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Welcome to Cultural Binge

The rating system is simple:
★★★★★ – Terrific, world-standard. Don’t miss.
★★★★ – Great, definitely worth seeing.
★★★ – Good. Perfectly entertaining. Recommended. Individual mileage may vary.
★★ – Fine. Flawed and not really recommended, but you may find something to appreciate in it.
★ – Bad (& possibly offensive).
See more reviews over at The Queer Review.
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Email: chad at culturalbinge.com
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GATSBY at The Green Light (Sydney Opera House) ★★★★

Co-Created and Produced by Stuart Couzens and Craig Ilott, Caper & Crow. Inspired by the book ‘The Great Gatsby’ by F. Scott Fitzgerald. The Studio, Sydney Opera House. 16 Dec, 2023 – 24 Mar, 2024.
Jazz age-themed burlesque meets acrobatics, dance and circus tricks in a 75 min blast of sultry excitement. This is GATSBY at The Green Light, taking over the Studio at the Sydney Opera House with an international cast and the sliver of a classic story.

Florian Brooks and Bayley Graham. Photo: Prudence Upton. You can barely move these days without hitting a new adaptation of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s most famous work, The Great Gatsby. It has been turned into numerous ballets, operas, graphic novels, films and stage musicals (two headed to Broadway at the moment). It’s even been turned into a computer game more than once. But GATSBY at The Green Light (created by Craig Ilott and Stuart Couzens) is something different, using the story of wealth, class and obsession as more of a backdrop to a range of modern vaudevillian performances.
The vibe of the evening is “excess” and the Studio has been turned into ‘The Green Light’, a late-night supper-club and bar, complete with cabaret seating. Staff provide table service (a small array of snacks and cocktails are on offer), but things take on a life of their own as the wait-staff double as dancers, hyping up the room and supporting the series of main acts who take over the top of the bar – which transforms into a stage.

Oscar Kaufmann. Photo: Prudence Upton. From here the aerialists take flight in a series of performances that defy gravity, as well as human anatomy (I don’t think hips, backs and necks are supposed to be able to do the things they do here). Miranda Menzies is breathtaking as she takes to the sky in mind-boggling hair-obics – I want to know what strengthening shampoo she uses. Zac Smith and Jemma Crump make things a bit more romantic with their acrobatic duo, and Oscar Kaufmann performs a mid-air striptease that would make Magic Mike blush.

Odette and the ensemble. Photo: Prudence Upton. It’s not all aerial work. Florian Brooks serves as a juggling bartender with flair to spare. Bettie Bombshell brings the burlesque and Bayley Graham oozes charm as he tap-dances with an energy rarely seen. They are often accompanied with live vocals by Odette who covers a number of contemporary and classic tunes like The Flying Lizards “Money” and Robyn’s “Dancing On My Own” (though the absence of Lorde’s “Green Light” feels like a missed trick).
If you’re wondering, where is Jay Gatsby in all of this? Then, well, you’re probably far too worried about the concept of a linear plot. The inspiration is more thematic than narrative. A brooding Gatsby (Beau Sargent) is seen on the fringes of the party before disrobing for a sexy acrobatic performance with his lover, under a green light no less. This show’s version of Daisy is a bit more “Gypsy Rose Lee” than any wilting flower.

Beau Sargent. Photo: Prudence Upton. Book lovers who were horrified by Baz Luhrmann’s screen adaptation should beware, this show plays even faster and looser with the source material. GATSBY at The Green Light is basically as faithful to its source material as Netflix’s horny YA Riverdale was with the kid-friendly Archie comics it was based on. The names are the same, but there is an abundance of non-story-related skin on show and with bodies like these no one is complaining. It’ll probably provide you with ample gym-spiration to get you through the festive season.
GATSBY at The Green Light is a thrilling circus show in 1920s drag with a 2020s soundtrack. It’s a sexy performance that winks in the direction of its literary origins but is more likely to make you log onto OnlyFans than GoodReads, if you know what I mean.

