Be Your Age - It's a Miracle.

The Royal Adelaide University Old Footlighters Club. Holden Street Theatres. 12 Feb Footlighters club14


They're ageing like a good Grange.


The classes of the fifties and sixties are classier than ever. Their pens are sharper and pith pithier.


The Royal Adelaide University Old Footlighters Club revived the art of university revue in 2006, long, long after they had left uni, and have turned into the cult show of the Adelaide Fringe.


They dare to say this is absolutely their last show.


There's a wrinkly rabble refusing to believe this could be so.
Heavens, they have only just recruited Keith Conlon into the team. He's a fresh old blood.
With Richie Gun, Rob Morrison and Bob Lott, he is able almost to revive the Adelaide University Jazz Band of the 60s - Anna Michael joining him on most acceptable ‘Ain't Misbehavin’' vocals.
 

There are some top notch skits in this revue, as well as some very odd ones and very lateral ones. There are incisive political skits, silly skits and cry-with-laughter funny ones.


My ribs are still aching from the restaurant scene, ‘What a Choice’.  Oh, and ‘Dual Britannia!’ It's an anthem to the roundabout. High spots are many. Kitty Peake as Gina Mineshaft - divine, and what an ending. Then there's Bob Lott skilfully chanting some complex scansion in ‘Popes I have Known’, a more serious theme. Bob and Kitty pair for ‘Time on our Hands’, the sweetest homage to retirement. Keith Conlon turns up as a political candidate sniping at "Christopher (hear me whine) Pyne" while running on a pronunciation policy. A lovely, quirky piece. The Gentlemen Footlighters line up en masse to deliver ‘The Creed’ - a big male priestly choir chanting the life and times of Tony Abbott. This is a top skit. There are zany moments such as the vegetable orchestra of ‘Fruit Cha Cha’ and unlikely moments such as the uber arty spoof on Pina Bausch choreography. This is a big number and it must have taken very serious rehearsal.


Wayne Anthoney has directed this production and his showbiz skills shine through the discipline and the general neat snappiness of the show.


This lovely, lively, fearless cast also includes John Potter, Margi Butcher and Margy Hill, Tisha Brown and Andy Ligertwood, Michael Johnston and Paul Kolarovich with Jenn Havelberg on choreography, Bill Kay, invisible but indispensable as ever, stage managing. The support team goes on. There is even a band of young musicians alongside these golden oldies.


Perchance, one of the secrets of the Footlighters' riotous success post prime is that, unlike their student selves, they now not only perform the satiric material, they are the material. They send up their own ageing processes - retirement homes, hearing tests, medical visits - a practice, one suspects, which is keeping them young.


Samela Harris


When: 15 to 22 Feb
Where: Holden Street Theatres – The Studio
Bookings: adelaidefringe.com.au

Albert Einstein: Relatively Speaking

Albert Einstein relatively speakingHolden Street Theatre. 12 Feb 2014


When thinking of Albert Einstein, "funny" is not a word which comes to mind. Unless John Hinton has been playing with the great physicist.


Last time he was in Adelaide, Hinton was in the guise of Charles Darwin. He loves, it seems, to play with facts and very clever men. But, is he a teacher, an actor, a singer or a comedian? Those are the questions.


As Einstein and wearing braces and very big hair, Hinton comes across as every student's dream teacher. This show is pretty much a theoretical physics lesson embellished with partial biography and some added theoreticals about how the man may have felt about this and that.


Hinton plays with the knowledge, demonstrating theories by using living audience members as props. It is surprisingly effective. Happening upon drama students who are not a bit reluctant to go onstage was a major bonus for his first performance. They turned those audience participation segments into fairly jolly improv. Acting students should be compulsorily provided for all such shtick.


For this show, Hinton brings a charming accompanist who plays his wives as well as the keyboard. He turns theories into songs and comic routines, and even indulges in some serious contemplation. The audience gets to vote (or does it?) on who should develop the nuclear bomb and it is here that the show takes a rare slow moment, to encompass Einstein's regrets.


Hinton rolls the clock to and fro, very successfully turning the Theory of Relativity into a rap song. Here there's complete audience participation as everyone learns how to sign MC2 with their hands, rapper style.


