The Magic Flute

The Magic Flute Adelaide Festival 2019Adelaide Festival. Festival Theatre. 2 Mar 2019

 

Adelaide Festival directors Neil Armfield and Rachel Healy knew that the festival is bereft without a headliner opera, and they have given us some doozers: Barrie Kosky’s Saul in 2017, Armfield’s own Hamlet last year, and presently Mozart’s The Magic Flute directed by Suzanne Andrade and Barrie Kosky.

 

Barrie Kosky, currently artistic director at Komische Oper Berlin, is regarded by many as the most creative and inventive opera director today. But for those old enough to party in 1996, he is fondly remembered for his Red Square after-hours entertainment venue in the festival of that year. Who in attendance will ever forget the dueling Caterpillar excavators, or the dancing Mini Morrises - choreographed to classical music and lit like a disco? The wunderkind from Melbourne was only 29 years old at the time and the youngest-ever Adelaide Festival director.

 

Except for the Adelaide Symphony Orchestra, the entire Magic Flute production - including soloists, chorus and conductor, Jordan de Souza - is imported from the Komische Oper and has already played in 22 countries and wowed half a million people.

 

Komische is German for comic and The Magic Flute is exemplary of Kosky’s flamboyant and colourful style. New to Adelaide audiences will be his collaboration with Suzanne Andrade. Andrade and Paul Barritt co-founded 1927, a British theatre company leading the world in integrating theatre, music and animation. Whereas opera was brought to animation in Looney Tunes’s What’s Opera, Doc? in 1957, the cartoons are bought to the opera in The Magic Flute. The fairy tale concerns young lovers who must pass tests in order to live happily ever after. Just like today, they must attain wisdom and beauty, or they die.

 

The entire set is only a couple of metres deep. It is basically a screen for projected animation with a few revolving platforms at various levels resembling statue plinths for the singers. The whole effect is mind blowing. Anything is possible – pink elephants lounging in giant martini glasses, forests of flowers, mechanicals and clocks, anything of whimsy and fantasy can be conjured and disappeared in a blink. It makes one giddy; someone described it like drinking ten cups of coffee. Queen of the Night, Christina Poulitsi, delivers her crystal-clear soprano in the guise of a giant leggy spider. The animation is perfectly timed with arias, singer interaction, the lighting and orchestra. Cute things, like petting a cartoon cat, or threatening things, like thrown knives are conjured. Just when the wow factor is about to wear off, the narrative commands a whole new ravishing scenario.

 

The animation is charming in that it’s obviously all hand-made and is influenced by silent film. Metropolis machinery, clocks and a Buster Keatonesque Papageno lovingly played by Joan Martin-Royo. Villain Monostatos becomes Nosferatu. All dialogue is transcribed to printed words that sail from the speaker. Notes fly out of instruments.

 

Mozart and librettist Emanuel Schikaneder would be very happy with this vaudeville romp so well mortised with animation. Double bravo!

 

David Grybowski

5 stars

 

When: 1 to 3 Mar

Where: Festival Theatre

Bookings: adelaidefestival.com.au

A Day at the Zoo

A day at the zoo Adelaide Fringe 2019Music and Fun. Burnside Community Centre. 23 Feb 2019

 

This wonderful little show takes the audience on a lively musical adventure where we pack our bag, travel to the Zoo, and meet all the different animals that call it home. There is

lots of singing and dancing along the way, and the audience helps to save the day when a troublesome little monkey causes mayhem! 

 

Presented by Libby and Carla Philips, this show is a great example of how you can engage and entertain children with little more than song and an interactive story.  The minimalist set and cast are all that is required to keep their young audience on their feet, smiling, and participating throughout.

 

In a stroke of genius, this show is on at the Burnside Community Centre, which lets one bypass the hassle of getting small children to a city venue on time, and minus the heat stroke.

 

Best appreciated by the under-fives, A Day at the Zoo is a fun and stress-free opportunity to experience the joy of the Fringe with your pre-schoolers.

 

Nicole Russo

 

When: 16 Feb to 9 Mar

Where: Burnside Community Centre

Bookings: adelaidefringe.com.au

Kokoda

Kokoda Adelaide Fringe 2019Adelaide Fringe. Star Theatres – The Chapel. 1 Mar 2019

 

The Kokoda Trail is a defining gene in Australia’s wartime DNA, and Kokoda, written by Peter Maddern and performed by Jayden Marshall, is a recent contribution to the catalogue of dramatic works that ensure this moment in history is vividly remembered for what it was: selfless sacrifice by ordinary men in regrettably extraordinary situations.

 

The history the play depicts is well known and documented. Suffice to say, the narrative explores the concept of the ‘chocolate soldier’, military leaders deflecting blame when campaigns don’t turn out the way they wanted, privation, mateship, instinct to stay alive, and the general horror of war.

 

The play comes in at around seventy minutes and is written for a solo actor, so it’s already a tall order for the production to be fully successful: the script needs to be engaging, the direction tight, the acting accomplished, and the production elements honed and empathetic. This production is often successful in these individual aspects, but not fully convincing in marrying them together.

 

Writer and Director Peter Maddern’s program notes state the script has been shortened since it was first produced, but it merits further cuts. Some of the underlying themes, such as military decision making, are re-explored but without adding substantial dramatic value. Some of the descriptive and scene-setting sections of text are evocative but are not always supported by sufficiently engaging stagecraft, which at times becomes repetitive. A one-hander places additional demands on all production components: they need to fit together like a jigsaw, and the realisation of the whole depends on the potency of every piece.

