★★★
Adelaide Fringe. Melba Spiegeltent -Gluttony. 26 Feb 2022
Tim Motley, aka Dirk Darrow, has been performing for many years, and he knows what he’s doing – perhaps too well. His show Dirk Darrow: Magic of Future Past attracted its fair share of kids -perhaps because of the afternoon timeslot for the performance, and this was perhaps his Achilles heel.
Motley’s magic and mentalist routine is clever, and breath takingly spooky at its conclusion, but the film-noir and futuristic time-travel infused sci-fi patter that sustains the routine (at least in this matinée performance) is too sophisticated for the younger members of the audience and not risqué enough for the adults. There are moments when the burgeoning tide of sexual innuendo is about to inundate us, but it pulls up short and quickly and leaves you a smirk on your face and a desire to send the kids out to buy ice-cream!
However, that’s a relatively minor grizzle, and the substance of Motley’s show is truly impressive. Just how do magicians do it? Sometimes we think we can sus out the trick behind the trick, but that confidence is soon dashed by something even cleverer.
Audience participation is a major feature of Motley’s show, but it’s all quite polite, benign and safe. No embarrassment at all, even if we do witness him fishing inside his pants for a … prop!
Throughout the show, Motley makes a number of observations that he quantifies: a particular date; the number of times something happens; a person’s age; somebody else’s weight etc. And then, right at the end of the show, there is one almighty and hugely impressive display of numerology where it is all tied together! It’s truly impressive and the audience holds its collective breath for a 60 second review of the entire show! I’m still wondering how he did “it”!
Kym Clayton
When: 26 Feb to 6 Mar
Where: Melba Spiegeltent -Gluttony
Bookings: adelaidefringe.com.au
★★
Adelaide Fringe. Slingsby. The Hall of Possibility. 26 Feb 2022
This work has been written and performed by Slingsby's Flying Squad and its intentions are excellent. It seeks to show the role that trees play in life on earth and in the lives of the cast of its creatives in particular. It uses all sorts of theatrical techniques: miniatures, shadow play, mime, monologues, and song. It delivers stories growing from the creation story, First Nation history, white grandma’s garden, Greek immigrant domestica, Islander in Islander language, and how trees can give knowledge in books and create musical instruments.
Various trees are depicted: the macadamia for its native bounty, the olive for its immigrant bounty, the mango for its islander bounty, and even tall trees for ocean-explorer bounty.
Different performers deliver their narratives in different styles, the common characteristic leaning into didactic earnestness. The cast members are very likeable and they move beautifully but perchance they could abridge and spark up their reflections. Even the songs feel dirge-like.
It would help to re-block the lighting so the performers look brighter and stage spotlights are not so often directed right into the eyes of audience members.
The show is rich with skill and good will and it clearly has masses of promise.
Samela Harris
When: 5 Mar
Where: The Hall of Possibility
Bookings: adelaidefringe.com.au
★★★★1/2
Fringe Festival. Visual Art: Simon Kither. Music: B.S. Roberts. West Village. 24 Feb 2022
Like artists the world over, Ben Roberts and his band, the Ukulele Death Squad, found themselves in 2020 without a gig, without an audience, without a plan. Months of domestic and overseas gigs, just gone.
So in July of that year, Ben packed up his uke and took off along the Heysen Trail with Simon Kither, to film and record a musical journey far away from the madding crowd.
To be fair, they only got about 17 kilometres (of about 1200) in, but it was enough to record an album’s worth of songs and to document some of the stunning countryside that so inspired the painter Hans Heysen.
The end result is projected onto three screens, with Roberts taking the lead on solo ukulele and vocal, accompanied by Alice and Matt Barker (aka Roger the Albatross). The LED screens cover about 50 square metres, along the length of the walls on three sides, and it takes a bit of rubbernecking to catch everything that’s going on. Once the music settles in though, so does the audience, and rather than looking at the scenery, it becomes part of the immersive experience. Simon Kither’s visuals can be quite mesmerising, and some of the ground level shots are just stunning.
The six-song EP, Live on the Heysen reflects different locations along the trail, and Roberts explains these as we go along. The songs don’t necessarily reference bucolic vistas - Southern State finds Roberts reflecting on his youth and his decision to leave home state Tasmania – and additional songs such as Compressed expresses the feelings and frustrations of living through the COVID-19 experience.
Alice and Matt Barker, providing backing vocals, are an integral part of this performance. With just one ukulele the sound can be a little sparse. This is not to say that it gets lost; Roberts uses his instrument brilliantly, is a great picker and has developed some really interesting arrangements. But it is when the Barkers add their soaring harmonies that the songs really come to life. Many build up to anthemic choruses, bringing a forceful character to some otherwise quite pensive songs. And for my money, Spiders took best in show.
