Thursday 8 September 2011

Mountains Never Meet

Here's what I said for artshub
 http://www.artshub.com.au/au/news-article/reviews/performing-arts/mountains-never-meet-185349?sc=1

Mountains Never Meet

By Lynne Lancaster ArtsHub | Friday, August 26, 2011
Print this article Email this article

Photo: James Brown  
Given that this production created by German-born, Sydney-based choreographer Martin del Amo was met by cheers and stamping feet at its conclusion, it’s clear the majority of the audience (and some of my colleagues) very much liked what they saw. Despite some terrific ideas informing the work – an exploration of the boundaries between dance and sport utilizing untrained community members, a la Lucy Guerin Inc’s Untrained – it left me disappointed and totally unengaged.
The opening duet, Duel, danced by footballer turned performer, Ahilan Ratnamohan and Connor van Vuuren and co-choreographed by them in collaboration with del Amo, was much more interesting and enjoyable. It was all done in slow motion – posed, frozen tableaux; the two guys interacting but not touching. In some ways it was reminiscent of the Australian Dance Theatre’s Held and Collision Course, featuring the wonderful visual effects of held sculptural frozen poses (slide, leap, jump, lunge, kick etc. and other football poses, and also some references to Olympic sports like shotput and discus). The line of the choreography was all curves and circles and there was some fancy, fleet footwork.
For the main work, del Amo worked with eight non-dancers ranging from 15 years of age to their mid-20s, all with diverse sporting and/or physical backgrounds – from hip hop crew members to engineers – and all of whom have a shared interest in choreography and performing, as typified by Ratnamohan.
The basis of the work was a series of simplified, everyday movements, e.g. walking – lots of walking – marching, running, skipping, jumping on the spot. Sometimes the walk was more like a harsh, cold march; at others it rippled in wave-like patterns up and down just one side of or across the stage.
It was as if each performer was in their own computer game world, on their separate distinct paths yet intersecting.
There was a Cunningham-like sense of rhythm and space, and I also detected possible allusions to Stravinsky’s Rite of Spring with the ensemble pack movement and the attention to very difficult counts and rhythms. All the dancers were dressed in layers of very casual street clothes. At one stage they removed their top layer T-shirts which became a sweaty bandanna. This was followed by some ‘cool’ ensemble work.
A squeaky shoe, one dancer going against the rhythm of everyone else, sudden fragmentary explosions of a repeated phrase of movement against the rest of the ensemble – there were some very interesting tiny fragments, but I am afraid it didn’t grab me.
It started very slowly and eerily with a single solitary walker emerging from the sidelit gloom. Gradually, all the other performers were added. The opening section went on way too long with an irritating whistle as a soundtrack, though I liked one short section towards the end, where the entire ensemble were on the floor, with very expressive arms.
As an idea involving the community and non-dancers this was terrific, but walking does not a dance make. Perhaps it’s a guy thing?
Rating: Two a half stars
Mountains Never Meet
Parramatta Riverside Theatre
August 17 – 20
Part of Western Sydney Dance Action & Riverside Theatre’s 2011 Dance Bites Program
Duel
Concept and Direction: Martin del Amo
Choreography: Martin del Amo in collaboration with the performers
Performed by Ahilan Ratnamohan and Connor van Vuuren
Mountains Never Meet
Concept, direction and choreography: Martin del Amo
Artistic collaborator: Ahilan Ratnamohan
Rehearsal assistant: Julie-Anne Long
Performers: Ravin Lotomau, Frank Mainoo, Benny Ngo, Kevin Ngo, Ahilan Ratnamohan, Mahesh Sharma, Nikki-Tala Tuiala Talaoloa, Carlo Velayo, Dani Zaradosh
Sound design: Cat Hope Lighting: Clytie Smith Costume consultant: Clare Britton Producers: Viv Rosman and Hannah Saunders for Performing Lines

The Libertine

 

This fabulous show was at the Darlinghurst Theatre a knockout

again a review for artshub

The Libertine

By Lynne Lancaster ArtsHub | Friday, August 26, 2011
Print this article Email this article
  
