Emily Eyefinger
 based on the books by Duncan Ball adapted by Eva Di Cesare, Sandra 
Eldridge & Tim McGarry.  Monkey Baa Theatre Company: 
Director     John Saunders
Designer     Mark Thompson
Lighting Designer     Martin Kinnane
Sound Designer     Rowan Karrer
Dramaturge     Caleb Lewis
Animation     Andrew Hagan 
at The Street Theatre, Canberra, October 1 – 5, 2013.
Reviewed by Frank McKone
October 5
Since Monkey Baa makes considerable claims http://monkeybaa.com.au/info/history/)  such as Founding
 members Eva Di Cesare, Sandra Eldridge and Tim McGarry established 
Monkey Baa to raise the bar of work for young people in Australia..., their production of Emily Eyefinger needs some detailed consideration.
The
 style of acting and the construction of the storyline can only be 
described as zany pantomime.  Like traditional British pantomime there 
was nearly as much for the adults to recognise and enjoy in the story of
 entering the tomb in the Ancient Caves of Tutenkamouse, with its 
mystery of the curse upon the first to enter, and in the 
characterisations especially of Great Aunt Olympia and the evil Arthur 
Crim, as for the target audience of 5 to 10 year olds.
There
 were some younger children in the audience when I saw it, and they were
 a bit frightened by some of the sound effects and Arthur Crim’s coming 
off stage into the audience – and they probably didn’t follow the story 
very well, especially since the transitions between scenes were often 
unpredictable.  In fact, in academic terms, “zany” could almost be 
classed as “absurdism”.
On the other hand the older 
children clearly got the hang of the visual jokes and clowning, and 
recognised the reactions of the young characters, especially of Malcolm 
sulking because his mouse researcher father insisted he wear  a mouse 
costume all the time, and of Emily’s feeling that she had lost her 
identity because her finger with its third eye had become the centre of 
attention.  The fact that they both took control of their lives – 
Malcolm taking his mouse head off in front of his father, and Emily 
realising she should keep her eyefinger and even enjoy being different 
rather than ‘normal’ – was an effective educational message, presented 
as a natural part of the action without obvious moralising.
On
 the point of standards (raising the bar), the acting was certainly up 
to high chin up level in characterisation and movement skills, and I was
 impressed with the set, props, sound and video design (and technical 
quality), especially considering the limitations you might expect when 
touring.
Having seen only one Monkey Baa production, I 
can’t say anything about the quality of their work overall, but within 
the range of the style of Emily Eyefinger, this production is certainly at a very good professional standard.
© Frank McKone, Canberra

 
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