Adelaide Botanic Gardens – Noel Lothian Hall. 19 Feb 2016
One of three shows in The Bunker Trilogy season, Macbeth is the only one adapted from an existing work. Written by William Shakespeare the piece follows the murder of the King, Duncan, by Macbeth who conspires with the queen in the act, and is then later assassinated by Macduff for his crimes.
For the purposes of this trilogy the play has been significantly cut in length, and edited in context, to fit the WWI bunker theme in which it is set. For the most part the cuts work; the dialogue is snappy, the ‘boring’ bits are gone, and the content is entertaining. Some of the edits however don’t work. Anyone unfamiliar with the work may leave the theatre with a few dangling questions – particularly who Macduff was and why he decided to avenge the King’s death.
Placing the action in a WWI bunker is interesting and effective, but doesn’t really add anything to the story line. Unlike the Trilogy’s other 2 shows, Morgana and Agamemnon, the bunker is used as a device here that is incongruent with many of the scenes; most particularly the royal banquet. In this particular instance the audience is included in the piece – the audience that wouldn’t normally be there if this were a WWI bunker – further confusing the themes and breaking any suspension of disbelief.
It is a production from which one has mixed feelings. The performances are top notch. Bebe Sanders plays a wonderfully engaging Lady Macbeth; though the emotional anguish she suffers when she begins to be haunted by her actions may have been just out of reach in this particular performance. Sam Donnelly plays just about the best Macbeth one has ever seen, with great passion, excellent diction and a pervasive madness that grows ever stronger throughout the performance. Donnelly and Sanders have a beautiful connection.
A tight reimagining of Shakespeare’s greatest killer that is not quite elevated by its new contextual surroundings, yet with spectacular performances.
This Macbeth is a mixed bag.
Paul Rodda
When: 18 Feb to 14 Mar
Where: Adelaide Botanic garden – Noel Lothian hall
Bookings: adelaidefringe.com.au
Dan Goronszy Arts. Gluttony – The Grand Caravan. 17 Feb 16
Like the famous T.A.R.D.I.S of Doctor Who television fame, the world within The Grand Caravan is much, much larger than what it’s capable of containing, viewed from the outside.
Destination Home, as a deeply intimate 13 member only audience experience, works to awaken comprehension and empathy with thousands of people seeking the safe haven of a secure home, whatever type it may be, rental or non-rental. They are people walking the same streets you do or fleeing destruction of their home and seeking safety thousands of miles away.
Dan Goronszy offers a blended text/physical theatre/puppetry production of great simplicity. Yet Destination Home is concerned with deeply complex social, political and personal issues involving the fight to defend ones right to the safe haven of home against politically and economically enforced competition; to be the ‘right’ kind of homeowner/renter/citizen.
30 slightly smaller than hand size disembodied plastic heads of all skin colour shades, manipulated by Goronszy, are key to the production’s capacity to subtly develop a spiritual sense of a lost and wandering tide of humanity. They are battered on the rocks of mundane but deeply hurtful bureaucratic machinations each individual member of the tide encounters, expressed in voice and movement.
Goronszy’s performance is remarkably wide in its emotional and physical range without seeming to overwhelm her much closed in audience. She gives emotional life, flesh and blood, and pain to silent heads as they arbitrarily move from one fruitless point of hope to another.
Destination Home is timely during a period of global uproar over refugees and domestic battles fought over affordability of housing. Here is a production that breaks down all the arguments to the essential one, do we really value the humanity of all, or are we merely allowing it to be commoditised?
David O’Brien
When: 17 Feb to 5 March
Where: Gluttony – The Grand Caravan
Bookings: adelaidefringe.com.au
Joanne Hartstone. The Cellar, GC. 17 Feb 16
Who is this man? If Thom Pain is at a loss to know, who are we to help?
He speaks a fractured stream of consciousness. There is narrative in there somewhere. Isn't there? There's the boy who was attacked by bees but thought they were trying to help him, to take away a pain that was already there. There was a dog. A horse walked into a bar.
And thus flow the existential contemplations. There's the woman he wooed with his one-card magic trick. Should he draw the raffle?