Einstein ages via a bottle of talc, his black hair tossed with talc for the grey effect and then soused for the whiter years. With a bit of good lighting, that talc can make a few clever emphases, too.


Hinton has worked hard to make a lot of silliness out of seriousness and to impart the scientific erudition along the way. He is strong of voice, corny of accent and lithe of body.
It's all lots of clever fun.


Samela Harris


When: 15 Feb to 16 Mar
Where: Holden Street Theatres – The Studio
Bookings: adelaidefringe.com.au

Bitch Boxer

Bitch BoxerBitch Boxer - Fringe


Holden Street Theatre. 12 Feb 2014


That a performer so fresh from drama school should be delivering this sort of dramatic punch is knockout.


The scrapbook of Holly Augustine will be full of just such pieces of heavy-handed wordplay since the piece that the young actress is presenting is 'Bitch Boxer' - the portrait of a young woman determined to prove her worth by becoming one of the first women in Olympic boxing. Women were only included in Olympic boxing in 2012 so the play, written by Charlotte Josephine, is right on the knocker, so to speak.


The aspiring boxer is one Chloe, a pretty tough chick from Leytonstone in the UK. The thing that makes her different is the power of her love for her late father, a devotion heightened by raw emotions at what her mother did to her father. So, while this play is the depiction of a feisty boxer with driving ambition it also, and most potently, is a love story.


On the one hand, it is hard-hitting. On the other, it is deeply touching.


It is, simply, a beautifully conceived and crafted theatre piece.


Not surprisingly, it has been reaping awards wherever it goes - a Soho Young Writer's Award, an Old Vic New Voices Edinburgh Award and our own Holden Street Theatres' Edinburgh Award for 2013 - which is what brings it here for this Fringe.


The one mistake playwright Josephine has made is in its name. Bitch Boxer is a bitch of a name. It is unenticing to a swathe of the theatre demographic. Ironically, it seems to become a good and catchy name after the experience - for the experience is rich and intense. It earned sell-out seasons in the UK.


Staged by Snuff Box Theatre in Collaboration with Richard Jordan Productions under the direction of Bryony Shanahan, it is a play of logistical economy.


There's a camp chair, a duffle bag and a boxing square marked on the black stage in talc. This is Daniel Foxsmith's quietly apt design.


The rest is the most eloquent lighting design by Seth Rook Williams. And the power of Holly Augustine.


She knows all the moves, light and fast on her feet, convincing with the fists. She accompanies her motion with the pattern of oomphs and uhs which represent blows given and received. Head and body whip back from the assault of her invisible opponents.


Her narrative is littered with expletives. It is tough. It is tender. It is sad. It is happy.


As a performer, she is fearless, high-energy and able to swing easily through a broad gamut of human emotions. The audience is utterly engaged.  At her first Adelaide performance, the applause went on and on.


Even for one who despises boxing, this is a winning work - and another feather in the Holden Street curatorial cap.


Samela Harris


When: 12 Feb to 16 Mar
Where: Holden Street Theatres - The Studio
Bookings: adelaidefringe.com.au

South Pacific

South PacificAdelaide Festival Theatre. 31 Dec 2013

Thanks John Frost, for giving Adelaide the pleasure of both finishing 2013 with South Pacific and beginning 2014 with it. The blockbuster's VIP opening night show linked the years with its after-party overlooking the clock-ticking general public's free Elder Park New Year's Eve Party. Those who ended the year with South Pacific now are recommending that everyone else lines up and gets to see it.

It's an old show, so tried and tested, so beloved by the public, that the big producers know that, well done, it will reap profits from which new and risky ventures may be launched. This staging goes all out to give it top gloss. It comes via Adelaide-born Frost together with Opera Australia and in association with the Adelaide Festival centre to deliver nothing less than the Lincoln Centre Theatre's Tony Award-winning production.

Of course, it has stars.

But the magic behind the magic is the depth of expertise, the eye for detail, the keenly-rehearsed synchrony. At the first strains of The Overture, it is clear the Adelaide Art Orchestra is in sweetest good note for the show and everything just shimmers along from there until the audience's moist-eyed standing ovation at the end.

