Bette and Joan by Anton Burge. Ensemble Theatre, Sydney March 20 – April 25 2026
Reviewed by Frank McKone
March 27
Cast
Jeanette Cronin as Bette Davis
Lucia Mastrantone as Joan Crawford
Creatives
Director: Liesel Badorrek; Assistant Director: Jessica Fallico
Set & Costume Designer: Grace Deacon
Lighting Designer: Kelsey Lee
Composer & Sound Designer: Ross Johnston
Video Designer: Cameron Smith
Stage Manager: Krystelle Quartermain
Assistant Stage Manager: Lara Kyriazis
It’s
my habit, as a reviewer, when seeing a play new to me, to not read too
much about the play, and especially not to read reviews, even of
previous productions, so that I can respond on the night with the
immediate feelings and thoughts that arise without being influenced
beforehand.
In the case of Bette Davis and Joan
Crawford, whose lifetimes closely matched my parents’ who were not often
film-goers, I think I never saw any of the Hollywood movies which made
Bette and Joan famous, though I certainly recall their names from my
younger days. But I was never aware of the feud between them.
As
I expected at Ensemble Theatre, I appreciated very much the acting
skills of both Jeanette and Lucia, clearly directed precisely in
creating every detail of facial expression, voice and physical action
that the playscript required; and the original use of video brought to
mind visually the questions the characters talk of – about acting and
knowing the difference between reality and fiction.
Yet I felt
there was something missing. I got the picture, so to speak, but I
found myself at Intermission hoping for something in the second half
which would reveal what the playwright’s purpose would be beyond showing
us these two women battling away at each other.
There were a few
hints in second half when they were older, in 1962, looking back on
their film-making experiences in the 1930s, 40s and 50s but nothing
definite enough to make me like either of them, or to feel more
empathetic towards them as personalities, apart from sympathy for the
social issue of the treatment of women compared to men.
So, after the show, I wondered if I should find out whether other reviewers had doubts like mine.
Lyn Gardner in The Guardian in 2011 made this comment about the original West End production that year: But
this kitsch play is not trying to be more than it is, and [Greta]
Scacchi and [Anita] Dobson carry it with an alluringly wicked twinkle in
their eyes...and it is only a pity there is not more excavation of the
emotional pain felt by these two icons, whose public success was
matched by private disasters.
[ https://www.theguardian.com/stage/2011/may/12/bette-and-joan-review ]
Anton
Burge wrote the script which is littered with references to Bette and
Joan’s shows. I would have liked to see more of a resolution at the end was a comment in a review of the Brighton Little Theatre production in 2024.
[ https://rozscott.com/bette-and-joan-by-anton-burge ]
So,
though Jeanette Cronin as Bette Davis and Lucia Mastrantone as Joan
Crawford surely gave as good as those acting in the play’s first
presentation, and despite Anton Burge’s claim (in the Ensemble’s program
notes) that it was never my intention to create merely a catalogue of anecdotes, I find I’m not the only one to want a bit more of a resolution and excavation of the emotional pain.
Maybe,
if it’s not there word for word in Burge’s script, then, as director,
Liesel Badorrek could indulge in a bit of poetic licence to make it
happen.
But don’t let my quibbles stop you from seeing Bette and Joan, because Jeanette and Lucia give stunning performances.
©Frank McKone, Canberra

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