Wednesday 29 June 2022

2022: A Sonnet for Sondheim - Lexi Sekuless

 

 

Photo: Andrew Sikorski

A Sonnet for Sondheim, presented by Lexi Sekuless and Belco Arts, at Belconnen Arts Centre Theatre, June 29 – July 2, 2022.

Reviewed by Frank McKone
June 29

Director, co-producer and performer – Lexi Sekuless
Pianist – Carl Rafferty; Choreographer – Annette Sharp
Performers – Jay Cameron, Katerina Smalley, Martin Everett, Tim Sekuless
Lighting and Sound – Linda Buck and Stephen Rose


My direct experience of Sondheim shows is limited to West Side Story, Sweeney Todd and Into the Woods (on stage at the Gunghalin College Theatre, 2015, directed by Richard Block and Damien Slingsby).  I never became an aficianado, but A Sonnet for Sondheim shows why I should have.

Through the device – a bit like Chorus Line, or Sydney Theatre Company’s Macbeth with Hugo Weaving – the cast on stage are themselves, an ad hoc group of actor/singers, telling some of their personal histories and performing audition pieces for a show.

“Don’t worry, just relax – it’s only a play” they sing at the beginning and end from Sondheim’s Ancient Greek musical The Frogs: Parabasis.  In my ignorance I have now found from Merriam-Webster that parabasis means “an important choral ode in the Old Greek comedy mainly in anapestic tetrameters delivered by the chorus at an intermission in the action while facing and moving toward the audience.”

I didn’t know this while watching, but I cottoned on to the idea that the show is a kind of meditation on the nature of art, using a collection of items from Sondheim, interspersed with sonnets (from the Portuguese by Elizabeth Barret Browning, and Shakespeare’s Sonnet 23), and some other pieces from Shakespeare, Browning and Emily Dickinson.  

As important as the choice of literary material among Sondheim’s lyrics – very much about the art of creating art, and the art of accepting, maintaining, losing and even escaping from love – is the impressive performance on the grand piano by Carl Rafferty, in the role of audition accompanist, and the neat choreography of the action by Annette Sharp which helps define the character of each actor in their varied solo roles, pas de deux’s and as chorus members.

The quality result in all these departments is excellent music, singing and dancing – yet never in the form of a standard ‘Musical’.  The dramatic throughline wanders about rather than creating a strong sense of development to a climactic point.  Did any of them succeed in their audition?  I’m not sure.

So at the end of the day A Sonnet for Sondheim is an interesting example of something I think of as meta-philosophising on art (parallel to terms like ‘metaphysical’ or ‘metacognitive’ thinking).  Clapping at the end of items was generally polite – though genuinely appreciative – and even at the end was not over-excited, because the show is not presented as a popular grand-scale musical entertainment, but is a thoughtful consideration of Stephen Sondheim – Artist.

© Frank McKone, Canberra

Sunday 26 June 2022

2022: Australianness in Our Art - UC Snailbox & New PP 3

 

Australianness in Our Art – A Snailbox Discussion Paper.

By Frank McKone
For the Centre for Creative & Cultural Research, University of Canberra Faculty of Arts and Design – Producer: Kiri Morecombe

“The University of Canberra welcomes artists to our platform for creative community engagement projects.”  I have been engaged in the Snailbox Project, and have also participated in the Keeping it Real – Seat at the Table Forum which was conducted in conjunction with the ACT Government, artsACT, Saturday June 4, 2022.

For the Canberra Critics’ Circle I have briefly reviewed Nobody Talks About Australianness on our Screens by Sandy George:  New Platform Papers No 3, June 2022: Currency House, Sydney. https://frankmckone2.blogspot.com/2022/06/2022-new-platform-paper-no-3-by-sandy.html

In this discussion paper, as a contribution for members of the Snailbox Project  https://creativeact.org.au/, I offer more detailed information from Sandy George’s Paper (at www.currencyhouse.org.au ) and consideration of the meaning of her term “Australianness”, as well as follow-up suggestions for political action supporting the positive approach in the recent Commonwealth Government election, as demonstrated in the speech by the incoming Arts Minister, Tony Burke, at the ALP Arts Policy Launch.
https://www.tonyburke.com.au/speechestranscripts/2022/5/17/speech-labors-arts-policy-launch-the-espy-melbourne-16-may-2022

The first main thread of George’s Paper “is about how only Australian film and television delivers local cultural value to local audiences, about why less drama is available, why it is harder to find, why there is uncertainty about its future”.  The key, she suggests, is “there is evidence everywhere of economic value taking priority over cultural value”.

Crucial information is in Chapter 3 - Let’s talk about drama financing, change and consequence which begins:
“To raise enough money to make a major drama requires entrepreneurialism, and involves drawing on every scrap of experience at one’s disposal, exploiting every contact and deploying considerable chutzpah. Traditionally and still, money comes from a variety of sources. In television, these are likely to include the local screening platform and a sales agent/distributor who will handle worldwide sales, and perhaps secure some before production commences. Federal and state governments are likely to be involved, and private investors as well. In a similar way, partners and finance must be cobbled together for feature films. Some partners will only pay upon delivery, which means turning to bankers and lenders. Interest charges can be very ugly. All projects will dream of great success. Few will achieve it, or earn big profits.”