Miranda Menzies. Photo: Prudence Upton. -
The Wind in the Willows (KXT on Broadway) ★★★1/2

Written by Alan Bennett (from the novel by Kenneth Grahame). KXT on Broadway. Dec 8-23, 2023.
If I were to sum up The Wind in the Willows at KXT on Broadway in one word it would be ‘charming’. There is a quintessentially British charm to the story of Ratty, Moley, Mr Toad and Badger that, not unlike Paul King’s Paddington films, taps into an idea of childhood without delving into childishness.
Playwright Alan Bennett’s list of achievements is long. From The Madness of King George to The History Boys and The Habit of Art, he’s produced work that dissects Britishness from various angles. His adaptation of Kenneth Grahame’s beloved book does the same, albeit with a gentler hand. The masterstroke is the way Bennett peels back some of the kid-friendly facade to show us the (slightly) darker side beneath.

Photo by Brittany Santariga Around the edges of the story, Bennett amps up some quick asides on the judiciary, consumerism and immigration that flesh out the slight tale with some meat for the adults. It’s welcome as this production narrows its focus down to characters with no sets, minimal props and some inventive costuming by Isabella Holder to give you the essence of the characters. This feels like a group of players popping up with an impromptu show and has a similarly fun, “make-do” energy to the performances.
Without the usual trappings of stagecraft to fall back on, all the attention is firmly on the performances. Elyse Phelan is simply adorable as Mole. She and James Raggatt (Ratty) have a wonderfully easy chemistry. Michael Doris’s Mr Toad is suitably silly but not quite the force-of-nature he is in the books. The ensemble are all excellent in a variety of roles, especially Miranda Daughtry’s menacing Cockney Weazel and Jack Richardson’s ridiculous Judge (“Gavel gavel gavel!”).

Photo by Brittany Santariga There’s a melancholy that wraps itself around the show, a reminder of a simpler Britain that’s been lost and our own childhoods left behind. In the end, sometimes it’s just the memories of old friends that stick with us, and there’s a joy in that as well.
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Midnight Murder at Hamlington Hall (Ensemble) ★★★1/2

Written by Mark Kilmurry & Jamie Oxenbould. World Premiere. Ensemble Theatre. Dec 1. 2023 – Jan 14, 2024.
Midnight Murder at Hamlington Hall isn’t the first play to derive comedy from a night at the theatre going wrong, but it may be the first to do so with such a tender heart. As this murder-mystery unravels before your eyes, it never sacrifices its love for the world it’s skewering.
The Middling Cove Players are preparing for their opening night. Writer/director Shane Tweed (Sam O’Sullivan) has pushed this amateur theatre company into new waters by premiering a brand new play that he wrote, adapted from a self-published pulp novel he discovered after a particularly nasty break-up. What the cast don’t know is that this may be the company’s last show, unless they can impress the councillors in the audience to keep funding them, and giving them use of the hall. But when a Covid outbreak takes out half the cast, Shane must recruit anyone and everyone he can to keep the show going…

Eloise Snape, Sam O’Sullivan, Ariadne Sgouros & Jamie Oxenbould. Photo: Prudence Upton. Midnight Murder… has all the elements you expect from a backstage comedy. Showmances, alcoholics, newcomers thrust into the limelight and a litany of technical mishaps. Long time member of the troupe, Barney (played by co-writer Jamie Oxenbould) has a bad habit of taking his clothes off when he’s panicked. Local real estate agent Phillipa (Eloise Snape) is trying to hide her attraction to Shane while boldly mispronouncing theatrical terminology. Stage manager Karen (Ariadne Sgouros) is only here to complete her community service requirements. This collection of lovable and cringe-inducing odd-balls set the stage for a slow-rolling disaster. The kind you can’t take your eyes off. When the cast shrug and say “The show must go on” Karen counters with an incredulous “Why?”.

