this is a show that is going to take me where no show has gone before. This show is not only about changing a story to tell another character’s story. It is about how history hides herstory. Even mighty literature can be accomplice to that concealment. 

 

Katie Lis as Angelique
One earnest truth remains constant in this bubbly and infectious musical. “The course of true love never did run smooth” On the surface, &Juliet may be a fairyfloss display of sugar candy sitcom but directors Charlotte Morphett and James Tolhurst-Close and Musical director Callum Tolhurst-Close and the creative team with musicians and actors have created a show that had the audience clapping and cheering one moment and listening and looking intently the next. There are images that evoke instant reaction like Fiona Leach’s Gothic attire for a granite faced Lord and Lady Capulet (Sam Thomson and Grace Forbes). There are scenes of tender emotion between Sissian’s Francois and Kirk’s May. There are moments of gentle female companionship between Valois’s Hathaway and Stevenson’s Juliet. There are scenes of hilarious comedy between Lis’s Nurse and Santolin’s Lance. And there is the wit and wile of the battle of the sexes between Hathaway and Gibbon’s Shakespeare. There is more to this show than may at first appear.

 In a show full of excellent performances and stand out production values, Stevenson headlines the show with powerhouse energy, talent and personality. A look at the song list indicates the enormous demand of the show on the performer playing Juliet and Stevenson rises to the challenge. There is a moment in Stronger when she asserts her independent control over her life that I captured a glimpse of star quality and the promise of a future that could take her far. This is in a company of excellent committed performers.

Chloe Stevenson as Juliet and the Shakespeare Players

Comparison can be odious and Free Rain’s ebullient production of & Juliet leaves me contemplating the vices and the virtues of Shakespeare’s tragic tale of woe. The power of Shakespeare’s quill still inspires an American jukebox musical more than four hundred years later to instruct us in Love's lessons for themodern age. Free Rain’s &Juliet is definitely a show to love.

Photos by Janelle McMenamin 

 

 

& JULIET


Book by David West Read

Music and Lyrics by Max Martin and friends

Directors, Choreographers and Set Designers: Charlotte Morphett, James Tolhurst-Close

Musical Director: Callum Tolhurst-Close

A Free-Rain Theatre Company production

The Q Theatre, Queanbeyan to 26 April

 

Reviewed by Len Power 2 April 2026

 

What if Shakespeare’s wife, Anne Hathaway, talked her husband into changing his play ‘Romeo & Juliet’ so that Juliet did not die at the end? With its mid-2000s sensibility and characters and with changes continuing to be made by the couple as the play progresses, ‘& Juliet’ is a show that exists mainly for enjoyment. Some modern political or social issues arise along the way, but it really is just crazy and tuneful fun.

All eight of the principal cast give committed performances. They sing the many songs in the show with charm, skill and confidence. The characters they play are not written with a lot of depth, but it really doesn’t matter. The rest of the cast, totalling 23, sing very well and dance the energetic choreography with precision.

Chloe Stevenson (Juliet) and the company

At the centre of the story, Chloe Stevenson as Juliet gives a touching performance of a young woman wanting to make her own choices. Jackson Gibbs and Vanessa Valois give highly amusing performances as the bickering couple, Shakespeare and Anne Hathaway. Katie Lis scores with a humorous performance as Angelique, Juliet’s nurse, and Joshua Kirk and Tate Sissian are very effective as the sexually troubled May and Francois. David Santolin is a strong presence as May’s father, Lance, and Mackinley Brown impresses as an arrogant, yet charming Romeo.

Jackson Gibbs (Shakespeare) and Vanessa Valois (Anne Hathaway)

The lighting for this show is complex and spectacular. Jacob Aquilina has done a superb job with the design. Telia Jansen’s sound design ensures that Max Martin’s songs have the right production sound and the balance between cast members and the band works very well.

Chloe Stevenson (Juliet) and Mackinley Brown (Romeo)

Fiona Leach’s clever costumes suggest the Shakespearian period while managing to be modern at the same time. Musical director, Callum Tolhurst-Close, has obtained a fine sound in the singing and the band is hot!

