This Week in Queensland Theatre: 17-23 May

Exterior of the Old Museum Building in Brisbane.
Image via Wikipedia

Check Company websites for show times and further details

Continuing:
Stockholm: STC for La Boite Theatre at the Roundhouse
The Timely Death of Victor Blott Dead Puppet Society at !Metro Arts
King Lear: Bell Shakespeare for Queensland Theatre Company at Playhouse, QPAC
Dante’s Inferno: Zen Zen Zo at the Old Museum Building
Songs for a New World: Harvest Rain Theatre Company at JWCoCA

Greenroom Reviews:
Stockholm
(Kate Foy)
The Timely Death of Victor Blott (Kate Foy)

Other:
Resetting the Agenda: professional development workshop for artists presented by BCC at !Metro Arts. (Tuesday – Wednesday)

Review: King Lear – Bell Shakespeare, Queensland Theatre Company & QPAC at QPAC

As I walk into the Playhouse Theatre for King Lear’s Brisbane opening night, I must admit I’m a little cautious.  A successful play that runs over three hours is an enigma.  If any play can do it, however, it’s King Lear, one of my favourite Shakespeare plays.  Perhaps I still had Queensland Theatre Company’s other recent production of Waiting for Godot in my mind, but I’m reminded that King Lear is the closest to existentialism that Shakespeare gets.  It’s a play where ‘nothing’ is a central theme, and where the protagonist deals with his own mortality with a tragic descent into madness.  The play is violent, heart-wrenching and devastating.  At least it’s supposed to be.  I’m afraid to say this latest production with John Bell in the lead doesn’t quite hit the mark. Continue reading “Review: King Lear – Bell Shakespeare, Queensland Theatre Company & QPAC at QPAC”

This week in Queensland theatre: 10-16 May

Check Company websites for show times and further details

Opening:
Songs for a New World: Harvest Rain Theatre Company at JWCoCA (Wednesday)

Continuing:
Let the Sunshine: Queensland Theatre Company at Cremorne, QPAC
Stockholm: STC for La Boite Theatre at the Roundhouse
The Timely Death of Victor Blott Dead Puppet Society at !Metro Arts
King Lear: Bell Shakespeare for Queensland Theatre Company at Playhouse, QPAC
Dante’s Inferno: Zen Zen Zo at the Old Museum Building

Greenroom Reviews:
Waiting for Godot (Dave Burton)
Stockholm
(Kate Foy)
The Timely Death of Victor Blott (Kate Foy)

This week in Queensland Theatre: 3-9 May 2010

Zen Zen Zo supporting Amanda Palmer
Image by chrisdonia via Flickr

Check Company websites for show times and further details

Opening:
The Timely Death of Victor Blott at !Metro Arts
King Lear: Bell Shakespeare for Queensland Theatre Company at Playhouse, QPAC
Dante’s Inferno: Zen Zen Zo at the Old Museum Building

Continuing:
Let the Sunshine: Queensland Theatre Company at Cremorne, QPAC
Waiting for Godot: Queensland Theatre Company at Bille Brown Studio
Stockholm: STC for La Boite Theatre at the Roundhouse

Greenroom Reviews:

Waiting for Godot (Dave Burton)
Stockholm
(Kate Foy)

Review: Stockholm ‘The poetics of cruelty’ – La Boite Theatre

If this play were a comedy, you might be tempted to toss in a phrase like ‘sex in the kitchen’ for impact. Stockholm, however, is most definitely not a comedy, and whilst there’s sex-play aplenty in the kitchen in the STC production currently playing at La Boite Theatre, this reviewer left the auditorium on opening night feeling, well … gutted … a not inappropriate reaction given the play’s content and a set wall which features some wicked looking knives. This forensic dissection of a relationship from Brit writer Bryony Lavery works through the senses and probes the mind; it’s a powerfully realised 70 minutes of vital performance that could happen nowhere else but on stage.

Sometimes you see a work that triumphantly displays its theatricality; Stockholm is one of them.

The play’s title gives a clue to the thread running through the work, a syndrome that encompasses the love-hate relationship between captor and the captured, the powerful and the powerless, the torturer and the tortured. Todd and Kali (incidentally, the Hindu goddess of death, and wife of Shiva) reminded me a lot of another warring, dramatic couple – George and Martha, albeit in the kitchen with knives rather than in the living room with booze where Albee sets Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? It’s the same, drawn out dance of death, both couples locked in an embrace designed to hurt and to go on repeating itself ad nauseum. Indeed, those knives on the wall can also call up an impression of an abattoir; you just know there’s going to be blood on the floor before the night is out. Stockholm also creates a good-looking, middle class world for its well-heeled characters to inhabit – that designer kitchen and smart chat are just veneer on a surface. Finally, there is a palpable feeling of isolation in this self-absorbed world, one that excludes all but the protagonists.
Continue reading “Review: Stockholm ‘The poetics of cruelty’ – La Boite Theatre”