Jamie Oxenbould. Photo: Prudence Upton. There’s a joy to watching good actors play bad actors, and this cast layer their characters-within-characters with gloriously broken motivations and desires. As this handful of well-meaning performers attempt to play thirteen different roles in the play-with-a-play, we are treated to daft accents, improbable costume changes and awkward, unintended pauses. Perhaps the biggest laugh came when the audience was treated to an actual momentary show-stop… It took Mark Kilmurry himself coming on stage and pointing out that it was genuine to break the spell of the play. They should work it into the script.
One thing is very clear, the Opening Night crowd, including just about every performer who has graced the Ensemble Theatre stage this year, was lapping it all up. Every small joke about life on the stage received riotous laughter. Knowing winks and nods were being shot across the stalls. Kilmurry and Oxenbould have laced this farce with the specificity of those who have come up through the amateur theatrical ranks.

Jamie Oxenbould, Ariadne Sgouros & Sam O’Sullivan. Photo: Prudence Upton. These kinds of backstage comedies are catnip to theatre-goers who love the peak behind the curtain. Seeing how the sausage is made can actually make you appreciate the artistry involved, and while this doesn’t have the tightly choreographed comedy of megahits like Mischief Theatre’s The Play That Goes Wrong or Michael Frayn’s Noises Off, Midnight Murder at Hamlington Hall has a genuine warmth to give depth to the frantic silliness.
As the saying goes, ’tis the season to be jolly, and this is a well-timed comedy to cap off a tumultuous year. The jokes may come at the expense of amateurs but they come from a loving place. Like the film Theatre Camp (on Disney+ now), this is a community laughing at itself, not outsiders pointing and laughing from the sidelines. Also, the harbour-side breeze and generous air-conditioning in the theatre make the scorching summer evenings much more pleasant all round.
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Track Works (Mortuary Station) ★★★1/2

Devised by Thomas De Angelis and Clemence Williams. Featuring music by Carl Orff, Dvorak, Verdi, Gounod, Rossini, Puccini and Bizet. Mortuary Station. 21 Nov – 19 Dec, 2023.
Chances are you’ve driven, or caught a train past, Mortuary Station. You’ve probably caught a flash of the architecture as you sped past or maybe you’ve seen photoshoots for brands, or just someone’s wedding, staged there. Well now you can hear some classic arie while gazing at the stonework in a new, site-specific show called Track Works.
Waiting for their train, a motley group of commuters find themselves stuck together. A young lawyer with a satchel full of paperwork, two schoolgirls up to mischief, a straggler and the station master, navigate their way around each other. But their behaviours collide as they wait and wait.

Anastasia Gall and Sophie Mohler in Track Works. Playwright Thomas De Angelis and director Clemence Williams have made an amusing and eminently pleasant evening’s entertainment with Track Works. Adapting a range of recognisable operatic classics from Carmen, The Marriage of Figaro, La Traviata, La Boheme, Madame Butterfly etc to a very modern situation. As fun and beautifully sung as the music is, the brisk 45 min show is held together by the amusing and entrancing antics of the performers on stage.

Lily Harper and Eden Shifroni in Track Works. As the two schoolgirls start to wreak havoc on the unsuspecting public, the comedy mixes with the music and action together. The platform itself makes for a well resourced stage, with multiple entrances and rooms the cast can duck into at the side, while the benches on the platform serve multiple purposes. The stunning sandstone architecture is as good a set as you could imagine (the show would feel less romantic were it staged in the middle of Town Hall Station).
The young cast get to stretch their talents up close. Lily Harper (Cendrillon, Madama Butterfly), Eden Shifroni (La Bohème), Sophie Mohler (L’incorinazione di Poppea), Anastasia Gall (Die uberflöte) and Michael Kaufmann (The Coronation of Poppea) make the most of their characters and work the comedy as much as their vocals.

Anastasia Gall and Sophie Mohler in Track Works. It’s a lovely way to spend an hour in the middle of the city. Grab a bite in Spice Alley or The Old Clare Hotel nearby before or after, and then sit back and enjoy the show.
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Looking Ahead to 2024 – Final Update!