This is a show designed to appeal especially to a younger audience. The directors, Charlotte Morphett and James Tolhurst-Close, have provided a colourful, enjoyable  show with fine singing and dancing. It’s quite an achievement.

 

Photos by Janelle McMenamin

 

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/.

 

 

  

Monday, March 30, 2026

ROMANCE SUBLIME! - ART SONG CANBERRA


Lorina Gore, soprano

Anthony Smith, piano

Wesley Music Centre, Forrest, March 29

 

Reviewed by Len Power

 

It’s a great experience to see an artist performing at the top of their game. It’s even more thrilling when she’s one of ours.

Soprano, Lorina Gore, completed her postgraduate voice studies at the Australian National University in Canberra and at the National Opera Studio in London. After winning numerous competitions nationally and internationally, she joined Opera Australia as a principal artist in 2008 and has since performed many roles for the company. She also enjoys a busy recording career as well.

Her accompanist on piano, Anthony Smith, is also a graduate of the ANU School of Music. He is a Canberra-based pianist, composer and musicologist. He has performed nationally as well as internationally and is currently repetiteur for three major Canberra choirs. This was his tenth appearance for Art Song Canberra.

The program commenced with 8 Gedichte aus Blätter (8 Poems From Last Leaves) by Richard Strauss. Set to the poems by Hermann von Gilm zu Rosenegg, Strauss composed the songs when he was only 21 years old. Three of the songs have become classics in the Lied repertoire. It was a great opportunity to hear all 8 songs performed together.

 

Anthony Smith (piano) and Lorina Gore (soprano)

Gore gave fine performances of each of the songs. From the hymn-like melody of the first song, Dedication, through the haunting and ethereal, The Night, Gore impressed with her emotional readings of the songs. Other highlights included The Dahlia with its enchanting vocal melody, Autumn Crocus, with its undertones of death, and the beautiful All Souls Day, the final song.

The second half of the program consisted of songs in various genres that have been part of Gore’s life and career, starting with songs discovered in her student days. She began with the wistful Stephen Foster’s No-one to Love and followed it with Kashmiri Song by Amy Woodforde-Finden. This beautiful song full of longing was given a superb performance.

The program continued chronologically and included songs by Liza Lehmann, Roger Quilter, Lerner and Loewe, Leonard Bernstein and Stephen Sondheim. The distinctive styles of these songs were all given excellent performances. So Pretty, a song for Peace by Bernstein was movingly sung as was Before I Gaze At You Again from the musical Camelot by Lerner and Loewe.

Anthony Smith (piano) and Lorina Gore (soprano)

Gore also impressed with her down-to-earth and disarming commentaries about the songs. Her story about obtaining an audition for ‘My Fair Lady’ in Sydney just so she could meet the director, Julie Andrews, was particularly amusing.

Her final song on the program, Sondheim’s Could I Leave You? was brilliantly sung and showed Gore’s skill as an actress. Throughout the program, Anthony Smith played the various music styles with consummate skill.

For an encore, Gore performed the Habanera from Bizet’s Carmen, inviting the audience to sing the repeated chorus response in the song. It was an exhilarating end to a memorable concert.

 

Photos by Len Power

 

This review was first published by Canberra CityNews digital edition on 30 March 2026.

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/.

 

Sunday, March 29, 2026

Bette and Joan

 


 Bette and Joan by Anton Burge.  Ensemble Theatre, Sydney  March 20 – April 25  2026

Reviewed by Frank McKone
March 27

Cast
Jeanette Cronin as Bette Davis
Lucia Mastrantone as Joan Crawford

Creatives
Director: Liesel Badorrek; Assistant Director: Jessica Fallico
Set & Costume Designer: Grace Deacon
Lighting Designer: Kelsey Lee
Composer & Sound Designer: Ross Johnston
Video Designer: Cameron Smith
Stage Manager: Krystelle Quartermain
Assistant Stage Manager: Lara Kyriazis



It’s my habit, as a reviewer, when seeing a play new to me, to not read too much about the play, and especially not to read reviews, even of previous productions, so that I can respond on the night with the immediate feelings and thoughts that arise without being influenced beforehand.