This is an extremely powerful production that is at times bawdy, lewd and rude, very funny yet also extremely sad and moving in parts.
Readers might have seen the 2004 movie version of Stephen Jeffrey’s play starring Johnny Depp; if not, it concerns the extraordinary life and times of John Wilmot, second Earl of Rochester and his life at the court of Charles II. Rochester wasted his many gifts, was a very heavy drinker, a philanderer, a playwright, poet and a pornographer among other things and died at the age of 33. Although he had money and status he was self destructive, because of his inner vulnerability, insecurity and self loathing.
Jeffrey’s play presents him sympathetically, but from his opening monologue Rochester (Anthony Gooley) warns us not to like him. Gooley is brilliant in the role. A dashing, handsome actor in top form, he is mesmerizing as the Restoration rake. No wonder his wife, Elizabeth (terrifically played by Susan Prior) falls for him. However, Rochester can be rude, self centred, sarcastic and brutal. Elizabeth is treated horrendously – no wonder the marriage falters.
This play is not only a narrative biography of Rochester’s life but raises such issues as the position of women in society at the time. We see events from Elizabeth’s point of view and also from that of actress Lizzy Barry (Danielle King ). Both women struggle to define their place in society, to find independence, freedom and their own voice. We also meet Jane, a whore, and Molly, the equivalent of what would now be called stage manager at the playhouse Rochester frequents.
The play also explores the issue of authority, the ‘divine right’ of kings, and also King Charles’ and Rochester’s very different attitudes to their various responsibilities (to their wives, their mistresses, the running of the estate and/or the country). The political becomes the personal. We see how Charles (brilliantly played by Sean O’Shea) is deeply disappointed in Rochester’s frittering away his life, but also how Rochester (and others) have lost hope in the king.
A lot of the show is hot and steamy, featuring brothel scenes, sex scenes and some nudity. Act Two opens with a rehearsal of Rochester’s play Sodom, a metaphorical attack on Charles II, which while seemingly silly is also quite powerful as there’s a grain of truth behind it (as well as lots of dildos!).
When in disguise as the quack doctor, apparently pleasuring both himself and his female patients – but ripping them off financially – Rochester wears a black cloak, hood and cap and a protective grey plague mask, again a reminder of the times and also possibly shades of Moliere’s plays The Doctor In Spite of Himself and The Imaginary Invalid.
Religion is also important in the text – Rochester is shown as a scandalous, heretical atheist; or is he?
Fittingly, as Rochester was passionate about the theatre – he saw the theatre as a way of analysing the truth about life – The Libertine also features numerous playhouse sequences. We see both backstage scenes and ‘plays within a play’. There are references to Shakespeare’s Hamlet and to Dryden’s work, among others, plus Rochester’s own work and that of one of his friends, George Etheridge.
There is some excellent doubling of roles (as Charles Sackville and Mr Harris, James Lugton is excellent; there’s also a terrific performance by Felix Jozeps as Billy Downs and the artist Huysmans). As gruff Alcock, Rochester’s servant, Sam Haft is delightful.
Lucilla Smith’s set design is marvellous – sort of a Miss Haversham-ish Versailles, all dusty smeared mirrors and drapes over the furniture. The production also features metaphorical use of mirrors (how society sees us, how we see ourselves), for example in the use of mirrors backstage at the playhouse.
Mary Rapp’s onstage cello playing is tremendous and the soundscape is just right. Smith’s costumes are superb and extraordinarily detailed, featuring the corsets and masses of layers the women wore, and the hot, itchy wigs, breeches, shirts and jackets worn by men of fashion in the era.
A totally absorbing, enthralling cautionary tale of the downfall and dissolution of a gifted rake.
Rating: Four and a half stars
The Libertine
By Stephen Jeffreys
Directors: Damien Ryan & Terry Karabelas
Designer: Lucilla Smith
Lighting Designer: Matt Cox
Sound Designer: John Karabelas
Original music: Drew Livingston and Sean van Doornum
Featuring: Matt Edgerton, Anthony Gooley, Sam Haft, Felix Jozeps, Danielle King, Naomi Livingston, Alice Livingstone, James Lugton, Sean O’Shea and Susan Prior. Running time: Three hours 15 mins (approx) including interval
Darlinghurst Theatre
August 24 – September 11
Lynne Lancaster
Currently working for FRANS, Lynne Lancaster is a Sydney based arts writer who has previously worked for both Ticketek and Tickemaster. She has an MA in Theatre from UNSW, and when living in the UK completed the dance criticism course at Sadlers Wells, linked in with Chichester University.
E: editor@artshub.com.au
 

I Like This

Another work part of Spring Dance again reviewed for artshub
http://www.artshub.com.au/au/news-article/reviews/performing-arts/i-like-this-185397?sc=1

I Like This

By Lynne Lancaster ArtsHub | Tuesday, August 30, 2011
Print this article Email this article
  
