★★★1/2
Riverland Youth Theatre. The Arch, Holden Street Theatres. 12 Mar 2024
Brush up your classical Greek mythology before heading down to Holden Street. Of all unlikely things, a group of young thespians from the Riverland has mounted a wildly ambitious production of their own contemporary take on Euripides’ The Baccahe.
They have realised that there are topical parallels to be drawn from the story of outrageous and vengeful ancient gods. Hence, their “adaptation” is a ride of queer, gay, non-binary, tranny liberation in togas and hippie flowers.
They rejoice at vulgarity, arrogance and violence.
Language warnings are outré in the theatre but vernacular runs rampant in this show, as does the tedious conjunction(?) “like”.
Everything is, like, really, like gay.
Star of the show is of course, Dionysus, the god of fun, fertility, wine, and madness who is embodied in a flourishing celebration of high camp by Owen Stokes. It is Dionysus' story of rivalry and vengeance and the stage swarms with it all, it being a large cast. They’ve incorporated some gorgeous new-age gods such as the god of digital art and the excellent god of puberty and even a god of fan-fiction.
There is a dire need for firmer direction since a lot of the dialogue is inaudible due to lack of projection, shyness, or simply trying to deliver lines while lying on the stage.
What shines forth from the Riverland ensemble is a sense of joyful liberation.
They are having fun with the classics. Catch up if you can.
There are some promising talents onstage, among them Sophie Landau, Timu King, Rowen Hurrell, and Axel Lochert, as well as keen support players in Anni Mates, Zelda Edwards, Levi Button, and Arlo Sharp. All of them are under the lovingly supportive direction of Fleur Kilpatrick. Keira Simmons adds over-arching atmosphere with an interesting soundscape and Li Ingle has done a valiant job with costumes albeit the set with its panda toys is a bit puzzling.
One has to give it to this Riverland mob. They have braved the Fringe with something completely different.
All power to them. And let the gods stay with them.
Samela Harris
When: 12 to 15 Mar
Where: The Arch, Holden Street Theatres
Bookings: adelaidefringe.com.au
★★★1/2
Adelaide Fringe. The Bunker at Fool's Paradise. 7 Mar 2024
If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it. This could well be the slogan of Express Move Me & Scratch Arts, the outfits behind Moist, because it is unchanged from last year, and that is a shame.
Moist is a homoerotic circus show featuring four guys who don’t wear very much and enjoy getting wet and raunchy. The most interesting physical theatre/circus shows have a narrative that holds the performance together and give the audience a structure with which to make sense of the whole thing, at least subliminally.
The premise of Moist is unashamedly thin. The main protagonist is thirsty, very thirsty (and not just for hydration!) and he seeks to quench his thirst any way he can. If one of his former lovers might come to the party and help him out, then so much the better! Did I say thin? I meant tissue thin, but it doesn’t matter, because the audience isn’t there to be cerebrally stretched, they are there for a raunchy good time, and that’s exactly what they get. And, by the way, Fringe HQ advised ticketholders by email that the show’s rating had changed from MA15+ to R18+ !
So, what do you get for your hard-earned coin? You see four men strutting their stuff in orange jockstraps and lavender leotards as they engage in high-energy gymnastics, balancing and tumbling tricks while a pulsating underscore plays throughout and keeps your toes tapping. These guys are sexy and have no problems flaunting their stuff in your face, almost literally. There is lots of water being splashed about, some of it in an artistic way, and on one occasion with a nod to Sandro Botticelli’s ‘The Birth of Venus’, but for the most part it is simply with gay abandon.
This show is tongue-in-your-cheek good sexy fun. Plain and simple. If the show comes back next year, let’s hope it includes some new material.
Kym Clayton
When: 7 to 17 Mar
Where: The Bunker at Fool's Paradise
Bookings: adelaidefringe.com.au
Adelaide Festival. Schaubuhne Berlin & Theatre de las Ville Paris. Dunstan Playhouse. 9 Mar 2024
Despite warnings about homophobia and alcoholism, one is quite unprepared for the immense potency of this French one-hander by Édouard Louis.
The work opens passively, the performer alone at a table working on a laptop.
Tres ordinaire.
There’s a sofa OP on stage and a plastic garden chair; a standing mic, stick-like at centre stage; and a full screen video backdrop with the image of a foggy French road. One of those scary pollutant fogs where other cars appear like ghosts.
Louis speaks softly in French. White surtitles are just legible high against the video image. Grey roads, white lines, forward movement; time and distance. You cannot go back.
The narrative, however, is from a memoir which trips around chronology, piecing together a tale of family dysfunction, domestic violence, acute homophobia, cruelty and guilt, and the haplessness of a loving mother.
From the start, we understand that mon père is gravely ill and, as his past is revealed, the question of blame rises and who is to deserve what fate or injustice in life? This is a many-layered dilemma and one of the philosophic cores of the work.
Indeed, this one man’s narrative arrays everyman quandaries.
Louis’s stage presence is beautiful as is the pace of the work under the direction of the distinguished Thomas Ostermeier.
The black and white videos of Sébastien Dupouey and Marie Sanchez are a thematic marriage of exquisite atmosphere and aesthetic, as is the subtlety of soundscape from Sylvain Jacques.