Judging by the announced theatrical seasons, 2024 is looking pretty stacked with shows that have got me excited. I’ve done a bit of a dive into the seasons for Sydney Theatre Co., Belvoir, Ensemble, Griffin, Opera Australia, Hayes, Seymour Center, New Theatre and more to make some plans. Here are my totally unsoliticted thoughts…
THREE MAIN TAKEAWAYS

Cost of Living. Melbourne Theatre Company (L) Sydney Theatre Co & Queensland Theatre (R) 1. THE COST OF LIVING ‘CRISIS’ / ‘DOUBLE’ THE INHERITANCE
How did we end up with two, independent productions of both Martyna Majok’s Pulitzer Prize winning play Cost of Living, and Matthew Lopez’s Oliver & Tony Award winning play, The Inheritance playing the East Coast capitals?
The dual Cost of Living productions start with the STC/Queensland Theatre co-production starring Philip Quast, directed by Priscilla Jackman and Dan Daw, quickly followed by a separate production at MTC directed by Anthea Williams.
Meanwhile Melbourne kicks off the double hit of The Inheritance (which is a two-play epic) at Fortyfive Downstairs in January, before a different production comes to Sydney’s Seymour Centre in November.
Of course, this is a gem for all the theatre geeks – the chance to compare and contrast two acclaimed works interpreted by two different teams. My suggestion? See both!

The Inheritance. Fortyfive Downstairs (L) Seymour Centre (R) 2. THE YEAR OF JOANNA MURRAY-SMITH & SUZIE MILLER
Murray-Smith can sit back and cash the royalty cheques with three plays in circulation this year. There’s the return of the Julia Gillard hagiography Julia (at STC and touring), plus Ensemble are staging a revival of Switzerland and premiering her new adaptation of Uncle Vanya.
Meanwhile, Suzie Miller also joins the triple-show club with returning productions of RBG: Of Many One (STC) and Jailbaby (Griffin), and a new production of her earlier play Sunset Strip (New Theatre). Frankly, this is no bad thing in my book!

Uncle Vanya. Ensemble Theatre. 3. IF IT AIN’T BROKE…
At a rough count we have FOURTEEN productions coming back for more. There’s Julia and No Pay, No Way at STC. Suzie Miller’s RBG: Of Many One (STC) and Jailbaby (Griffin). Griffin’s Golden Blood gets a bigger run at STC (before touring). Belvoir are giving Counting & Cracking a well deserved victory lap, this time at Carriageworks, plus promoting Never Closer to the upstairs theatre. Outhouse Theatre’s brilliant Ulster American is having its third Sydney run, this time at Ensemble Theatre, and Darlinghurst Theatre Co are re-running Overflow. Plus there’s the commercial production of Chicago: The Musical (that staging is stuck in time),Handa Opera’s West Side Story from 2019 and Hamilton & The Rocky Horror Show both returning.
Okay let’s start breaking things down a little more…

A Fool in Love. Sydney Theatre Company. NEW WORK
New plays are obviously impossible to pre-judge. You can make a rough guess based on the playwright, but if you’re a theatre nerd (and you’re taking the time to read this, so I assume you are) it’s the thrill of discovery that gets your bum into the stalls. With Griffin shutting the stables door while they get a big upgrade, there’s a bit of a gap in new work in 2024 compared to normal too so I suggest we all stretch out and see more elsewhere as well.

The Queens Nanny. Ensemble Theatre. Melanie Tait’s new play, The Queen’s Nanny (Ensemble), has the potential to be either comfort food for the oldies or tap into some big emotions & topics. Swim (Griffin), the theatrical debut from poet Ellen van Neerven, feels topical and full of potential. STC have scheduled another queer comedy for Mardi Gras season, Van Badham’s A Fool in Love (after La dama boba by Lope de Vega) which should be good for a socially-minded giggle.