Part of this year’s Spring Dance season, Chunky Move’s I Like This is silly and great fun. There is no real story as such, rather the piece is an exploration of space and the various props the cast use. The atmosphere is of friends joking around. Faced with having to choreograph their first dance piece as a team, Hamilton and Perry decided to use the process of considering and developing a concept as the basis of their work. It premiered in 2008 and has since toured internationally.
Recorded conversations about the making of the project were sliced and edited and the blooper/silly moments that arose from the sessions integrated to form I Like This. The dancers comment on what they do or don’t like and what feels comfortable – or not – to wear and perform. The witty script (speech is very important in this show) is great fun.
Choreographically this is a blend of various styles – mostly modern/contemporary, but also mime, ballet, even Irish dancing. With regards to the modern/contemporary work there is a lot of use of isolation techniques (e.g. of shoulders, of wrists and hands, of the head) that is in some ways similar to the work of Fargion and Burrows. Sometimes there are small repeated phrases of movement. In one section the performers were like plants or rippling underwater creatures. Sometimes they danced in the dark, a sudden spotlight catching a fleeting glimpse of their movement. There are lots of allusions to vampires, zombies, horror stories and B-grade movies of the 1950’s.
In various sections the dancers moved in slow motion or pretended to be zombies (or Dementors, perhaps). The hard plastic chairs that are part of the set are also briefly incorporated into the choreography (hidden behind, peered over, and so on ). There is some excellent unison work, with the dancers making robotic gestures mirroring their words, at times stuttering, Max Headroom-like. There are some very funny trio sections too, including a hilarious section where a vampish, Frank-N-Furter like creator manipulates his two creatures, setting off chains of phrases of movement which lead to what is almost a clothed orgy. Much fun.
The lighting in I Like This is also choreographed and is critical to the performance. There are frequent snappy blackouts (which by the end of the evening I found gave me a headache). Four or so large handheld portable lamps are used and manipulated by the cast (eerie lighting from underneath the face, for example) the cables being connected to the sound system. In one section the lights are whirled like a bull-roarer or sword (a fast action sequence) and at other times used to pierce the gloom establishing the atmosphere (the storm sequence at the end, for example, is excellently done). Before the storm we hear Philip Glass’ ‘Metamorphosis’ and in another section there are loud pulsating and rhythmic electronic beeps and hums.
The show is performed with great exuberance, split second timing and impeccable precision. The under 35’s in the audience particularly loved it. While solid, it could have been tightened a fraction and the repetition edited out. Perhaps it should be viewed more as a ‘performance piece’ rather than a ‘dance’ work.
Rating: Three stars
Chunky Move’s I Like This
Direction and Photography: Antony Hamilton and Byron Perry
Lighting and Sound: Antony Hamilton and Byron Perry
Costume Designer: Paula Levis
Performers: Kristy Ayre, Antony Hamilton, Byron Perry, Lee Serle, Joseph Simons
Production Manager: Sophie Kurylowicz
Running time: 50 minutes (approx) no interval
Sydney Opera House
August 24 – 28

Princess Ida

I saw this at the Zenith Theatre at Chatswood - excellent
here's what I wrote for Artshub
http://www.artshub.com.au/au/news-article/reviews/performing-arts/princess-ida-185402?sc=1#contrib

Princess Ida

By Lynne Lancaster ArtsHub | Tuesday, August 30, 2011
Print this article Email this article

  
A most delightful evening was had by all at the Savoy Arts production of Princess Ida, one of the lesser known Gilbert and Sullivan operettas. Their eighth collaboration, first performed in 1884, it has a very silly, romantic plot and raises issues such as women’s education, Darwinism and creationism. As usual with the Savoy operas, it has glorious music by Sir Arthur Sullivan and some tongue twisting, bitingly witty Gilbertian lyrics (which for this production were updated to include mentions of mobile phones, shock-jock Alan Jones, Coles and Woolworths, and Mills and Boon!).
Set in medieval times, Princess Ida is based on a poem by Lord Alfred Tennyson and is a relatively simple story of two kings, Hildebrand and Gama, the son of one of them – our hero, Prince Hilarion – and the daughter of the other: our leading lady, the eponymous Princess Ida.
King Hildebrand, a good but rather explosively tempered ruler and the father of Hilarion, is marvellously played by Gordon Costello – regal, dominating in his authority, and in glorious voice. Prince Hilarion is played by Brendan Idles, who, while older than the 22 he is supposed to be, is terrific: in marvellous voice and fine form as an actor. He looks somewhat like a Pre-Raphaelite drawing of an aesthetic knight with a circlet on his brow. His friends Cyril (Dean Sinclair) and Florian (Mitch Bryson) are excellently performed. Cyril’s drunken song in Act Two, ‘Would You Know the Kind of Maid’ is funny, and has the potential to stop the show.
As Princess Ida, Brigitte Martin is superb. For her first entrance in Act Two she looks like a fairytale vision of a princess in white and silver – absolutely stunning. And she sings divinely. Brava!
Her horrible, embittered, grumpy father King Gama is delightfully played with great relish by Dion Khlentzos, who has a fabulous time being rude and complaining about everything. Gama’s three sons, Arac, Guron and Scynthius are terrifically played by Tim Southgate, Mike MacLeod and Atholl Robertson .I was particularly impressed by Southgate’s Arac.
Meanwhile, at Princess Ida’s university at Castle Adamant, Lady Blanche, the deputy head, is brilliantly performed by Marlene Vaughan, who is in fine form. (I loved the Valkyrie-like gear she wore in Act Three – most imposing.) Melissa, Lady Blanche’s daughter, is played exuberantly and with great panache by Rebecca Fitzpatrick. Florian’s sister Lady Psyche is sunnily played by Minh Huynh and she sings terrifically.
With minimal sets and a very effective use of projections (in particular for ‘A Woman of the Wisest Wit,’ sung by Lady Psyche) director Elizabeth Lowrencev has brought us a great show in relatively cramped conditions. Musically, the singing is superb, and the orchestra under Rod Mounjed’s inspired leadership sparkles, providing us with a magnificent aural feast, which is particularly exceptional given the cramped conditions of the overflowing orchestra pit.
A thoroughly enjoyable evening most enthusiastically received.
Rating: Four stars
Princess Ida or Castle Adamant by Gilbert and Sullivan
Savoy Arts Company

