Thursday 8 August 2024

2024: The Offering by Omar Musa and Mariel Roberts

 

 


 

The Offering by Omar Musa & Mariel Roberts.  Presented by Q The Locals at Queanbeyan Performing Arts Centre, August 8, 2024.

Reviewed by Frank McKone

Performance Poetry – Omar Musa
Cello, live and recorded – Mariel Roberts

The Offering is a substantial work in a highly original form of a public meditation on how to become one with oneself; to be a whole person.  Memory is essential, yet a key thought through the series of poems which make up this hour presentation is “memories are always translations” – of the past before one’s birth, as well as of your past since your birth.

Taking up stories of his immigrant father’s family and traditions in Sabah, Malaysian Borneo, Omar speaks in role as a water spirit.  He seeks understanding of the unity of land and water, searching in the archipelago of memories for the island which is himself – a Queanbeyan local, Australian, with memories of Borneo – its history as a country and the history of his family he has visited there as child and adult.

The often startling originality of his words, particularly when he tosses in unsuspected surprising rhymes, is matched by Mariel’s equally original creation of a soundscape – often perhaps in the tradition of musique concrète – live on the cello, but also incorporating instant recorded playback.  She provides not just an accompaniment for the poems but a form of music in its own right giving an emotional depth to the images and moods in her husband’s words.

The poems come to seem like major arias in a small opera: the audience spontaneously applauded each poem, and one solo ‘poem’ from the cello without words.  And, again surprisingly, the whole work becomes a drama with its hopes and dreams finally reaching the spirit’s success – as a fictional character which is also Omar Musa finding himself in a real world of human confusion.

Working together in the creation of art, Mariel Roberts and Omar Musa offer each of us the way towards our own one-ness.  Breathe: inhale and search; exhale and find the way.


 ©Frank McKone, Canberra

Saturday 3 August 2024

2024: Uncle Vanya by Anton Chekhov, adapted by Joanna Murray-Smith

 

 

Uncle Vanya by Anton Chekhov, adapted by Joanna Murray-Smith.  Ensemble Theatre, Sydney, July 26 – August 31 2024.

Reviewed by Frank McKone
August 3

Playwright: Anton Chekhov; Adaptor: Joanna Murray-Smith
Director: Mark Kilmurry; Asst Director: Emma Canalese
Set & Costume Designer: Nick Fry; Lighting Designer: Matt Cox
Composer & Sound Designer: Steve Francis
Dialect Coach: Nick Curnow; Intimacy Director: Chloe Dallimore
Stage Manager: Lauren Tulloch; Asst Stage Manager: Christopher Starnawski
Costume Supervisor: Renata Beslik

Cast:
Nanny / Maryia – Vanessa Downing; Telyeghin – John Gaden AO
Yelena – Chantelle Jamieson; Serebryakov – David Lynch
Sonya – Abbey Morgan; Vanya – Yalin Ouzecelik
Astrov – Tim Walter



“I’d adapt a phone book in order to have a show at the Ensemble”, says Joanna Murray-Smith.  And so said all of us in the audience yesterday afternoon.

That’s because Murray-Smith achieved her Writer’s Note aim.  She points out that “the eternal dilemma for contemporary Artistic Directors” is whether “Chekhov’s language needs to change” when “historical language [such as in the standard Penguin translation by Elisaveta Fen ©1954] sometimes doesn’t work for comedic effect.  It sometimes sounds stilted or pompous to modern ears….  So by deftly translating the intention into language that fits it best in this moment now can make the play sing in the way more effectively as it was intended to.”

Of course, it was intended to be a satirical comedy in which Uncle Vanya’s plight in relation to the proposed selling of the family estate would be both a laughing matter and a serious concern for middle class Russians in 1899 attending the Moscow Art Theatre.  And, of course, in 1954 the F- word would never have been allowed to cater for “younger audiences who aren’t used to having to ‘work’ to understand a play”,  as Murray-Smith describes them today.

But, of course, at 83 I laughed along with the rest, many of whom were probably not much younger than me at the Saturday afternoon matinee.  Even attempted homicide made us laugh in nervous reaction – though I wonder how that was received in Chekhov’s time.

And I say that because Mark Kilmurry and the terrific team of actors kept us right on the correct satirical edge so close to reality that often we couldn’t be sure whether to laugh or not.  All the actors were equally in tune with Murray-Smith’s style, so that though we knew we were watching this late-19th Century specifically Russian society, we had no trouble believing these characters were real.

In particular I would like to give a little extra praise to Abbey Morgan.  Her teenage Sonya could so easily be overplayed, especially in her scene with the older Yelena  talking of her unrequited love for the doctor, Astrov.  Yet Abbey made a speech like this:
“O Lord, give me strength…. I’ve been praying all night…. I often go up to him, start talking to him, look into his eyes…. I have no more pride, no strength left to control myself….. etc. etc.”
into both Chekhov’s satire of overblown young love and at the same time was just sad enough for me to feel sympathy when Yelena asked “And he?” and Sonya replied “He doesn’t notice me.”


In other words, Ensemble Theatre has done both Joanna Murray-Smith and Anton Chekhov proud.  

And because of her deftly translating Chekhov’s intention, we see that this is not a play just about Russia in 1899, but a play which through our laughter makes us acutely aware of how the threat of social breakdown – all those F-words – is just as real for us today.  