For anyone who thinks that embarrassingly poor renditions of April Sun in Cuba is indicative of what you can do with a ukulele, enlighten yourself. Ben Roberts aka Ukulele Death Squad, will show you the way.
Arna Eyers-White
Where: The Lab, West Village
When: Thursday 10 March
Bookings: adelaidefringe.com.au
★★★★★
Pietagogetter. The Garden of Unearthly Delights - Babylon. 25 Feb 2022
You haven’t really Fringed if you haven’t exposed yourself to Reuben Kaye. I lapped up his show last year and he’s returned with Reuben Kaye - The Bitch Is Back. But wait, there’s more! He also hosts The Kaye Hole… variety show at 11 pm on Friday and Saturday nights throughout the Fringe. When too much Fringe fun is barely enough, this is the place for indecent excess.
There is no question who is riding whom tonight; a hands-up poll reveals heterosexuals are in the minority, a revelation accompanied with squeals of delight. Dressing down in a tatty and tight black dress, Reuben resembles a disrobing porcupine due to spiky accoutrement, and he further accessorises with a microphone sprouting horsehair. Ships could navigate on his personal magnetism. Sporting a short drop fade crewcut and chiseled good looks, he is in perpetual motion. He sings with incredible power and you soar with him. Reuben et al are ably supported by musical director Shanon Whitlock on keys, Jarrad Payne playing drums, Dylan Marshall on guitar and Alana Dawes tickling the bass. But, as Reuben says, with watchability comes responsibility. He calls out social injustice and bad government with genuine concern and to much applause.
Bettie Bombshell is the first other to explore the stage. Wearing a teeny-weeny bit of black gothic, Betty tumbles and twists and the tassels go twirling to menacing music. Betty’s best assets are readily bankable. She menaces the audience with lascivious prowling. Burlesque at its best.
Dale Woodridgebrown is the sort of colourful cowboy you could easily saddle up to. Miming a gay fav, his virtuosity with rope wouldn’t earn first prize at the rodeo. But he can crack whip a rose bush into a bouquet, even using his butt as a vase.
Elke’s lithe frame belies the incredible strength required to throw oneself about on the trapeze and make it eye candy. Emily Chilvers follows another Reuben song with some deft rope work while elegantly stripping down to the sexy essentials.
Tina (the ex-diva) Del Twist hobbles on stage with a broken heel and an enormous bowl of wine. Appearing inebriated beyond redemption, she slays the audience with some un-operatic behaviour. The few voice samplers she manages to emit only teases us with anticipation of full throttle which was reached crooning the iconic White Rabbit with band.
Warning: Do not leave early! There’s more! I wish I could tell you what Tara Boom wore, and what she did, but this was the most audacious and surreal act of the night, and it’s best enjoyed with complete surprise. She brought down the house.
Subsequently, Reuben announced the show was over and it ended like a car accident. He attempted to reverse the screeching halt, but there needs to be a better plan.
The Kaye Hole… is 90 minutes of unrelenting, lewd and loudly extroverted entertainment hugely loved by those attending. Bravo!
There is every chance your show might have different guests performers depending on availability.
David Grybowski
When: 18 Feb to 19 Mar
Where: The Garden of Unearthly Delights - Babylon
Bookings: adelaidefringe.com.au
★★★★★
Pietagogetter. Gluttony – Rymill Park – The Bally. 25 Feb 2022
Josh Glanc, the vendor at the game, calls out chips, potato cakes, dim sim, sausage rolls – he discovers the rhythm and turns it into a song. This is how the hour goes; the ordinary is topsy-turvied into the funny. Finally on stage, he sets up his table of prop curiosities and works his way through a comic agenda. Glanc’s a quadruple threat – actor, singer, dancer (well, he moves the hips pretty well), and plays guitar. And you are caught in his magnetic field watching with anticipation how he will transform the mundane into mirth.
His humour is zany, droll and absurd. It’s situational comedy, Glanc isn’t a gag artist or raconteur. Whether he takes on the personae of a truck driver or a woman or child, he performs who he is being, and can change that in a blink. You have to be different to win two Best Comedy weekly awards in former fringes.
Glanc finishes off with his most complete song and one everybody relates to – searching for the lost file on the computer. The frustration grows with each step in the process, the steam rises from the collar and the eyes widen with rage. A great ending to a great show! Bravo!
PS Bare hairy chest and Harley not included.
PPS This is his last weekend and the Bally is tiny. My Friday night show was a sell-out. Book ASAP.
David Grybowski
When: 18 to 27 Feb 2022
Where: Gluttony – Rymill Park – The Bally
Bookings: adelaidefringe.com.au