Australian Dance Theatre. Anniversary Season 2017. 29 Nov 2017
10 years ago, the late Tanja Liedtke choreographed and unleashed on the world what was to be her last work, Construct. It arrived in Adelaide from an overseas tour two years after her death and left audiences awestruck by its power; an impact doubled by her passing.
Sufficient time has passed to reflect on past responses to the work in those difficult days. For so many, it was all too close to home. The business of working out what this was, and meant, along with the loss of Liedtke clouded much.
Original ensemble member, co-choreographer, and Remount Director, Kristina Chan along with Remount Director, Craig Barry offer a production featuring three new dancers who strongly affirm the initial sense created 10 years ago. Not only was Construct something radically new, but equally timeless in its expressed content; the human frailty which underlies how life is constructed and broken, and that ‘building’ choices can constrict or free us in life.
Kimball Wong, Jana Castillo and Marlo Benjamin manage, with fierce impassioned commitment, a work of exacting physical demands that shifts from comedy to deep emotional drama. Construct is such a purely, deeply human work at the core.
From the delightful clown like slapstick phrases featuring Wong desperately attempting to keep the stiff figures of Castillo and Benjamin from toppling over, to shy finger walking interactions between Castillo and Wong or a heartfelt samba love dance, Construct constantly explores the highs and lows of human beings building their deepest connections.
An open stage strewn with the trappings of a building site - wooden slats, electric drill, ladders and trestles - serve two purposes brilliantly; perfect props to play comic building games. They symbolise, and make clear, the broader intent of Construct in linking to the heart and soul of human successes and failings at life-construction.
It’s therefore no surprise choreographically that Construct makes brilliant, albeit demanding use of sharp angles, bends, twists and turns closely associated with the business of a building site. Liedtke’s choreography, fused with DJ Trip’s remarkably subtle capacity to shift from mechanistic to romantic ambience, manages to offer a double world. The rawness of building against the rawness of human experience.
Liedtke’s approach in Construct has, over the last decade, begun sneaking into other works and choreographic technique. Her use of simple, sharp and crystal clear vignettes, focus on uncluttered but accessible emotional narrative, and drive to present human experience as universally understood by all are significant gifts to audiences, dancers, and choreographers of the future.
David O’Brien
When: 29 Nov to 2 Dec
Where: Space Theatre
Bookings: bass.net.au
State Opera of South Australia. Adelaide Town hall. 21 Nov 2017
Opera spectaculars are a winning format for the State Opera of South Australia, and for the public. What could be better than a packed program of popular arias, overtures and choruses? Spectacular operatic singing and music, without the in-between bits! Can’t do better than that!
On this occasion the State Opera staged for two nights only a hugely successful celebration of the glorious music of Giuseppe Verdi, who is one of the pillars of the art form. Seventeen pieces in all were presented ranging across Verdi’s better known operas, including La Traviata, Il Trovatore, Rigoletto, A Masked Ball, Aïda and Nabucco. (He composed more than 25 operas, but not all are well-known or equally popular.)
Dr Stephen Mould, who is a senior lecturer in conducting and operatic studies at the Sydney Conservatorium of Music and has a long list of successful international and domestic conducting credits to his name, conducted the Adelaide Symphony Orchestra which was not at full strength. A number of principals were absent but it mattered not a jot. The talent of the orchestra and Adelaide’s general musical talent pool runs deep, and Mould’s decisive conducting extracted the goods. On only one occasion – in the trio Quale insolita gioia from Aïda – did Mould allow the might of the orchestra to overpower the singers, but that was only for a phrase or two. It should be noted that the singers performed with the conductor and the orchestra to their backs, but somehow the communication between Mould and the singers remained tight. (Incidentally, Quale insolita gioia was perhaps the item on the program that was the least appreciated by the generally enthusiastic audience.)
The programme began with a stirring performance of the emotive overture from La Forza del Destino. Dean Newcomb’s clarinet work was first rate. The overture was met with enthusiastic applause and the audience was put right into the mood for a rollicking good time. Mould spoke directly to the audience about each item that followed and his erudite comments were both instructive and witty. The man has a nice warm style, without a hint of gratuitous flamboyance. The audience warmed to him from the outset.