P.S.
For those confused by Russian names here’s the list of the characters in the standard form.  It’s a bit like a phone book:

Serebriakov, Alexandre Vladimirovich, a retired professor

Yeliena, Andryeevna (Helene Lienochka), his wife, aged 27

Sonia (Sophia Alexandrovna), his daughter by his first wife

Voinitskaia, Maryia Vassilievna, widow of a Privy Councillor and mother of the professor’s first wife

Voinitsky, Ivan Petrovich (Vania), her son

Astrov, Mihail Lvovich, a doctor

Telyeghin, Ila Ilyich (nicknamed ‘Waffles’), a landowner reduced to poverty

Marina, an old children’s nurse, and A Workman

The action takes place on Serebriakov’s estate – which Sonia’s Uncle Vanya claims was given to Maryia when her daughter married Serebriakov, and so cannot be sold by Serebriakov without approval from at least his daughter Sonia (now a young adult) and preferably from her Uncle Vanya as well.

 ©Frank McKone, Canberra

Friday 2 August 2024

2024: The Sunshine Club by Wesley Enoch AM

 


The Sunshine Club by Wesley Enoch AM. HIT Productions at The Q, Queanbeyan Performing Arts Centre, August 1 2024

Reviewed by Frank McKone

Creative Team:
Writer & Director: Wesley Enoch AM
Composer: John Rodgers; Musical Director: Shenzo Gregorio
Choreographer: Yolande Brown; Lighting Designer: Ben Hughes
Set& Costume Realiser: Adrienne Chisholm

Cast:
Frank Doyle – Garret Lyon; Rose Morris – Claire Warrillow;
Aunty Faith Doyle – Roxanne McDonald; Pearl Doyle – Tehya Makani
Reverend Percy Morris / Bill Harris – Dale Pengelly
Dave Daylight – Leeroy Tipiloura; Lorry Hocking – Colin Smith
Peter Walsh / Doorman / Jimmy Daily – Rune Nydal
Patti Maguire (Rose Cover) – Chloe Rose Taylor
Mavis Moreton (Pearl Cover) – Jade Lomas-Ronan

Band: 5-piece live

The cast and five-piece live band
in The Sunshine Club 2024

Ostensibly, The Sunshine Club is an intriguing rom-com, until – like Romeo and Juliet – the dark forces of social discrimination wreck the rom and eliminate the com.  

Claire Warrillow and Garret Lyon
as Rose Morris and Frank Doyle
dancing in The Sunshine Club

Is there any real hope for change for the better, as Frank Doyle starts on the alcohol path in angry frustration in the final scene?  Will Rose achieve the professional singing career she deserves?  How will Dave and Pearl manage bringing up a white man’s child?

Yet the terrific up-beat band (who unfortunately are not acknowledged in the printed program); the always lively precision choreography; and the careful direction of the mood changes, light the drama with sunshine from within.  What makes it intriguing is that the show is simply enjoyable to watch even while the reason for needing mixed blak/white weekly dance clubs brings up clouds and even thunder and lightning.



Rozanne McDonald as Aunty Faith Doyle
bringing on thunder and lightning
in The Sunshine Club by Wesley Enoch AM


In fact – and this is a worry about how far we have improved in view of last year’s referendum – I (a 1950s immigrant) had never known about the Sunshine Clubs that some claim were set up around the country after returned Indigenous World War II soldiers realised their fighting for freedom didn’t mean theirs.  

Perhaps I’m wish-fulfilling: in offtheleash.net.au “The Sunshine Club is a fictional place but it's based on a real place called the Boathouse in Brisbane that a lot of my Elders went to. They'd tell stories of the dances they'd go to, how they'd have to sneak in and sneak back out again,” Enoch says.

But then again, after explaining he wrote the musical in 1999 “in reaction to the late 1990s and the Reconciliation movement”: “There’s a song right at the end, and I don’t want to give away too much, but when we wrote it in the 90s the sentiment was that we have to make change. The lyric goes: “If not now, then when? If not now, then show me a world where it can,” says Enoch.


Despite the brilliance of The Sunshine Club, I fear I still can’t see that world yet.  I was surprised to see much less than a full-house audience last night, while to me it is a great shame that it gets a run of just one night in Queanbeyan.  

I can only hope, as Enoch writes in his program Creative Note, that “you see The Sunshine Club as a great celebration of our history but also, through our history, a way of talking about the situation that we [were in] twenty years ago in the 1990s when I first wrote it.  In 2024, we need to focus a lot more on how we work together and how reconciliation is possible in the future.”

But is this the last of HIT Productions’ presentation of this entertaining and important show?  Their web page, https://www.hitproductions.com.au/theatre/come-on-down-to-the-sunshine-club  last updated May 2, 2024, lists the performances through 2023-2024:

2024 PERFORMANCES:  Sydney Coliseum, NSW; Tanunda Soldiers’ Memorial Hall, SA; Murray Bridge Performing Arts and Function Centre, SA; Nautilus Arts Centre, the SALT Festival, Port Lincoln; Mildura Arts Centre, Mildura; Broken Hill Civic Centre, Broken Hill; Wangaratta Performing Arts Centre, Wangaratta; Ballarat Civic Hall, Ballarat; Kingston Civic Hall, Moorabbin.

2023 PERFORMANCES: Far more than I can record here, in Victoria, South Australia, Tasmania, New South Wales and Queensland.

So I hope I need not worry so much, since as Wesley Enoch says “This play is a way of having our voice heard and our world view expressed so we can be heard” and that it’s people who go to plays who make things change.

Claire Warrillow as Rose Morris with Garret Lyon as Frank Doyle
Their first touch in The Sunshine Club by Wesley Enoch AM