A leading example is what happened to Neighbours:
“Australia’s longest-running drama, Neighbours, was cancelled after 37 years on air and almost 9,000 episodes because the UK broadcast partner Channel 5 wanted to divert its funding to original UK dramas. It is a crushing example of how a financing partner on the other side of the world can make a decision with monumental consequences for Australia. Thousands of practitioners have learned their craft on Neighbours. The cancellation of the series has been likened to closing a film school.”

The irony is, of course, that without that external funding, Australia lost an iconic Australian drama.

After describing the changes happening in people’s viewing habits – about free-to-air television, cinema attendances for feature films, and the developments online of subscription video-on-demand, Chapter 4 - Government offers financial incentives for both local and foreign drama takes up the key issue:
Taxpayer funding and rebates sit alongside regulation to assist Australian drama to get made.

First, there are regulations about the broadcasting of Australian content – “to ensure local drama is available in homes, although not as actively now as in the past, and it is not applied at all to SVODs or to cinemas.”

Then there are two kinds of financial incentives for the making of shows having Australian content: indirect tax rebates; and direct taxpayer funding.

The main rebate is called Producer’s Offset.  The producer has to demonstrate the show is eligible first.  Then they “send a box of receipts to the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) once the project is finished, to get back 30% if it’s for the home screen, and 40% if it’s for cinemas. For features, at least $500,000 has to be spent to make any claim. For television it's either $500,000 or $1 million, depending on the format.”

It’s important to know that there is no upper limit set for the Producer’s Offset, so there is an incentive for foreign producers to make “Australian” shows, and are encouraged by the state governments to make them here – but with a focus on profit-making overseas, since the Australian market is relatively small.  This is becoming a big issue with the development of the SVOD platforms, like Netflix, Stan etc, for home screen consumption, even more than with traditional feature films for cinemas.

The question is, what does Australian content mean?  How do producers here and overseas interpret it – a story written by an Australian; a story set in Australia; a story filmed by Australians – or just teched by Australian technicians; a story acted by Australians (or maybe including just one who is famous);  a story which ‘rings true’ to Australians – but may not be appreciated by people in other countries; a story with universal appeal with some connection to Australia?  

The main source of direct taxpayer funding is Screen Australia and state governments’ departments like artsACT.  This money is limited, but can be provided to a producer who also claims the Producer’s Offset.  Of course the same questions of eligibility arise.

George explains funds are “given out at the discretion of Screen Australia staff and board members to a range of funding programs and initiatives, although applications are only eligible if they have the support of the market.  ‘The agency provided more than $42 million in production funding for drama
titles in 2020/21,’ one media release reads:

That included $15.9 million for general television drama, $9 million
for features, $10.7 million for children’s television, $4.5 million for
online drama productions (SVODs and platforms such as TikTok
and YouTube) and $2.7 million for First Nations productions. A
further $22.6 million of additional funding was injected into the
industry in 2020/21 for drama development, documentary, talent
development, distribution, international marketing, festivals and
guild assistance.

For the record, Screen Australia received nearly $92 million from government that
year.”

In other words, the business of being an arts producer – a creative – even in a small local-scale business as for many I met in Snailbox and Keeping it Real, takes place within a huge world-wide conglomerate of arts activity; remembering as Sandy George points out that most other countries offer variations of financial inducements and regulations.  In some cases, cultural stipulations are placed on what may or not be made or presented in that country; some may be seen as political propaganda or essentially national advertisement.

And some may wish to see their arts, as Minister Tony Burke puts it:

“And that’s why I want to talk today about cultural policy.

Because creativity that comes from this land isn’t important simply based on whether the rest of the world takes notice.

It isn’t important simply because of its commercial value, although the economic contribution of our creatives is immense.

To Australians, our creativity should matter simply because it’s ours. It happens here. Its roots drive deep into our home. Our stories matter because they are ours. And I am determined to shine a spotlight on our artwork, have our poetry spoken, our literature read, to fill the stalls and dress circles of our theatres, see the names of Australian creatives as the credits roll on screen, and crank up the volume to 11 for our music.”

It’s at this point that Sandy George’s distinction between art which has “Australianness”, and art which may merely have Australian content, must raise its head for discussion.  The image I have in mind is that moment when the kangaroo’s ears flick-twist in my direction though she appears not to be aware of my presence.  Does she recognise my humanness?

“Governments around the world support local film and television. Disbursement
methods vary enormously so comparing levels of support is difficult and there are no
global formulas for per capita contributions.  There’s never discussion on how much Australia should put into drama with Australianness compared to drama without it, or the extent to which cultural value is trumped by economic value. A lot has changed in the production landscape in the 15 years since the rebates were introduced and they now need thorough examination from every angle.”  George seems to define the distinction as between drama without Australianness being merely of economic value; while drama with Australianness has cultural value.