 

Zac Eichner’s lighting design works well in the intimate space of the Chapel Theatre and evokes the near-helplessness and isolation that the Kokoda diggers must have experienced.

 

Jayden Marshall captures the initial wide-eyed adventure-seeking youthful brashness of Private Morris Powell and confidently transitions into a terrorised man who is desperate to stay alive against seemingly impossible odds.

 

A highlight of the production is the soundscape by Andrés Diez Blanco and Josh Williams. It greatly adds to the tension and atmosphere of the production.

 

The ending of the play is unexpected and dramatically shocking, and leaves the audience in no doubt about the futility and sadness of war. Jayden Marshall’s curtain call is all the more poignant.

 

Kym Clayton

 

When: 1 to 11 Mar. Continuing in Stirling until 16 Mar

Where: The Chapel, Star Theatres.

Bookings: adelaidefringe.com.au

Out Of Chaos…

Out or Chaos Adelaide FestivalAdelaide Festival and Gravity & Other Myths. Scott Theatre. 1 Mar 2019

 

The physical theatre company, Gravity & Other Myths, is a big South Australian success story. Their show in the 2016 Adelaide Fringe, A Simple Space, so impressed the Adelaide Festival’s artistic directors, Neil Armfield and Rachel Healy, that they offered them a gig in the big tent of the Festival the following year. And that show, Backbone, was so well received that they return to the Festival presently with the world premiere production of Out Of Chaos….

 

This is amazing and refreshingly different physical theatre performance. Director Darcy Grant aims to break down the barrier between the eight acrobats (that’s what they call themselves) and the audience, and this is accomplished admirably with insights into the performers’ thoughts through spontaneous interviewing by Grant himself. Local lighting designer Geoff Cobham dims a variety of illumination in creative ways rendering a pleasingly engaging and mysterious atmosphere. With the loose street clothing and free commentary, an illusion of attending an informal rehearsal and chatting with the performers is palpable. Yet, make no mistake; injury-defying tumbling is taking place with choreographed precision. Dance mutates into dangerous physicality and contests of wills. Who will last longer, the ladies in one-handed stands or a lingering uttered note. You will gasp and applaud with admiration.

 

Part of the simple approach of the troupe is that very few props are employed – a hoop number, and occasionally a lot of round tables. Quick jumps into shoulder stands are remarkable, but exchanging bodies between trees in a forest of triple shoulder stands is pretty outstanding. You share the trepidation of free-standing precariously three people high and the relief of having feet on the floor as the strong bottom rung. People are propelled and flying in theme with the company name – gravity and other myths – but must also be caught with only a net of absolute trust.

 

An outstanding ticket for the whole family. Bravo!

 

David Grybowski

5 Stars

 

When: 27 Feb to 6 Mar

Where: Scott Theatre

Bookings: adelaidefestival.com.au

Hans - Like a German

Hans Like A German 2019The Octagon. Gluttony. 28 Feb 2019

Our Hans can do no wrong. We love him as shamelessly as he is shameless. Year after year his doting fans pack his venues to the rafters and fall about in mirth at his every piece of cheeky shtick.

 

So what can one say that is new or different about his 2019 production?

Only that it is 2019 and he is more famous than ever, the international star who wowed America’s Got Talent and went on to play Las Vegas. He has photos to prove it. Only at the Paris Hotel, he says, but he’s working on getting to play the Bellagio.

 

Being a man of the moment, Hans, aka Matt Gilbertson, opens the show in Sound-of-Music mode but wearing cute little German pedal pushers and bike helmet and doing perilous loops on a Fringe Lime Scooter. What? No bling?

Don’t be silly. The bling is beneath. He strips down to reveal gorgeous midnight peacock sequins on another clever Mum-made outfit.

 

Rock the Boat, he sings, and the audience rocks along with him. “Do I know my audience or what?” he brags. Ah, but are there any Germans? Yes. Oh, local Germans. Not as bad as having the German Ambassador on opening night, eh, as happened.

 

Hans already has cast his eagle eye across the audience. He has spotted the potential targets. He has patter going with his front row, perky teases.

He does something different; does some Sound of Music a la Brecht and Weil. Stunning. Applause. Applause.

A bit of tap. Costume change. Feathers. Some topical jokes. More audience chiding. Some polka. 

Time for audience participation. He hauls up the prepared victims to frock up as dancers. It is funny but he does not take the audience humour to the risqué lengths of yore. He may utter a lot of expletives but he’s family friendlier these days. It’s the 4.45pm timeslot, he says.

 

Hans is a bundle of unbridled energy. It is hot as hell outside on this heatwave afternoon, but Hans is hotter hot stuff. He is a stomping, pivoting, whirling, marching, shimmying whirlwind. He’s on accordion. He’s on piano. He’s belting out songs with his bigger and absolutely marvellous Ungrateful Bastards band with its sensational pianist backup singer.  There are no Lucky Bitches this year. Hans dances alone. He does the splits alone. Some men in the audience might miss the dancing girls, but Hans doesn't seem to.  He is Adelaide’s favourite home-grown superstar.  He’s what his audience wants and he gives them an ever-loving all.

 

Samela Harris

5 Stars

 

When: 28 Feb to 17 Mar

Where: The Octagon at Gluttony

Bookings: adelaidefringe.com.au

Page 154 of 289

More of this Writer