In the case of Bette Davis and Joan Crawford, whose lifetimes closely matched my parents’ who were not often film-goers, I think I never saw any of the Hollywood movies which made Bette and Joan famous, though I certainly recall their names from my younger days.  But I was never aware of the feud between them.

As I expected at Ensemble Theatre, I appreciated very much the acting skills of both Jeanette and Lucia, clearly directed precisely in creating every detail of facial expression, voice and physical action that the playscript required; and the original use of video brought to mind visually the questions the characters talk of – about acting and knowing the difference between reality and fiction.

Yet I felt there was something missing.  I got the picture, so to speak, but I found myself at Intermission hoping for something in the second half which would reveal what the playwright’s purpose would be beyond showing us these two women battling away at each other.

There were a few hints in second half when they were older, in 1962, looking back on their film-making experiences in the 1930s, 40s and 50s but nothing definite enough to make me like either of them, or to feel more empathetic towards them as personalities, apart from sympathy for the social issue of the treatment of women compared to men.

So, after the show, I wondered if I should find out whether other reviewers had doubts like mine.

Lyn Gardner in The Guardian in 2011 made this comment about the original West End production that year: But this kitsch play is not trying to be more than it is, and [Greta] Scacchi and [Anita] Dobson carry it with an alluringly wicked twinkle in their eyes...and  it is only a pity there is not more excavation of the emotional pain felt by these two icons, whose public success was matched by private disasters.
[ https://www.theguardian.com/stage/2011/may/12/bette-and-joan-review ]


Anton Burge wrote the script which is littered with references to Bette and Joan’s shows. I would have liked to see more of a resolution at the end was a comment in a review of the Brighton Little Theatre production in 2024. 
[ https://rozscott.com/bette-and-joan-by-anton-burge

So, though Jeanette Cronin as Bette Davis and Lucia Mastrantone as Joan Crawford surely gave as good as those acting in the play’s first presentation, and despite Anton Burge’s claim (in the Ensemble’s program notes) that it was never my intention to create merely a catalogue of anecdotes, I find I’m not the only one to want a bit more of a resolution and excavation of the emotional pain.

Maybe, if it’s not there word for word in Burge’s script, then, as director, Liesel Badorrek could indulge in a bit of poetic licence to make it happen.

But don’t let my quibbles stop you from seeing Bette and Joan, because Jeanette and Lucia give stunning performances.



 

 

 

Thursday, March 26, 2026

Cellist James Morley delivers outstanding performance


Canberra Symphony Orchestra

Conductor: Jessica Cottis

Soloist: James Morley

Llewellyn Hall

Thursday March 19, 2026


By Tony Magee


In a presentation where the overarching theme was friendship, Canberra Symphony Orchestra excelled in one the finest concerts I’ve heard from them.


Conductor Jessica Cottis was in full control, sweeping the musicians through the multifaceted program with precision.


Jessica Cottis conducts the CSO. Photo: Arianne Schlumpp


Opening with Through Changing Landscape by Australian composer Alice Chance, tentative steps forward began with just flute, with other instruments gradually joining until the full orchestras was playing.


A solid brass foundation emerged, then high above a piccolo made its mark, with piano octaves below.


Pizzicato from the five doubles basses and then the cellos carried the piece further with two massive orchestral climaxes as the high points.


Inspired by a long train journey with changing scenery as the train progresses, it was a very happy piece.


One of the few happy aspects to Prokofiev’s last years is the friendship he enjoyed with the young cellist Mstislav Rostropovich, for which he composed the unusually titled Symphony-Concerto for cello and orchestra, Op.125.