Watershed: The Death of Doctor Duncan. Opera Australia. Plus we have the already mentioned, award-Hoovering, two-part The Inheritance which will be the big LGBTQ+ piece of the year (Belvoir’s Holding The Man and Opera Australia’s Watershed: The Death of Doctor Duncan are high on my must-see list). Though famously it was a massive hit in London, less so on Broadway, so I’ll be curious to see how Australian audiences react to it. At nearly 7hrs long, across both plays, I’m just going to suggest you bring a nice cushion to the theatre with you. Spoilers: I’ve seen The Inheritance six times and adore it.

A Case for the Existence of God. Seymour Centre. The brilliant Sam Mendez directed production of The Lehman Trilogy comes to Australia (believe the hype – it’s as good as they say). Outhouse Theatre Co are back at Seymour Centre with a new show, Samuel D. Hunter’s A Case for the Existence of God, which won the 2022 New York Drama Critics’ Circle Award. Their work has been impeccable for years now so this one is a “book right away” choice for me.
New Theatre have a number modern classics in their season. From James Graham’s Rupert Murdoch play, Ink, Martin McDonagh’s Hangmen, and Jordan Seavey’s Homos, Or Everyone in America (which I’ve wanted to see for a while). And I wouldn’t call this one a “classic” but the stage version of Shakespeare In Love boasts Lee Hall adapting Marc Norman & Tom Stoppard’s screenplay – surely that’s just theatrical comfort food.
I was really impressed with Sam O’Sullivan’s Boxing Day BBQ last year, one of those plays I knew nothing about but gripped me in a way I wasn’t expecting. So I’m keen to see what his new play, McGuffin Park (Ensemble) has in store for us.

Zombie: the Musical. Hayes Theatre. Hayes has doubled down on the new writing this year, and I really hope it pays off. TikTok sensation Ride The Cyclone could be catchy fun or drive anyone over the age of 16 insane. The combination of Griffin and Hayes in the mix of Flat Earthers gives me faith there’s more to this one than meets the eye.
Hayes also has a World Premiere from Laura Murphy (The Lovers, The Dismissal) in Zombie: The Musical. That makes three new shows produced in just two years for Murphy (if I’m counting correctly). That is a ridiculous pace for a musical theatre songwriter and I’ll be frank, as much as I loved both The Lovers and The Dismissal, the music varied from ear-worm to forgettable filler. Neither took up much space in my mental play-list, so I just hope that the zombie of the title isn’t Murphy herself after being worked to death.

The President. Sydney Theatre Co. RETURN OF THE KINGS/QUEENS
Each year seems to give us the return of some notable name to the stage, and this year we’ve got plenty. Hugo Weaving, Kerry Armstrong and Colin Friels are back at STC. Sarah Brightman coming to Aus for Sunset Boulevard will be a major event. David Williamson has un-retired to bring us a new play, The Great Divide (Ensemble), plus he’s got a comedy in South Australia, The Puzzle. Griffin is serving a triptych of Louis Nowra’s. And we have short run cabarets from Todd McKenny (Ensemble) and Carlotta (Hayes).

Things Hidden Since the Foundation of the World. Sydney Festival. SYDNEY FESTIVAL
Sydney Festival proves to be a great time to push the boat out a bit and see things beyond your usual tastes. This year we’ve got Belgian theatre company Ontroerend Goed’s Are we not drawn onward to new erA. Climate change plays are usually, sadly, a bit crap but this could be very interesting. National Theatre of Parramatta & the Javaad Alipoor Company’s Things Hidden Since the Foundation of the World returns after a 2022 preview run, a bit of post-modern look at our obsession with true crime.

Holding The Man. Belvoir. THE SHOWS THAT REALLY INTEREST ME…
There are a few shows that have piqued my interest above the rest.
There are some modern classics getting a welcome new production. Holding The Man, The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time and August: Osage County at Belvoir and Masterclass (not to be confused with a different Masterclass at Sydney Festival) and Colder Than Here (Laura Wade’s Posh is favourite of mine so I’m glad to get a chance to see her earlier work) at Ensemble are all ticking boxes for me, as well as the already mentioned Switzerland and Cost of Living.