She provides an example of the recent Fires six-part drama by Tony Ayres on ABC TV as a clear case with Australianness.  I have no hesitation in agreeing with her response to the program:

“I had to see Fires for work and otherwise would not have done so because in horror and shock I had watched the Australian countryside burn over and over on the nightly news in 2019. Others felt the same way. Sure enough, it reawakened my feelings of despair. But the experience also left behind the sensation that I’d sat holding hands with the people who lived through the trauma, listening intently to them while they told their confronting stories.”

The show was not funded by Screen Australia, but by the ABC and Tony Ayres Productions, which is backed by NBCUniversal/Matchbox Pictures. Fires was supported by Film Victoria through the Victorian Screen Incentive and Regional Location Assistance Fund.  From George’s report, I’m not sure who took the Producer’s Offset – Tony Ayres Productions perhaps, but I’m guessing more likely the US backer, NBC.  It was clearly first embraced by Sally Riley at ABC TV.

The point of importance is that this is the kind of work which Screen Australia should be funding directly, rather than a foreign backer being needed.  This means, I suggest, $92 million a year is not enough for searching out and investing in Australian original material – with Australianness – to outweigh the foreign investment money, so that Sandy George’s fear that our young generation will not see enough of our culture on their screens can be allayed.

But there is also the question of Australian material which should not be invested in because it fails to make the grade of sincerity of the Australian experience, which we so fortunately saw in Fires.  A feature of government regulation, for investment by Screen Australia or state governments, has to insist on presenting in the name of Australia – with it’s Producer’s Offset attraction – only work of that level of artistic quality.  It’s not just a matter of saying to Netflix, or to a local entrepreneur pitching on Tik Tok, no more bland cop-shows or horror for the sake of horror – however popular they might be.  Somebody – like lots of Sally Rileys – will be needed to keep our culture supported.

We do this sort of judgement-thing in the Australia Council, and perhaps a lottery like the British National Lottery is what we need to find the funds – not just for film on screens, but for all kinds of art projects.

But at the end of the day, there is still in my mind a worry that “Australianness” is an amorphous thing to imagine.  It would be easy to say it must have that sense of ironic risktaking in the old cartoon “for Gor’sake, stop laughing” which has always defined the Australian way for me.  But I represent only one – the Ten-Pound Pom – of all the different peoples who make up the Australian people as a whole.  Can we insist on Australianness, with money attached, without losing our particular sense of humour, individuality, originality – our creativity as artists in an ever-evolving culture?  

 

For gorsake, stop laughing - this is serious!
Stan Cross (1888-1977


 

 

 

Saturday 25 June 2022

2022: New Platform Paper No 3 by Sandy George

 

 

Nobody Talks About Australianness on our Screens by Sandy George.  

New Platform Papers No 3, June 2022: Currency House, Sydney.  Edited by Julian Meyrick.
Media Contact: Martin Portus, Phone 0401 360 806, mportus2@tpg.com.au
www.currencyhouse.org.au

Reviewed by Frank McKone


"The simple act of watching film and television equates to very big business for some……My argument is about something much more important than financial value. It is about how only Australian film and television delivers local cultural value to local audiences, about why less drama is available, why it is harder to find, why there is uncertainty about its future and why some of it feels a lot less Australian……and there is evidence everywhere of economic value taking priority over cultural value––a folly, given cultural significance is the predominant reason the industry gets public funding."

So Sandy George’s central question is How can more and better film and TV with (on-screen) Australianness at its heart be made and seen?  It’s not for her just a practical and economic problem, despite her longstanding experience in “the business that sits behind film and television” where “the menu [is] offered to audiences and how each dish on that menu appears on the plate.”

“Stop pretending everything is OK,” she yells. “Depending on economics to deliver cultural value is arse about.”

Determined so furiously to have the right thing done, who is this Antigone yelling at?  

Not the recently dead king, her father, Oedipus (Scott Morrison); but his incestuous brother-in-law Creon (Anthony Albanese) who’s just taken over.  But surely it will all turn out OK if she marries Creon’s son, her cousin Haemon (Tony Burke), won’t it?

I feel a Baz Luhrmann coming on.  He’s done Elvis a treat, so I hear.  Will my pitch make it on Netflix?  Will it be made in a Melbourne, Sydney or Gold Coast studio by all our expert Aussie techs, with American money?  Will that mean it can be called an Australian production and attract the Producer’s 40% Offset?  Will Screen Australia buy-in?

Before reading New Platform Paper No 3, this was all Greek to me.  Now I know much more about FTA TV and SVODs and the way the viewing world is changing, for screens at home and in cinemas, as the younger generation is not just watching video-on-demand but creating work on TikTok and other platforms, ready for streaming services to distribute.  