It has explosive revelations, bursts of loud American pop music, and effusive drag cameos which explore not only the son’s talents but his father’s hostility towards him. Even for a factory worker who likes to dance, a “faggot” son in rural France is a cause for shame. The father has demonstrated only one tender gesture in the boy’s life. While he would never fulfil his son’s craving for recognition and while his utter reprehensibility caused his son’s flight, there is that hefty anchor called love. There are moments the audience weeps for it.
Louis’s tale reaches deep into our souls.
And, then, the denouement!
Why is that awful father dying aged only in his 50s?
It is not the factory accident alone. Thereon arrives the coup de théâtre. An eruption of agit prop which pins back the ears and breaks the heart.
And, come the curtain, audience members en masse leap to their feet in thunderous acclaim.
This is what festivals are all about.
Samela Harris
When: 9 to 10 Mar
Where: Dunstan Playhouse
Bookings: adelaidefestival.com.au
Adelaide Festival. Wende and the Royal Court Theatre. The Space. 7 Mar 2024
This shouldn’t really work. What is this, really? A musical? A concert? It is a jumble of musical styles from whispered ballad to Broadway tune to European chanson to hip-hop-ish-electronica-frenzy to round-the-piano singalong. But this production is in no way disjointed or muddled - it is wholly successful, bringing the opening night Space audience to its feet.
The Promise is - loosely - a song cycle that spins its way through complicated emotional territory. The production was developed at the Royal Court Theatre, a collaboration between five female playwrights, composers, and musicians, exploring what can only be expressed in song. And what a powerful expression this is. At the centre of The Promise is an extraordinarily committed performance by Dutch singer-songwriter Wende: she is compellingly versatile - her voice moving from a seductive purr to a full-throated roar to an unadorned clear bell. She is confident, nurturing, fearful, brave, confronting, rousing and raw. Sometimes she sits, still and poised, sometimes she runs laps around the band, dancing and convulsing, sometimes she climbs atop the piano and into the crowd. Wende is engaging and immediate - it feels like she is singing directly to you. She is backed by a talented and tight three-piece band of multi-instrumentalists, driven by percussion and piano. Their collaboration and communication is consistently excellent.
The Promise works so beautifully because it touches, both directly and obliquely, on sometimes messy emotional truths with precision, poetry, and an understanding that truths can be elusive and ambiguous. The songs feel like out-loud articulations of the unformed and unspoken inner dialogues that chatter away in our heads. Thematically, The Promise focusses on the feminine and the feminist. The songs explore danger and risk (“there’s a dark black pool on the edge of the island”), loneliness and isolation, birth and a sense of place, the dark constraints of suburbia, and the fear of aging and disappearing from view. Motherhood, and the choices to have or not have children, are particularly poignant, and explored with sensitivity. In one of the emotional highlights of the performance, Wende draws us all in, encouraging us to sing and repeat her gentle rousing chorus “I’m a good enough mother”.
When Wende belts “I’m a good woman”, this is a question, a manifesto and a defiant claim all at once. And, when she murmurs “It’s not light yet, but it’s getting there” more and more softly at the close of this wonderful production, there is a palpable sense of renewal and hope.
John Wells
When: 7 March - 10 March
Where: The Space
Bookings: Closed
★★★
Adelaide Fringe. The Arch, Holden Street Theatres. 7 Mar 2024
It is almost axiomatic that if it’s performed at Holden Street Theatres, then one can expect high quality entertainment, but sadly, Station J – An MI6 Comedy is an exception to that rule.
Station J is an international branch office of MI6 fronting as an import-export business and is staffed by three ‘agents’ headed by Charles (played by James Rosier). He is joined by communications officer Terrance (Sam Browne) and Margaret (Annabel Green). They are grappling with a faulty radio and incoming messages are in disarray. Margaret is in the throes of manually deciphering one such message when they are set upon by Steven (Fi Parrey), a female double-O agent (or is she/he?) who channels and dresses like James Bond, but the text does little to capitalise on the gender bending. As the plot to blow up the world unfolds, they are joined by Admiral Planchett (Kieran Bullock, who co-wrote the play) who tries to outsmart Steven, but is he who he seems? The whole silly plot of double and triple agents culminates in Margaret showing her true colours and saving the day.
The script tries very hard at being funny, and at times seems as if it is trying to draw inspiration from classic British comedies such as Yes, Minister, but it falls short, and the laughs from the audience are sporadic at best.
The set is reasonably sophisticated for a Fringe production, and styles a hidden telecommunications room in a spy agency. The booby trap is almost hi tech!!
The actors play straight (as they should) work hard to extract as many laughs as possible from the script, but it’s hard work to land any real punches. Rosier is almost incomprehensible throughout because of his laboured and forced accent and uncomfortably brisk delivery. By contrast Green is convincing and holds the show together.
Station J is presented by Victorian independent theatre company Social Club Productions who are making a return visit to the Adelaide Fringe following other successes, but this show doesn’t satisfy.
Kym Clayton
When: 7 to 10 Mar
Where: The Arch, Holden Street Theatres
Bookings: adelaidefringe.com.au