Dracula. Sydney Theatre Co. The two shows that have really got me intrigued are both happening at Sydney Theatre Co. There’s Zahra Newman in Dracula, the final part of Kip Williams’ gothic cine-theatre trilogy. This feels like a combination of great elements (great actress in an anti-intuitive role, mixed with genre busting tech) that could be real theatrical dynamite. And there’s a totally new staging of Dear Evan Hansen – which has the theatre nerd in me excited. The idea of a world-first reinvention of a modern show (plus the mechanics of a co-production between STC and commercial producer Michael Cassel) has my expectations set high – which may be its undoing I guess. I guess that makes up for them programming Lynn Nottage’s Sweat, which won the Pulitzer, but I found it predictable and one-note when I saw it in London – maybe this time it’ll win me over? I had a similarly neutral reaction to Constellations when I first saw it, and STC turned me around on that one.

Turn of the Screw. Hayes Theatre. And slightly left field, but I can’t wait to see what director Craig Baldwin does with an operatic version of Turn of the Screw at Hayes Theatre. His work with Outhouse Theatre Co has been outstanding, so this could be a sleeper-hit in the making.

English. Melbourne Theatre Company. WORTH PLANNING A WEEKEND AWAY?
As always, Melbourne is getting the prime cuts of the big musical theatre with Groundhog Day already announced and Beetlejuice coming in 2025 (but at least Sydney gets & Juliet in 2024). Tim Minchin’s Groundhog Day is one of my favourite new musicals of the last decade (I’ve seen it three times now), so that one is definitely worth a trip south.
Melbourne Theatre Company also has the debut of a new musical based on My Brilliant Career, plus the Australian Premiere of the 2023 Pulitzer Prize winner, English by Sanaz Toossi. Queensland Theatre has a musical based on kids TV classic, Round The Twist, written by Paul Hodge. Brisbane’s La Boite has a revival of Patrick Marber’s brilliant Closer in the mix. While the State Theatre of SA has Lucy Kirkwood’s The Children, a new musical co-written by Van Badham called The Questions.
But the show that has me really fascinated is Malthouse’s adaptation of Under The Skin based on Michael Faber’s novel (and the 2013 A24 film version starring Scarlett Johansson). It’s a weird, sci-fi tale so bringing it to the stage will require big imaginations.

The Great Divide. Ensemble Theatre. IN CONCLUSION…
There’s a wide variety of shows (and this isn’t even counting our smaller independent and fringe venues) coming our way which is more than enough to keep us busy, and our wallets potentially aching. Will they all be hits? Of course not, but 2023 was a damn good year so signs are positive. Like superannuation providers it’s important to stress that past performance isn’t necessarily an indicator of future results, but we live in hope.
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The Seagull (Sydney Theatre Co) ★★★1/2

Written by Anton Chekhov. Adapted by Andrew Upton. Sydney Theatre Company. 21 Nov – 16 Dec, 2023.
Sydney Theatre Company closes out 2023 with as close to a “safe bet” as they’ve had all year. A familiar, classic play, adapted by a familiar, acclaimed playwright, starring a lot of familiar, adored faces. This should be an end-of-year showstopper, but as good as it is The Seagull is a bit less than the sum of its excellent parts.
Andrew Upton’s return to STC will excite many (and frighten a few I’m sure) and his new version of Chekhov’s The Seagull seems pitched at the creatives in the audience, mocking the world of artistic endeavour and the fame/artistry divide with almost pantomime glee. Original Russian names are Anglicised (Konstantin is Constantine, Trigorin is now Boris, Sorin is just Peter etc), the overly self-aware script front loads the tale with comedy (ably delivered by this great cast), but the haze of depression and danger hangs over proceedings. This is Chekhov after all, it’s never going to end well for everyone.

Harry Greenwood. Photo: Prudence Upton. Among this cast of excellent-as-ever returning STC players like Toby Schmitz (Blithe Spirit), Sigrid Thornton (The Lifespan of a Fact), Megan Wilding (The Importance of Being Earnest), Brigid Zengeni (Do Not Go Gentle) and Markus Hamilton (Fences), it is Harry Greenwood who steals the show as Constantine. While the romantic farce plays out around him, Greenwood’s Constantine is foppishly fragile and broken. He manages to be both marvellously comedic and desperately pathetic at the same time. His conflicted relationship with his mother (Thornton) is beautifully realised as they lovingly tears strips off each other – the moment is bizarrely tender and cruel.