Now available at www.currencyhouse.org.au the Paper is essential reading for anyone seeking to create work or perform in any version of the drama world.  Sandy George is an insider with self-awareness in the production process across the sector, providing real-life examples which explain why we must be concerned about maintaining our culture, how it may evolve, and how Australianness is being and will be perceived – by ourselves and by people around the world.

Importantly, she is not just crying out like Antigone.  Nor will she suggest such direct action, as Antigone did in burying her brother, which inevitably led to her death.  She writes, with statistical backup, of Australians’ love for Australian content and our recognition of what makes the grade as having Australianness.

George has many practical action suggestions on different aspects of government arrangements and funding, for the new Federal Government, State Governments, and even at local levels – which I trust Tony Burke as both the previous Shadow Arts and now the fully-fledged Arts Minister will take to heart.  

She writes, for example: We need to cultivate that love and encourage it to be shared. The enthusiastic can be given resources to run book-club-style events that would elevate attention at the time of a production’s release. If done right, the impact could be phenomenal. Fostering a community of supporters would help keep some local cinemas open on the back of Australian films, and could even lead to the establishment of a lottery that funds production initiatives designed to involve the public.

https://www.tonyburke.com.au/speechestranscripts/2022/5/17/speech-labors-arts-policy-launch-the-espy-melbourne-16-may-2022
To have the Minister open his Arts Policy Launch, in St Kilda, Melbourne, in this way, is enormously encouraging:

“Very few drivers realise they are accelerating past the oldest living thing in Melbourne.

 
The Bunurong Corroboree Tree, or 'Ngargee' Tree.  An ancient red gum thought to be between 300 and 500 years old.  With leaves still soaking in energy and roots deep, deep into the land of the Kulin nation.

That the tree belongs in place and on country - matters.
That it lives - matters.
That it grows - matters.

It has stood guard over every change, every ceremony, every battle, every conversation of pain or love, that has occurred beneath its boughs, and within its sight. It has stayed, flourished, and grown.

Stories can be universal. Emotions, and ideas can ricochet around the globe. But everything starts with place. Every story, work of art, movement, harmony or discord starts in a place.

And that’s why I want to talk today about cultural policy.

Because creativity that comes from this land isn’t important simply based on whether the rest of the world takes notice.

It isn’t important simply because of its commercial value, although the economic contribution of our creatives is immense.

To Australians, our creativity should matter simply because it’s ours. It happens here. Its roots drive deep into our home. Our stories matter because they are ours. And I am determined to shine a spotlight on our artwork, have our poetry spoken, our literature read, to fill the stalls and dress circles of our theatres, see the names of Australian creatives as the credits roll on screen, and crank up the volume to 11 for our music.”

Perhaps a modern Creon’s son will form a true relationship with Oedipus’s daughter, and change the ending of Sophocles’ play of present and future doom.  I, the old blind prophet Teiresias, need no longer warn of horrific omens from the gods, but hope for a perfect marriage for Sandy George and Tony Burke.  With Prime Minister Albanese's blessing.


Sandy George
Photo supplied

 © Frank McKone, Canberra

Thursday 16 June 2022

2022: A Doll's House by Henrik Ibsen, adapted by Joanna Murray-Smith

 

 

A Doll’s House by Henrik Ibsen (Norway 1879), adapted by Joanna Murray-Smith.  Ensemble Theatre, Kirribilli, Sydney, June 10 – July 16, 2022.

Reviewed by Frank McKone
Opening Night June 15

Director – Mark Kilmurry; Understudy Director – Sophie Kelly
Set & Costume Designer – Veronique Benett
Lighting Designer – Verity Hampson; Composer & Sound Designer – Daryl Wallis
Intimacy Coordinator – Shondelle Pratt

Photos by Prudence Upton

Set Design by Shondelle Pratt
for A Doll's House, Ensemble Theatre 2022

Cast:
Nora – Chanelle Jamieson; Torvald – James Lugton
Krystina – Lizzie Schebesta; Krogstad – David Soncin
George – Tim Walter

In the original script the characters are listed as
Torvald Helmer
Nora, his wife
Doctor Rank (George)
Mrs Linden (Krystina)
Nils Krogstad
The Helmers’ Three Children
Anna, their nurse
A Maid-Servant (Ellen)
A Porter

Above L-R
Standing - Chanelle Jamieson, James Lugton
Seated - Lizzie Schebesta, Tim Walter
Below L-R
Chanelle Jamieson, David Soncin

_____________________________________________________________________

Any new production of an old play makes it a new play.  Each performance – including how its audience responds – is a new experience.  That’s the wonder of live theatre.  

Joanna Murray-Smith has adapted Henrik Ibsen’s A Doll’s House placing it in a modern world of unreliable financial security rather than Ibsen’s more compact almost small-town 19th Century local banking system.  To picture the difference, consider that today Australia has only four major banks, while in the 1890s depression more than 50 Australian local banks went bust with managers like Helmer. https://www.rba.gov.au › publications › rdp

Today’s Torvald and his wife Nora are caught in financial wild weather of dubious loan sharks and fragile business reputations, where sexual relationships have implications for personal success.  