Out of Context

This was part  of Spring Dance here's what I wrote for artshub

Out of Context - For Pina

By Lynne Lancaster ArtsHub | Saturday, September 03, 2011
Print this article Email this article

  
One of the strangest, weirdest shows I have seen in quite a while, this production sharply divides audiences and critics. It is biting, cutting-edge modern dance that really makes you think.
Ballets C de La B is based in Belgium (Ghent) and has been choreographed and directed by Alain Platel since 1984. This work premiered last year, touring internationally, and was performed in Sydney as part of this year’s Spring Dance season.
Platel seeks for a language of movement connected to the arbitrary, the uncontrolled, the unconscious. Some of it is hot and sexy, parts are very funny, a lot of it is extremely thought provoking. A reading of this plotless work could be that it begins quite slowly and primitively with the lower members of the animal kingdom and eventually ends with primates. The dancers interact, but for most of the work there is a feeling that they are all in their own separate worlds, emotionally detached and with no interaction with the audience.
The show begins with the dancers emerging from the audience, clambering onstage and stripping down to their underwear. Dusty pink blankets become an essential prop, ditto some microphones. In one section the dancers are like underwater columns of coral with a blanket draped around them and waiting for a shoulder strap to drop. Or should that be ancient Greek statuary?
Choreographically, yes, you can see the Bausch influence, but also that of Kylian, Bejart, sumo wrestling and Nijinsky’s L’Apres Midi D’un Faune, plus allusions to the cygnet pas de quatre from Swan Lake. Ballet is used as a solid base but there is a wide range of other movement – spasms, convulsions, tics, ‘silly walks’, blinks, frowns, teeth chattering, and popular dance forms (popping. locking, moonwalking etc).Ripples of movement and fabulous soft jumps are contrasted with lots of earthy floorwork. Disco movements are also incorporated.
Fragile animal movements are used (head turns, sniffing), at times lion-like (roaring), at others equine (e.g. pawing). From the human end of the spectrum we see a shy couple courting, children waking from sleep (wonderful rippling arms here, for example). Fabulous articulated feet almost become star performers in their own right.
Sexual desire and the eroticised human body are humorously, delicately portrayed. One of the hunky male dancers clambers over the audience seats and ‘shakes his stuff’ in the face of an audience member. Another (Romeu Runa I think – tall, gangly and an incredible mover) mostly wears headphones, provides a lot of the noises as part of the soundtrack, and has a rock star-like sequence or two with various microphones.
A sequence that can stop the show with tumultuous applause is when a severely suited man, po-faced, does an ironic sign language version of ‘The Man I Love’.
Individually, the entire seemingly-boneless cast are astonishingly brilliant performers, presenting the almost impossibly demanding choreography with detached precision and amazing control. The ensemble work is gripping.
The soundscape ranges from silence to animal noises, disco rhythms, karaoke-like spoken lyrics to various songs, grunts, and various sounds produced by the dancers (at times with the microphone in their mouth).
The Pina Bausch influence (to whom the work was dedicated) is evident in the production’s disturbing analysis of the human condition. Confronting and challenging, it questions the very meaning of existence.
Rating: Three and a half stars
Les Ballets C de la B and Sydney Opera House present
Out of Context – For Pina
Danced and created by Elie Tass, Emile Jose/Quan Bui Ngoc, Hyo Seung Ye, kaori Ito, Mathieu Desseigne Ravel, Melanie Lomoff, Romeu Runa, Rosalba Torres Guerrero, Ross McCormack
Concept and Direction: Alain Platel
Dramaturgy: Hildegard De Vuyst
Direction Assistance: Sara Vanderieck
Lighting Design: Carlo Bourguignon
Sound Design and Electronic Music: Sam Serruys
Sound Engineer: Bart Uyttersprot
Costume Design: Dorine Demuynck
Running time: 90 minutes (approx) no interval
Sydney Opera House
August 30 – September 1