Harry Greenwood and Mabel Li. Photo: Prudence Upton. Despite the zingers in the script and the all-round fun performances, this production starts to feels flat, almost literally so in many instances with the cast arranged in neat lines along the wide set. David Fleischer’s set design is claustrophobic, full of boxes within boxes, keeping a constant pressure on the characters that feels at odds with the script’s humour (but in keeping with the tension of the story). This is matched with unrelenting lighting that offers little reprieve. The result is a show that is hard to physically take in at times. By the end my eyes were in need of a break or refresh in the visual palate to stop from feeling drained.

The ensemble of The Seagull. Photo: Prudence Upton. The space however is filled with some brilliantly funny moments. Wilding is at her frazzled and frantic best (though I do worry she’s being awfully typecast now). Schmitz has perfected his middle-aged-man-child and shines giving his “writers lament”. Sean O’Shea delivers a killer monologue… about goats. Thornton gets to stick it to every pretentious performer you’ve ever seen give an ingratiating interview. Mabel Li’s Nina is charmingly dim, without a hope in the world. Through each of them Chekhov, via Upton, mocks the ridiculousness of our human nature before diving us headlong into the tragedy of our existence.

Markus Hamilton & Megan Wilding. Photo: Prudence Upton. Upton’s adaptation of Chekhov is full of irreverent, modernised humour (the purists will be mad) and this comedic ensemble bring The Seagull to life. I just wish the direction and design were filled with the same emotional dexterity as the text.
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Darwin’s Reptilia (Belvoir 25a) ★★1/2

Written by Charlie Falkner. Belvoir 25a. 15-26 Nov, 2023.
Darwin’s Reptilia, closing out 2023’s Belvoir 25a season, is bonkers. Whether you think it’s “good bonkers” or “bad bonkers” is going to be entirely up to you, but at $25 a ticket it’s hardly a huge investment. For me, The Master & Margarita upstairs is peak “good bonkers”, but despite the heat Darwin’s Reptilia comes across under-cooked.
We start in New York at a PR party for Renata (Ainslie McGlynn) who’s written a self-help book of dubious quality. Her partner, Declan (Danny Ball) is distracted by the awful industry people around them when Renata receives a shocking message. Her estranged birth mother has died. Renata decides to fly to Darwin, with Declan and their baby, to attend the funeral and meet her half-sister, Flick (Zoe Jensen). When rogue crocodile’s force everyone to stay in their crappy hotel for days on end, tensions and temperatures start to rise.

Danny Ball, Ainslie McGlynn, Mathew Lee. Photo: Phil Erbacher. Designer Ruth Arnold has done excellent work on a tight budget, the “pool” was a nice highlight that had me fascinated and also craving lime jelly on the way home. Lighting by Saint Clair and sound design by Hewett Cook do a lot of heavy lifting to sell the sharp changes of scene and tone.

Zoe Jensen. Photo: Phil Erbacher. The performances are generally very good. Some are pitched at “watch me being funny” exaggeration, others trying to stay grounded. Mathew Lee gives nuance to the awkward fanboy John who follows Renata to Australia in search of some direction. Danny Ball plays Declan’s big swings with gusto, one of the few roles that has material an actor can really sink their teeth into.
A major problem is that reality is too often sacrificed at the altar of “quirky” with the characters lacking any internal consistency or genuine human behaviour. Renata’s descent into madness is given no grounding in the script, it merely happens. Declan spends the opening scene completely self-absorbed, but the rest of the play being a responsible(ish) parent. He also has a third-act “revelation” that doesn’t actually mean anything. Flick is narcoleptic (why?) with a disturbing nocturnal tendency (no spoilers – but why? And also, wha-huh?). Hotel Manager Bobbi (Leilani Loau) receives earth-shattering news in one scene, which is hand-waved off in the next.