In this scenario, Nora’s way of coping with marriage, to an emotionally limited Aspergers up-and-hopefully-coming Torvald, not only means three children in eight years but outwardly presenting herself as a show-pony socially, while borrowing secretly (and disastrously) to build her husband – almost another child – into the executive level they both want for the wealth it would bring.

Chantelle Jamieson’s manic performance in Act 1, and the force with which she escapes from this conflicted existence – into an unknown but independent future – is an extraordinary tour-de-force.

This is also where the close-up in-the-round Ensemble Theatre shows its power.  We are in the lounge room with her when Torvald, affectionally but so ironically, calls her his little sparrow.  We feel as she does, that she is trapped in this house, treated as a doll with no real life of her own.  I still thank Hayes Gordon for taking the risk on this Kirribilli boathouse in 1958, and remain so glad that it is still afloat 64 years later.

All the cast, equally with Jamieson, establish their characters definitively, so that the mystery of how they relate to each other over the years before and during the Helmer marriage is bit by bit revealed, and therefore explains why Krogstad does what he does just before the end of the play – and why Nora can make no other decision but to leave.

The adaptation, using modern devices (emails instead of letters in a glass letter-box, for example), has kept the story and most of the dialogue the same as in William Archer's translation of 1889.  That in itself is an amazing commendation of Ibsen’s modernity.  

Murray-Smith has shortened the playing-time, leaving out the scenes with the children, the nurse and the maid, and having a short scene-change between the original Acts 1 and 2, with a full interval before Act 3.  I can see the economic reasons for this in our day, but it seemed to me that this made the ending seem to come in too much of a hurry.  

The dramatic intensity when Nora finally shuts Torvald up with such an angry – however justified – “No!” works for Jamieson’s frantic character, yet it is different from the quiet, rational, absolutely determined, steely-minded Nora that I have always found in the original script just before she stands up to leave:

HELMER I would gladly work for you day and night, Nora – bear sorrow and want for your sake. But no man sacrifices his honour, even for one he loves.

NORA Millions of women have done so.

HELMER Oh, you think and talk like a silly child.

NORA Very likely. But you neither think nor talk like the man I can share my life with.  When your terror was over – not for what threatened me, but for yourself – when there was nothing more to fear – then it seemed to you as though nothing had happened. I was your lark again, your doll, just as before – whom you would take twice as much care of in future, because she was so weak and fragile.

Helmer becomes pitiable, begging, forever incapable of understanding.  He “sinks into a chair by the door” without our pity. In this production, we were in danger of feeling a bit sorry for him.

But that’s what makes live theatre of such great value.  I have seen the play anew in this production of A Doll’s House, in Joanna Murray-Smith’s adaptation under Mark Kilmurry’s direction.  Definitely not to be missed.


The relationship changes between Nils Krogstad and Krystina Linden
David Soncin and Lizzie Schebesta

Dr Rank reveals his feelings for Nora
Tim Walter and Chanelle Jamieson
Torvald confronts Nora as she begins to realise the reality of her situation
Chanelle Jamieson and James Lugton

© Frank McKone, Canberra

Friday 10 June 2022

2022: American Pie (Don McLean) - Shortis & Simpson

American Pie by Shortis & Simpson.  Belconnen Arts Centre Theatre (BelcoArts), Canberra, June 10-11, 2022.

Reviewed by Frank McKone
June 10

Moya Simpson and John Shortis have maintained their special status in our local music scene.  They write, sing and play in a folk kind of way, with an unpretentious purpose to educate us about our culture, through easy humour, soft but telling satire, and sometimes deep empathy.  In this 80 minute show, they explore the meaning of Don McLean’s lyrics in a celebration of 50 years of popular recognition of his 6-stanza song, American Pie.

The essence of the show, demonstrated through singing the songs of the singers, from Buddy Holly to Janis Joplin, whose stories are behind McLean’s lyrics, is to explain what he meant by

But something touched me deep inside, the day the music died;
But I knew I was out of luck, the day the music died;
And we sang dirges in the dark, the day the music died;
Do you recall what was revealed, the day the music died;
I saw Satan laughing with delight, the day the music died; and finally
They caught the last train for the coast, the day the music died.

The show was a revelation for me to hear with such clarity all the words of all the songs sung by Moya, even when taking on the style of each singer in some 28 songs most of which I thought I knew.  

Connected by John’s history of the music and the times from the 1950s, related to the singers and bands McLean was referring to:
sadly (When I read about his widowed bride);
ironically (Do you believe in rock ’n roll, Can music save your mortal soul);
satirically
(And while Lennon read a book on Marx / The quartet practised in the park);
or horrified (Oh, and as I watched him on the stage / My hands were clenched in fists of rage),
I understood in a new way the breakout from the complacency of the 1950s, why The Times They [Were] a-Changin’, and what it meant when “the three men I admire most: The Father, Son, and Holy Ghost” were murdered – the first in 1963, and two in 1968.  No wonder Don McLean was distraught, writing and singing “So bye-bye, Miss American Pie” in 1972.  