Outstanding young cellist James Morley was the soloist and he delivered a spectacular performance of incredible insight, technique and depth of emotion.


Playing from memory, he delivered superb tone production and projection.


James Morley. Photo courtesy Ukaria Cultural Centre


The opening Andante was in march tempo with a wonderful bass foundation. The following Allegro giusto brought forward furioso playing from Morley with dramatic interludes from the trombones and tuba in unison with timpani.


There followed an incredible cello cadenza where Morley was able to explore the full range of his instrument.


The closing Allegro marcato featured a wonderful and majestic fanfare from the horns underpinned by slow and deliberate pizzicato playing from the double basses.


At the conclusion of the work, the audience erupted in thunderous applause which just went on and on, and both Morley and conductor Cottis were called back again and again to take their bows.


Morley is studying at the ‘Hans Eisler’ School of Music in Berlin and has previously studied at the Sydney Conservatorium of Music and the ANU School Music, where he won Best Recital Award and the Audience Choice Award in the 2019 ANAM Concerto Competition, performing the Prokofiev Symphony-Concerto with the Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra.


He plays the ‘Ex-Robert Barrett’ cello made in 2004 by Rainer Beilharz.


The concert closed with a superb performance of The Enigma Variations by Sir Edward Elgar. 


Elgar described how, on the evening of 21 October 1898, after a tiring day's teaching, he sat down at the piano and began to improvise various melodies in styles which reflected the character of some of his friends. These improvisations, expanded and orchestrated, became the Enigma Variations.


He is also quoted as saying that he would not explain the Enigma, “It’s ‘dark saying’ must be left unguessed, and I warn you that the connection between the Variations and the Theme is often of the slightest texture.”


Then, cryptically, “Through and over the whole set is another and larger theme which ‘goes’ but is not played…”


Elgar liked to tease his friends about guessing the Enigma. 


In November 1899, Elgar was in conversation with Dorabella Penny, subject of the tenth variation. Elgar asked: “Haven’t you guessed it yet? Try again!.” 


“Are you quite sure I know it?” “Quite.”


And on another occasion: “Well, I’m surprised. I thought you of all people would guess it.”


“Why me of all people?”


“That’s asking questions!”


Speaking with Troyte Griffith in 1923 - the subject of the seventh variation - Griffith asked, “Can I have one guess? Is it God Save the King?”


“No of course not, but it is so well known that it is extraordinary that no-one has spotted it.”


Is there actually a musical theme on which the variations are based? Most people assume so, but Elgar always referred to the subject matter as “it”, never tune or theme.


The famous violinist Yehudi Menuhin claimed to have solved the mystery in 1984, when he announced from the stage of Carnegie Hall, before conducting a performance of The Enigma Variations, that the solution was Rule Britannia. He later retracted this statement.


Sir Edward Elgar. Photo: Charles Frederick Grindrod circa 1903.
Courtesy National Portrait Gallery, London


Canberra Symphony Orchestra filled Llewellyn Hall with a spectacular performance of the work. The third variation, Richard Baxter, was joyful. The fourth, William Meath Baker, was bold, featuring triple forte timpani.


After a timpani introduction, the sixth, Isabel Litton, continued with prominent brass. Troyte Griffith’s variation, number seven, featured a delightful clarinet opening.


The most famous of the variations is the ninth, Nimrod, dedicated to August Johannes Jaeger. It has been used countless times in television and film scores - from Monty Python to Dunkirk. The opening bars are a quote from the slow movement of Beethoven’s Pathetique piano sonata.


The tenth, Dorabella Penny, began with woodwinds and then a beautiful viola solo played superbly by Tor Frømyhr. Leader of the cello section, Patrick Suthers, opened the twelfth variation, Basil G. Nevinson, and his excellent playing was featured prominently throughout.

With the first variation being dedicated to the composer’s wife, Caroline Alice Elgar, the work came full circle with the Finale being Elgar himself.


So closed an absolutely superb concert from the Canberra Symphony Orchestra and one that I will remember with fondness for a long time.