Zoe Jensen, Leilani Loau. Photo: Phil Erbacher. Taken in isolation, much of this works. Most of the performances are strong and individual scenes are just fine. But when everything is put together it’s clear the puzzle pieces don’t fit, no matter how hard you push them into place. Once the script has cycled all five leads through each possible pairing, it has nowhere else to go. What do these characters actually want? What is the point of putting these characters in this situation? What do they reveal about each other? The narrative gets lost in the shuffle as Renata (ostensibly the main character) fades from the action and lacks an emotional climax. The ending is almost too absurd, and unearned, to mention. I can see the glimmer of interesting thoughts here, but the unfocused storytelling gets in their way.

Danny Ball. Photo: Phil Erbacher. Darwin’s Reptilia may work for you. The comedy and drama were too uneven for my tastes and the more I looked, the more issues I had with the script. But there was definitely laughter in the room and other reviewers have been warmer to it than I am. So I’d say, if you’re interested, grab a ticket and see for yourself. At $25 a seat, you’ll probably spend more on a pre-show meal anyway.
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The Master & Margarita (Belvoir) ★★★★★

Devised by the cast and creative team. Based on the novel by Mikhail Bulgakov. Belvoir St Theatre. 11 Nov – 10 Dec, 2023.
There are words and phrases which, when I see them in a show description, give me pause. “Immersive”, “interactive” and “devised by the company” all equal one thing in my mind – “mind-dumbing self-indulgence”, or at the very least the potential to be. So when I read that Belvoir’s The Master & Margarita was “devised by the cast”, in addition to “duration: 3hrs” and adapted from a Russian novel… well my brain was prepared for a whole evening of pain.
I should have known better.
The Master & Margarita is one of the most vibrant things I’ve seen all year, and it’s been a very good year for Sydney theatre.

Gareth Davies, Marco Chiappi, Josh Price, Amber McMahon & Matilda Ridgway. Photo: Brett Boardman. Mikhail Bulgakov’s novel tells the story of The Master (Mark Leonard Winter), a writer whose work has been deemed subversive and banned. His latest work, a retelling of the story of Jesus and Pontius Pilate, stays hidden in journals. When the Master is thrown in gaol, his lover Margarita (Anna Samson) goes to supernatural lengths to get his release. Meanwhile, in 1930s Moscow, the Devil (Paula Arundell) is having fun with Stalinist atheists…
Director Eamon Flack and the company of actors have taken to the text with a simple mantra, “Don’t be boring” and bring a substantial cache of showmanship to this decidedly meta adaptation. Every trick in the book, and I often mean a literal book, is used to keep you entertained and the story moving along at a brisk clip. There is a lavish amount of nudity, which never feels unwarranted in context.

Marco Chiappi & Josh Price. Photo: Brett Boardman. The Master & Margarita is often more circus, magic show and cabaret than traditional theatre, but then there is little ‘traditional’ about this play. There is no fourth wall. As the room laughed at a line about “the housing situation” the cast are quick to point out it’s not a modern addition, but part of the original text. When the characters launch into a not-so-subtle critique of wealth they take full aim at the audience before them. I spent a good part of the running time slack jawed, in awe of what this cast was doing and the audacity and irreverence they displayed.
The company introduces a third narrative, that of writer Bulgakov’s own life, to the stage making the novel’s subtext of repression shockingly overt. This is where the play really sunk its teeth into me. For all the entertaining mania on stage, the production never loses sight of its story, of the reality and the impact it has.

The Company of The Master & Margarita. Photo: Brett Boardman. After three hours, the play does slightly suffer from Return-of-the-King-itis – an ending that you see coming but seems to take far too long – but it never burns through the good will the show had stockpiled all the way through.
As we left, my English friend turned to me and said “That’s the kind of thing you’d see at the Royal Court or the Donmar. It should tour” and I couldn’t agree more. Send this over to London and New York… it’ll blow their minds!