In his way of thinking, there is a pattern. He pauses to reflect on it. Yes, he has mentioned the boy and the bees. He needs a volunteer from the audience. Maybe not. He blows his nose on a handkerchief and then uses it as a prop to talk about brains. His thoughts skitter. Absurdist non sequiturs meander forth.
He seems an innocuous man and yet there is something threatening about him. He defies the fourth wall. He is unpredictable. He is confronting. His mind is made up and unmade in a trice. He is sincere. No, he is teasing.
His ramblings are peppered with wonderful one-liners. Listen carefully, or you'll miss them. They're funny.
He says he is a clever man - and he is.
It is a clever script and, when the show is over with its beautifully tailored ending, one recognises why this Will Eno creation was distinguished as a Pulitzer nominee. It is imaginative, alternative, rich in striking imagery, ideas and surprises. And yet, it is the sad tale of a small man.
New York actor David Calvitto has brought this character with this dense and complex script to Adelaide.
He plays it as if he is just a bit uncertain, as if it is just a bit improvisational. He seems devastated when a man abruptly storms out of the theatre and suggests that perhaps the whole audience would be better off following him. Did that man really leave or was he a shill?
Anyone who does not see this show through to the end is cheating themselves of a magnificent theatrical experience. It's not quite like anything one has ever seen or could ever forget. Bravo.
****1/2
Samela Harris
When: 17 Feb to 6 Mar
Where: The Cellar, GC
Bookings: adelaidefringe.com.au
Joanne Hartstone in association with Seabright Productions. The Queens - The White Queen. 17 Feb 2016
Sam Donnelly, in his spare time out of the bunker from playing in the Fringe-favourite trilogy, is disguised as a Trekkie tragic at the Queen's Theatre over the next few weeks. Writer/director Jon Brittain of Britain shows off his intimate knowledge with the famous Vulcan and the fan phenomena. Within the context of a Star Trek (first series, mind you) obsession, there is a boy-meets-girl, boy-loses-girl, boy-gets-girl-back story. Our hero, caught in a tractor beam by the famous TV show, reaches a life-changing turning point when his unabashed Trekkie girlfriend is gonna mix with his workmates who have no idea of his secret obsession. But ‘lurv’ conquers all.
Donnelly is vastly energetic and well directed in employing an attention-seeking physicality, but he is hampered by the poor acoustics of the Queen's Theatre, which is but a shell, and not really a theatre. The show is like Donnelly acting out an American romantic comedy movie. Do you need some knowledge of Star Trek to enjoy the show? I would say so. What if you enjoy love stories? This one is pretty cliché, but I was moved by our hero's passion to right a wrong with the love interest. If you have a great interest in obsession, you'll be fine.
PS The 50th anniversary of the official Star Trek Convention will be in Las Vegas in August 2016. See you there!
David Grybowski
When: 17 Feb to 13 Mar
Where: The Queens - The White Queen
Bookings: adelaidefringe.com.au
Superbolt Theatre and Seabright Productions. Garden of Unearthly Delights - Umbrella Revolution. 16 Feb 2016
Dinosaur Park, formerly appellated Jurassic Park, and probably not now for copyright infringement reasons, was a sell-out show at the Edinburgh Fringe last year. The Park family wants to share with you a private screening of the hugely successful movie directed by Steven Spielberg in 1993; the original Michael Crichton novel spawned another three films with a fifth in the pipeline. But the movie is missing and daddy Terry, and Jade and Noah - with theatresports novelty and inventiveness - act out key movie moments that poignantly reflect and interweave with the life of a single dad raising teenage kids. Noah is an enthusiastic teen living in his fantasy world as a consequence of being sidelined by the battle for emotional supremacy between Dad and emo Jade.
Co-creators and performers Maria Askew, Simon Maeder, and Frode Gjerløw run on high octane with cleverness. Dinosaurs, deep family matters and DNA molecules are acted with alacrity. Plenty of potted palms place you on that dangerous island. T-rex is a back pack, and electronic gates are mic'ed voice effects. Raptors in the kitchen remain dangerous.
Deep knowledge of the dino franchise would be a megasaurus-size help but is not essential. At times poignant but mostly funny, Dinosaur Park is good fun Fringe fare.
David Grybowski
When: 12 Feb -14 Mar
Where: Garden of Unearthly Delights - Umbrella Revolution
Bookings: adelaidefringe.com.au