The dancers are as divine as the choreography. The entrance of the male corps in high leaps over the rocks is a spectacle of sheer exuberance. The stage swarms with talent and the characters shine through with Mitchel Butel creating one of the best Luther Billises in the business and, interestingly, one Andrew Hondromatidis who just keeps stealing the eye as Stewpot - an actor gifted with "presence" and very fine movement.

The South Pacific island with its American forces base and the hilltop plantation home of Emile De Becque are smoothly and effectively presented through the sets, the backdrop sea seeming to achieve a certain lifelike texture.

This old Rogers and Hammerstein musical is based on James A. Michener's Pulitzer Prize-winning tale of love between cultures and the both serious and silly facets of wartime life on a foreign outpost. Poignant quotations from the Michener text are projected onto the Festival Theatre's safety curtain, neatly contextualising the presentation as well as bookending it.

Surprise of the night is Christine Anu's Bloody Mary. Perhaps the first Australian Indigene to play the Tonkinese role, she took over from Kate Ceberano in Brisbane and made Mary her own. Anu's voice is reedier than familiar embodiments and her look is strongly teeth-stained and pop-eyed. She mutes some of the coarse comicry milked by most performers and delivers a Mary of immense tragic proportions. She searches out the depth of desperation of a woman reduced to selling off her teenage daughter. It is performance from the soul.

Lisa McCune is sweet, vulnerable and altogether appealing as Ensign Nelly Forbush. She is accomplished in a broad range of stage skills and has a lovely melodic voice, albeit in the opening scene she is not only overshadowed by stature but overpowered by the volume of her fellow romantic lead, Teddy Tahu Rhodes playing Emile De Becque. Rhodes' is one great big beautiful baritone instrument. Amplification of such operatic abundance is de trops. And while Rhodes assumes a convincingly thick French accent, he is just a bit wooden as an actor.

By the end of the show, however, no one cares. Young tenor Blake Bowen has blown us away as Lieutenant Cable, Bartholomew John has strutted the stuff of navy authority, Celina Yuen has beguiled as sweet Liat, Jeremy Stanford has been handsome as Harbison, the chorines have delighted and the children have charmed.

A torrent of wonderful songs have been expertly performed

Angelina Ballerina The Mousical

Angelina Ballerina The MousicalDunstan Playhouse. 31 Dec 2013


This is how it should be done. No corners are cut in this touring production of the darling little mouse dancer's story.


Angelina Ballerina is one of the superstars of little girl world with scores of books and a rather good British television series featuring the voice of Judi Dench as Angelina's mum. But Angelina is a mouse and the temptation in delivering her live to the stage would be, and has been, to mouse her up with a big animal character head. In this show, written and directed by Miranda Larson, Angelina's mousiness extends only to tail and a dainty mouse headpiece. Thus, she truly comes alive on stage and I didn't hear a single child ask where the big mouse head was.


Larson has treated children with respect in this show. It opens with the sound of an orchestra tuning up and then there is a proper overture. The curtain rises on Angelina and her classmates at the Camembert Academy in Chipping Cheddar, England. That there are hip-hopping boys in the class lends boy cred - evidenced by the number of boys at the opening performance - and there's a bit of classic old boys-versus-girls shtick as the show rolls along.


This is a proper musical. It has wonderful, classy music composed by Barrie Bignold. It has terrific, lively and highly varied choreography devised by Matthew Cole and interesting, vibrant costumes from Isla Shaw who also designed the very versatile sets. The six performers have song and dance skills of West End standard and their rodent personalities shine through.


The Katharine Holabird narrative tells of the Camembert Academy winning a chance to appear in its pupils' favourite television program, Dancing With Mice. To this end, the mouse dancers must create their own dance production. Angelina is appointed Dance Captain and not only has she to try to devise a dance but also to manage her fellow students, all of whom have their own ideas about what should be featured in the show. This gives scope for lots of fun and games and some audience participation. The children would probably have liked a bit more of the latter.


A special highlight is the cameo appearance of a troupe of little local ballet students from Rebecca Mason's Dance Studio. They are little darlings, one of them quite tiny, two of them boys. It's another nice element in a well-devised, well-produced and well-performed touring holiday show. In its genre, it's up there in the five star department.


Samela Harris


When: Closed
Where: Dunstan Playhouse
Bookings: Closed

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