The first aria of the evening was sung by sopranao Gisele Blanchard. Dressed in a stunning red and green gown, her performance of Sempre Libera from La Traviata was effortless. The difficult staccato leaps were conquered with ease, as were the gentle and quiet leaps in Caro nome from Rigoletto.
Baritone Mario Bellanova was outstanding in every aria that he sang. His facial expression, gesture and general acting skills brought to life everything that he sang. His rich, velvety booming voice was note perfect across the full register of every aria. His Credo from Otello and Cortigiani from Rigoletto forced one to think differently about the villains he was portraying. He allowed humanity to shine through even the darkest moments.
Mezzo-soprano Elizabeth Campbell again demonstrated immense acting skills and her detailed understanding of the repertoire in her layered performances of the deeply tragic Condotta ell’era in ceppi from Il Trovatore and her part in the ever popular quartet Bella figlia dell’amor from Rigoletto.
Tenor Bradley Daley and baritone Jeremy Tatchell sang the first duet of the evening – Dio, che nell’alma infondere from Don Carlos – but suffered a few pitch and timing issues. However, Tatchell was at the top of his game with Morte di Rodrigo, also from Don Carlos and Daley fared much better (with Blanchard) in a lusty performance of Brindisi from la Traviata which suited perfectly his tessitura. His La Donna e mobile from Rigoletto was a little too nasal and unemotional.
Soprano Teresa La Rocca, like Bellanova, was a highlight of the evening. Her strong and pure soprano line cut through the most difficult phrases like a hot knife through butter. Ecco l’orrido campo from Un ballo in Maschera traverses the lowest lows to near highest highs for a soprano voice, and she sang it beautifully, and effortlessly, with buckets of characterisation as she did in the trio from Aïda and the quartet from Rigoletto.
Tenor Norbert Hohl, who is often seen in the chorus, sang several principal roles and demonstrated not only his own rich talents but also demonstrated the depth of talent that lies in the chorus. Mould commented that the chorus of the State Opera is one of the best in Australia. He is of course quite correct, and one isn’t parochial either! The chorus also sang the iconic Anvil Chorus from Il Trovatore (and immediately reprised it!) as well as the ever popular Va Pensiero from Nabucco. The choruses were rousing, musical and were hummed by the audience well into the night after they had left the theatre.
A great concert! Long may State Opera continue to present gala ‘spectacular’ formats. There are so many more possibilities still to explore! If you are ‘opera shy’, have no hesitation in coming to the next spectacular whenever that should be!
Kym Clayton
When: 21 and 22 Nov
Where: Adelaide Town Hall
Bookings: Closed
Feast Festival. Nexus Arts, Lions Arts Centre. 17 Nov 2017
If burlesque is about extravagance, parody and caricature particularly with a focus on nudity, then Brodie John’s Burlesque by Force is not a burlesque performance. Rather it is a carefully constructed glimpse into the fragile world of a rape victim who shelters behind the persona of a burlesque performer. It is a relatively short piece – some 35 to 40 minutes – but it packs a punch that leaves you thinking long after you have left the theatre.
Despite its impact, if Burlesque by Force is to have an ongoing existence as a piece of theatre beyond its recent world première, as it deserves, it needs further development. In short it needs to be longer and would merit being less ‘designed’ in its format; more on that later.
Brodie John wrote the script and was the sole performer in what was a well-executed, well designed, stylish and affecting production. As the burlesque performer, he enters from the stage left wing acknowledging the enthusiastic applause of an unseen audience. After taking several bows, the performer retires to his dressing room and starts the process of removing makeup and costume, and, as the layers are stripped away, the person behind the performer is slowly revealed through an extended soliloquy that is interspersed with a recorded voice over.
The narrative is about the performer’s rape at the hands of a former sexual partner whom he still sees, and acknowledges, from time to time as if nothing had happened, or as if it is all forgotten. But it is not forgotten, and it is not forgiven. The hurt and shame and disgust persist and the performer shares with the audience in vivid detail his personal struggle to not let this gross, violent act be a defining event.