It was a fitting ending to the show for Moya to sing that other song by Don McLean in sympathetic memory of the artist Vincent van Gogh as her encore, after the full house acclaimed the duo, following singing together the whole six stanzas and choruses of American Pie.  

Her rendition of Vincent, beginning with
Starry, starry night, paint your palette blue and grey ·
Look out on a summer's day, with eyes that know the darkness in my soul

brought me near to tears.  There was humour and even hope for a better world after our recent election during the show; but in the end American Pie is about accepting reality – but not ever letting the music die.



 

Moya Simpson and John Shortis
Shortis & Simpson in performance

 © Frank McKone, Canberra

 

Thursday 9 June 2022

2022: Emerald City by David Williamson

 

 

Emerald City by David Williamson.  Free Rain at The Hub, Kingston, Canberra June 8 – 25, 2022.

Reviewed by Frank McKone
Opening night June 9

Director – Anne Somes; Set Designer – Cate Clelland
Costume Design – Fiona Leach supported by Cast and Creatives
Lighting Design – Chris Ward; Sound Design – Justin Mullins
Original Music – Alexander Unikowski

Cast:
Colin – Isaac Reilly; Kate – Victoria Tyrell Dixon; Mike – Daniel Greiss
Elaine – Helen McFarlane; Helen – Hannah Lance; Malcolm – Patrick Collins

___________________________________________________________________

In 1987 I saw the original production of Emerald City at the Opera House Drama Theatre.  That was a Sydney show.  Last night, in The Hub at The Causeway in Canberra, I saw a Melbourne show.  David Williamson’s brilliant play contrasts the two cities.  Melbourne is deep and meaningful; Sydney is shallow and money-grubbing.

In my memory, after 35 years, despite the outstanding performances by John Bell as the writer Colin, Robyn Nevin as his publisher wife Kate, Max Cullen as the huckster Mike McCord, Andrea Moor as his partner Helen, Dennis Grosvenor as financier Malcolm, and Ruth Cracknell as producer Elaine, all I have left is the beautiful distant backdrop image of the huge shining emerald harbour.  Theme, characters and plot have faded from that ‘Sydney’ show.  

At The Hub, Free Rain’s ‘Melbourne’ show, small in scale, will be remembered entirely for how clearly these actors, under Anne Somes’ direction, created strength of character, took us through the complexity of Williamson’s plot, and showed how the themes “of money versus integrity – with Sydney being the supposed locus of the former and Melbourne the latter – emerged, as did possibly the most important dynamic in the play, the inevitable, often very competitive, struggle for career achievement in a marriage of two professionals.”  

These are Williamson’s words from his Home Truths – A Memoir.  In other words, Isaac Reilly’s ‘Colin’, Victoria Tyrell Dixon’s ‘Kate’, Daniel Greiss’s ‘Mike’, Hannah Lance’s ‘Helen’, Patrick Collins’ ‘Malcolm’, and Helen McFarlane’s ‘Elaine’, captured exactly what the author intended.  The trick in this play is to keep a delicate balance on the knife edge of genuine art on the ‘Melbourne’ side and entertainment on the ‘Sydney’ side. The final words of the play are “Take care!”

I thank the company for the care they have taken.  

The casting as well as the characterisations are spot on.  It was amusing to see a tall, slim-built Colin with such a tendency to expound ideas while exhibiting anxiety about criticism – so much like the real David Williamson of that time in this play he calls ‘biographical’.  You’ll need to read Page 249 of Home Truths, where Frank Moorhouse – invited by David to opening night – had told him “the Max Cullen character would have had possibilities if I’d gone into him in more depth” and had “finally dragged himself to his feet when he realised he was the only one in the audience not joining in the standing ovation.”   Maybe like Colin with Mike McCord, David says “I decided that life was too short to persevere with my attempts at friendship.”  I wonder, though, if Moorhouse would have said the same of Daniel Greiss in the role.  His Mike actually persuaded us that this awful ‘huckster’ could genuinely be in love with Helen.

The play raises problematical questions of sexism, requiring women who must be obviously physically sexually attractive to make Colin and Mike so besotted with Kate and Helen respectively; while each being at a level of maturity and ethical social capacity way above their men.  Both Victoria and Hannah created the humour in their situations equally with the seriousness of what we now understand as Me Too feminism, which we saw on March 15, 2021, when more than 100,000 Australians participated in the March4Justice rallies to protest sexual assault and harassment in politics, while calling for an end to gendered violence. [ABC TV] 

I think we can thank David Williamson for helping to create that new understanding and positive action in this 1980’s play.  While Helen McFarlane’s portrayal of Elaine, the forceful woman arts producer, forced to compromise her artistic standards to raise her mortgage repayments, also raised the question of the precariousness both of working in the arts and of financial security for older women.

