Debt Defying Acts – The Wharf Revue by Jonathan Biggins, Drew
Forsythe and Phillip Scott, with Amanda Bishop. Sydney Theatre
Company at The Playhouse, Canberra, October 18-22, 2011.
Reviewed by Frank McKone
October 18
At the urinal, conversation flowed, fulsome and pithy:
“They really are clever.”
“They are! They are!”
Taking the piss out of politicians certainly worked on Canberra’s public servants.
Powers
must have been specially delegated from DFAT considering the inordinate
responses not only to the present Foreign Minister Kevin Rudd in the
guise of the Phantom of the Opera, but also the mysterious appearance in
the downstairs disabled toilet of ex-Foreign Minister Alexander Downer,
who didn’t want to be told anything about anything. The Phantom, of
course, was holding his ambition (i.e. the Prime Minister Julia Gillard)
incognito, insisting in magnificent song on his undying love for her.
Why
is the disabled toilet downstairs where disabled people can’t get to
it? – exactly. Just the place for a quiet read (Alexander had come to
recover a forgotten tome), or for holding someone incognito, and indeed
for a final stab in the back. As Julia made clear, this time she will
do it properly, while Kevin slumped across the piano keyboard – I could
say, “dead, buried and cremated”.
Which reminds me of
the other phantom of this circus: a clown who appeared only briefly at
the beginning as a shadow figure with big ears – Tony Abbott, the evil
Dr No with his Invisible Mandate. Julia, Queen of the High Wire
Balancing Act, was there, though actually riding a nameless (faceless?)
pony. Wild Barry O’Farrell (or was it Farry O’Barrel?) got his gun with
the help of the religious right. Even the Faded Rose of Yesteryear,
Miss Kittie Keneally, had her day. The Tragedy of King Rupert played
out to its inevitable conclusion as his favourite seeming daughter
Rebekah took nothing, while his Crouching Tiger wife took everything.
But no show for Tony Abbott.
Was the problem that there
is simply nothing funny to write about an Opposition in a political
revue? Or just about this Opposition?
Getting a bit
more serious, a good revue should edge towards satire. If it’s edgy
enough it should reach some kind of horrible truth. This was achieved
in this year’s Wharf Revue in a shadow puppet presentation of the
shock-jock horror, Alan Jones and those he has spawned. Using
recordings of their broadcasts, including the ring-ins, this segment was
parallel to wayang puppetry which might bring down a dictator in
another country. If only, in our case.
And getting
very serious, this production is magnificent. The action is fast-paced
with great timing throughout, in a circus-tent set which incorporates
its own lighting, sound and visual media, reminding me of the amazing
Famous Spiegeltent. We are used to the annual Wharf Revue, of course,
but this year I thought Amanda Bishop’s singing, dancing and athleticism
stood out (upside down at the very end), as did Drew Forsythe’s Rupert
Murdoch as King Lear. Switching so many roles – and some very
complicated costumes – in short order, with each new character instantly
recognisable, was a strength in all four performers.
My conclusion is that the Canberra Theatre Centre should have employed this team to launch its 2012 Program (see Love Song blog posted October 6) as well as including The Wharf Revue again next year (as they have).
© Frank McKone, Canberra
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