Brodie John’s script is intimate and confronting, but at the same time beautiful as it lays bare the contradictions of sexual behaviour. It explores the feelings of self-guilt that are often reported as typical of rape victims, but it stops tantalisingly short of being a fully immersive experience. It warrants further exploration. I wanted to experience the performer’s pain more than I did. I wanted to get under the skin of the ugly suppurating sore that is surely the unwarranted feeling of guilt that the victim feels.
Brodie John circulated an ‘open letter’ to the audience in which he said that he was “honoured” that the audience had come to the performance and that he would be “humbled” to meet the audience after the show. The letter makes for interesting reading – I cannot doubt its sincerity – but I would have liked its sentiments to have been somehow included in the narrative of the script. I’m sure it’s possible.
Marissa Bennett (director), Abbey Howlett (composer) and Stephen Moylan (designer) have all left something of themselves in this production, but none more so than Brodie John.
Burlesque by Force will play in the next Fringe Festival. I hope there is enough time for it to be developed further. It deserves a new audience.
Kym Clayton
When: 15 to 18 Nov
Where: Nexus Arts, Lions Arts Centre
Bookings: Closed
Independent Theatre. Goodwood Theatre. 17 Nov 2017
Elegant and stylish. These hallmark characteristics of Independent Theatre’ productions shine forth from the moment the curtain comes up on Brideshead Revisited.
Not that there is a curtain. It’s all about lighting and simplicity.
Rob Croser and David Roach, with lighting designer Bob Weatherly, have found that a clean and lean look is what suits the Goodwood Theatre. Hence, just two long benches adorn a dramatically raked green stage which converges towards a huge framed screen upon which photographs are projected as virtual backdrops. Sometimes they’re exterior architectural images of Oxford, Venice, or Brideshead. Sometimes they are interiors. Occasionally they go a bit further to include art for the artist of the play, at one point creating an aesthetic of such drenching beauty that one would gladly let the play freeze there.
Will Cox as the older Charles Ryder returning in uniform to be billeted in the castle where once he loved and lost, sets the mood for the audience. He is narrator. We are about to hear a story. Audience members settle into their seats expectantly.
They are not disappointed.
Evelyn Waugh’s tale of bisexual love, family ties and religion unfolds eloquently through the heart and eyes of Charles Ryder, an atheist in a seething pit of conflicted Catholics. It is the tale of Sebastian, the spoiled beautiful dipsomaniac rich boy asphyxiated by his strictly devout mother, and of his variously distracted family members in their great and glorious castle. It is the story of how relationships may affect destinies and of how siblings may supplant one another. In this case, with Sebastian gone to his various alcoholic fates abroad, it is how Charles sees shades of that love in Sebastian’s troubled sister, Julia.
It is a vast and complex human portrait which spans 1923 to 1943. Only the little sister, Cordelia, is to emerge as a nice person, and she is deemed “plain” and alone.
Director Rob Croser has directed this show with his usual finesse and chosen its cast well. Will Cox, in a brown suit and waistcoat, carries the play with immense sensitivity. His eyes are everything. A beautiful actor. Then again, Ben Francis, shows the depth of his extraordinary versatility by embodying with agonising accuracy the needy, overwrought ambivalence of Sebastian. His fear of the judgemental prying of his mother and his need for unsullied loyalty tear into the heart of the audience. As he evolves to be the alienated alcoholic expatriate, so does the characterisation succinctly complete the picture. It will not be forgotten.
Madeleine Herd plays his sister Julia, a woman who breaks from the family values with her relationship with the divorced Canadian tycoon, Rex. Her defiance of the strictures of Catholicism becomes her inner torment, albeit she never loses the superficial grace of the English aristocrat. Herd's key to this characterisation is her voice and delivery which, with uncanny similarity to English actress Michelle Dockery, imbue Brideshead Castle with surprisingly fitting shades of Downton Abbey.
The rest of Independent’s cast play multiple roles. Paul Reichstein as the arrogant dandy, Anthony Blanche, is one of the delicious high spots of the production. David Roach plays myriad senior roles from fathers to teachers and, as ever, is unerring and a pleasure to behold. Brodie Watson-Victory adapts so completely to his contrasting roles that he could be different actors. And Emily Stewart, who has to grow up in front of the audience's eyes, comes into her own when Cordelia emerges as an interesting adult.