An important aspect of Free Rain’s production was the success of the costume department, especially for the women as their relationships with the men shifted from time to time.

Lighting, sound – including Sydney seagulls – and an unobtrusive music accompaniment allowed the dialogue and action to have the central place, despite the amusing position taken by the pure entertainment huckster that Colin’s film script shouldn’t have any words.  This is Williamson, the word-smith, making fun of himself.  Of course in the movie Gallipoli, we saw the true quality of his film script writing.

And last I have to say how well the director and cast handled the shifting from naturalistic playing to the ‘presentational’ monologues as characters spoke directly to us about what they felt and thought about each other.  The simple device of the non-speaking character held in freeze-frame worked smoothly and effectively to keep us on that delicate balance that the play requires.

Overall, then, Emerald City is another excellent example of the new theatre Hub for local companies like Free Rain, and – for me, at least – a filling-in of my memory space, reminding me of how good is the playwright, David Williamson.

See the play, and read the book – Home Truths published by Harper Collins, 2021.


Photos by Cathy Breen

Patrick Collins and Isaac Reilly
as financier Malcolm and writer Colin
Hannah Lance as Helen
Helen McFarlane and Daniel Greiss
as Elaine and Mike



Isaac Reilly and Victoria Tyrell Dixon
as Colin and Kate

 

© Frank McKone, Canberra

Saturday 4 June 2022

2022: Keeping it Real - Arts Forum

 

Keeping it Real: Seat at the Table – University of Canberra Creative Recovery and Resilience Forum, at UC Building 7 (Faculty of Arts and Design), Saturday June 4, 2022.

Producer – Kiri Morecombe
Forum Facilitators – Ketura Budd, Nick Delatovic, Zora Pand and Tom Campbell
Pitch Lab Facilitators – Lavanna Neal and Adam Deusien
Participants – some 40 local artists in conversation about challenges, strategies, connections and support for the arts sector.
Forum Writer-In-Residence – Simone Penkethman

Keeping it Real is the final event in the Creative Recovery and Resilience Forum’s 2021-22 series as part of the ACT Government’s Creative Recovery and Resilience Program.

Reviewed by Frank McKone ____________________________________________________________________
The Context:
Released 12/07/2021

Canberra’s arts industry will be given a boost through the Creative Recovery and Resilience Program, which will support the ACT arts industry to recover from the effects of COVID-19, build capability within the sector and create jobs.

Minister for the Arts Tara Cheyne said the Creative Recovery and Resilience Program, with more than $700,000 in funding, will focus on employment and economic stimulus for Canberra’s creative sector.

A number of different initiatives will be delivered under the program over the next 12 months to empower the arts industry to recover and respond to the emergent opportunities created by COVID.

“The arts are an essential part of our lives and contribute immensely to the economic, cultural and societal value of our community,” said Minister Cheyne.


https://www.cmtedd.act.gov.au/open_government/inform/act_government_media_releases/cheyne/2021/canberras-creative-recovery-supporting-jobs-in-the-arts


At https://creativeact.org.au/forum/ you may find my relatively ancient face among the many, such as: 


11-year-old “Ghos7” who operates online as a “Day Disco DJ”;

 
through people such as Ruth O’Brien who I am aware of as an actor and musician with Rebus Theatre and is now focussing on “Mary Violet Creative”, hosting online workshops and events and providing support for artists with the business and administrative sides of their work through coaching and providing arts admin outsourcing services;

 
to Kirandeep Grewal who is a multi-disciplinary artist and an art educator based in Canberra.  Her art practice is based upon a meditative approach to everyday life. It is a learning and sharing journey of her work which also encourages others to engage with art. Her preferred medium is silk on which she explores colours. Her designs on silk scarves, wall hangings or paintings are a combination of various techniques, including Shibori, Indian tie-and-dye, free hand drawing/painting and embroidery.

Juliette Dudley demonstrates what it’s all about pictorially:


 I approached my Seat at the Table a little unsure of my place as a mere critic among so many creatives.  But there is a far wider perspective than just the arts sector, when you find on line at https://scholar.google.com.au/scholar?q=national+recovery+and+resilience+plans&hl=en&as_sdt=0&as_vis=1&oi=scholart  a huge stack of academic articles, especially from Europe and Japan, about national recovery and resilience plans from many different angles.

And, yes, we have one: The Australian Government launched the National Recovery and Resilience Agency on 5 May 2021 to support local communities to respond to major disasters. The new agency will assist communities with relief and recovery efforts following large-scale natural disasters.7 May 2021  
https://www.pmc.gov.au › news-centre › domestic-policy

And we have one for the Australian Capital Territory, at https://www.act.gov.au › actrecovery which includes $711,000 for a new Creative Recovery and Resilience Program (CRRP); designed to focus on employment and economic stimulus for the creative sector in the ACT. Six new projects include 

>    this CRR Forum (University of Canberra); 

>    CRR Residences in Digital Innovation and Cross-Sector Engagement  (University of Canberra (UC) and Belconnen Arts Centre (Belco Arts); 

>    Residencies in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Arts and Cultural Practice, and Community Arts and Cultural Development (Ainslie + Gorman Arts Centres); 

>    City Commissions (Contour 556); 

>    Arts Infinity Lab (Paper Giant);

>    Good Company (You Are Here); 

and an ACT Government Creative-in-Residence Project delivered by artsACT (A six month residency for 2 creatives – Ketura Budd, Nick Delatovic – in an ACT Government Directorate.)