The play itself, adapted from Waugh's book by Roger Parsley, loses some of its momentum towards the end when all the guilt, doubt and religious redemption untwines in the great death bed scene. It was ever a troubling ending; it beggars the credibility that the rational atheist is converted at the eleventh to join those he has witnessed so deeply punished by their cruel and superstitious religion. But it sends the audience away with cultural dilemmas to dissect.
Samela Harris
When: 16 to 25 Nov
Where: Goodwood Theatre
Bookings: trybooking.com
The Adelaide Repertory Theatre. The Arts Theatre. 16 Nov 2017
Roll up, Roll up.
The Rep’s end-of-year romp into the realms of classic vaudeville is a night of raucous audience engagement and tears of mirth.
This is a wonderful tradition upheld by our oldest theatre company which happens also to be the oldest in the southern hemisphere, and quite a spectacle with the stage transformed to faux travelling tent, enabling the show to swing from high ham melodrama to assorted classic vaudevillian turns. Some audience members are still holding their ribs after watching Lindy LeCornu and Christopher Evan’s gloriously po-faced performance of the world-famous Balloon Dance.
Then there was Aled Proeve’s wistful rendition of The Hole in the Elephant’s Bottom which soon had the audience completing the punchlines like some huge smooth choral ensemble.
Indeed, in many ways the audience’s performance on opening night deserves its own rave review. It was of strong and beautiful voice both in song and booing and hissing and cheering; for, indeed, there was a valiant hero to celebrate, an evil villain to loathe and a beautiful heroine to champion in Walter Boughton’s dramatic melodrama, Virtue Always Triumphs or Life in the Wicked City.
Buddy Dawson has sprung miraculously out of musical theatre to save the day as Dick Truhart. This athletic young performer has a heavenly sense of physical comedy and an unerring instinct for the cornball. He plays it hayseed to the husk.
The object of his devotion is the hapless, innocent, unknowing heiress Charity for which part director Pam O’Grady has found the utterly divine Ashley Penny. Artful balletic physical exaggeration, a strong voice, an ability for split-second mood changes and the best howling bawl in the business put her in the upper echelons for melodrama stardom - for which, sadly, there is limited call today.
However, shades of the much loved Old Kings Music Hall of yore were ever present in this vivid and fun-filled show, not least when the bedazzling Mistress of Ceremonies, Penni Hamilton-Smith called upon the original Master of Ceremonies from those early Adelaide years, Mr Gordon Poole who, at 92 going on 93, still with that mellifluous British stage voice, was there in the audience booing along with the best of them.
Hamilton-Smith was true to the “ham” in her name in glamorous overkill, swishing about in blinding pink but, oddly, seeming almost to be sight-reading the show’s script when doing the absurdly alliterative introductions.
Also doing a lot of swishing was cloak-wrapped David Sinclair as the evil villain from “the city” whence all wickedness and depravity springs from the saloon bars and torture chambers. Raspy-voiced and evil-eyed, he pursued poor Charity with his gang of odd-bod thugs played by Matt Grohl, Laura Antoniazzi and Aled Proeve. Rose Vallen in black eyepatch was another evildoer as was Rebecca Kemp; not all that she seemed, as we came to find out. Tim Blackshaw and Annie Hall paired nicely as the earthy Truhart parents and Christopher Meegan pleased both with his twinkle-toed poise as the mysterious stranger and his lovely voice singing Danny Boy.
For, yes, there are songs for young and old, sing-alongs and knees-up in this celebration of cultural kitsch and, with Rowan Dennis on drums, it is the legendary Sandi McMenamin on the tatty old upright piano who gives the show its musical life. Move over Winnifred Atwell.
All this and much more is rolled into rowdy and rollicking fun by the expertise of director Pam O’Grady with a solid and seasoned backstage team, including Brian Budgen as scenic artist and Richard Parkhill on lights.
Give yourself a pre-Chrissie treat. Buy a ticket and live a night in laughter at the silliness of old-time shtick. It’s a tonic.
Samela Harris
When: 16 to 25 Nov
Where: The Arts Theatre
Bookings: trybooking.com