Today’s Forum was M/C’d by Ketura Budd, explaining that the frame for the two hours’ discussion – in groups of 10 around 4 tables – should be respectful inclusion, the collective nature of the arts, sharing and connecting with each other.

She had mixed the participants on each table to provide a likely diversity of ideas and arts experience, and listed a number of issues which we were likely to cover – though with no constraints:
Getting beyond the known knowns such as -
Being underfunded;
Being underpaid;
Getting past barriers;
Working voluntarily;
Disbelief – questioning arts as not really a job;
Working from home;
Arts as intrinsically valuable;
And concluding with the premise that each arts person here today is equally valuable.

When I asked about my status as a reviewer, it was promptly made clear that reviewing is creative, too.  The warmth of acceptance was a strength of the afternoon’s experience.  

My table was facilitated by Tom Campbell, who began with a brief story of his personal background and art work, inviting us each to speak in turn.  Telling our stories, though just in two or three minutes each, quickly brought us together: despite the proximity of the other three tables, their voices were not interrupting our concentration as we absorbed quite different personal stories and personalities. Opening up for presenting ideas and responses came easily.  Tom’s quiet approach gave us freedom to speak: facilitation was the right word.

Though two or three people from each table reported on their discussions to the whole gathering at the end, each with positive feelings about the exercise, but raising different specific points, I can only write in some depth from my own table.

As the real creatives spoke, some from the perspective of ‘community workshop’ arts actvities, others from the ‘arts creation or performances as small businesses’ perspective, I began to see the problem of government focussing on the economics of the ‘arts sector’.

Slow Stitching community arts activity led by
Kiran Grewal and Michele Grimston
of the Migrant Women's Art Group
Photo: Simone Penkethman

 

A crucial point is that the coming together of people to do art is its value in itself.  Even if, as one speaker said, trying to do it is ‘terrible’ (perhaps because of the process; or perhaps because the result is not artistically successful), it is the experience of doing it which can change what you understand, what you feel, and what you think; while bringing the people involved together through that experience.

This is as true for the image above of Kirandeep Grewal and Michele Grimston from the Migrant Women’s Art Group leading an exploratory workshop-style activity at the Belconnen Arts Centre as it was for another speaker describing the difficult process of running a nine-piece band, managing the financial arrangements at the same time as creating and then performing the music.  

The important point that arose from peoples’ stories and thoughts in response was that each as an artist worked with a strong sense of responsibility to others.  Leadership in the arts is quite different from leadership as we often see it in business.  This is because the focus for business is on the profit-making of the venture; while – in the example of the nine-piece band – arrangements are worked out for the artists to manage the money in a cooperative way because the focus is on the making of the music.

The result of the focus on profit/loss is that leaders are in a position where caring about their employees, or about the customers for their product, or even about the quality of their work, is set to one side.  Recent cases I thought of, for example, are Mark Zuckerberg (Facebook / Meta) and Jeff Bezos (Amazon); and probably Clive Palmer and his ‘United Australia Party’.  In a sense, I thought, these entrepreneurs are ‘creatives’, but they are not like the people I was hearing at my table.  In the end the emphasis on the arts economy is quite the wrong way to consider the value of the arts to our community.  Those business and political ‘leaders’ become engrossed in their personal wealth and political power; while as speakers at my table said, making my art is central to my person – and that is its value, not only to me but to all those others who work with me and others who see my art.

There is a generosity in art; and I felt today that our local government, in setting-up and financially supporting the Creative Recovery and Resilience Program – and especially in the manner in which today’s Seat at the Table Forum was conducted – has shown the importance of the arts to our whole community.  

At the national level, of course, I trust that the newly elected government will take up its responsibility to arts in the community, by the community and for the community.  Starting, I hope, with rethinking the role, funding and management of the Australia Council.  

Instead of a competitive model for grant applications, we need a readiness model already in place in the ACT CRRP, where ArtsACT staff can personally assist artists with putting together their applications, especially on how to acquit the grant money and the complexities of accounting for the GST – so that the artists can keep focus on making the music in recovery from shocks like Covid-19, and with continuing resilience into the long-term future.

I would like to conclude with my thanks to all the people who sat with me at my table – that is, at our table(s) – and all those from ArtsACT and the University of Canberra who made the day happen.



Keeping it Real - Seated at the Tables
Photo: Tobias Price



Keeping it Real - Refreshments
Photo: Tobias Price