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Showing posts with label TAP Gallery Darlinghurst. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TAP Gallery Darlinghurst. Show all posts

Tuesday 17 July 2012

After The End


After The End
Written by Dennis Kelly
Directed by Felicity Nicol

Reviewed by Catherine Hollyman

The TAP Gallery in Darlinghurst is a mismatch hub of both static and performing art. It’s where emerging artists of any persuasion have chance to showcase their work without the costs (and often limitations) of a commercial space. The small area is highly conducive to the play’s setting – a bomb shelter - and theme: survival after an attack.

A nuclear attack on the city.A personal attack on another’s beliefs.A vicious sexual attack.An internal attack on oneself. As the synopsis asks:“The end is nigh.Will you survive?What will happen After the End?”

Louise (Rebecca Martin) and Mark (Drew Wilson) are co-workers and perhaps the only survivors after a nuclear bomb went off outside the pub they were in. Thankfully, or perhaps suspiciously, Mark has a Cold-War bunker to which he carries an unconscious Louise. Once she comes around, the pair explores the evening’s events as well as their past interactions with each other. Comments flippantly thrown are magnified in the circumstances and what may once have been easy to ignore, can now mean the difference between life and death.

As the pair walks the tightrope of trust, questions are raised…and I’m still not quite sure that they’re ever answered. Regardless, Martin and Wilson seem perfectly at ease on the stage, tackling Dennis Kelly’s tense subject matter and director Felicity Nicol’s confronting action with a steely determination and resolve that is reflected in their characters. 


Sunday 10 June 2012

Three Sisters - Review


Three Sisters – TAP Gallery Darlinghurst, 7-23 June
Written by Anton Chekhov, directed and adapted by Liz Arday
 Reviewed by Lana Hilton
“Any idiot can face a crisis. It’s the day-to-day living that wears you out”
– Anton Chekhov.
This simple quote was all the information I had about this play; I went in with an open mind hoping for a dramatic Russian production filled with vivacious humour and characters that slide around the set slightly drunk.
Although it was a little funny, and wine and vodka were definitely unnamed actors whose performance time doubled that of any other, unfortunately this ‘day-to-day living that wears you out’ also wore me out by the end.
The play is set in a small provincial town that is definitely not Moscow, as the country’s capital is all that the siblings talk about- returning to the hometown they so dearly love. Their recently departed father was in the military and as a result the three sisters are known by many soldiers, officers and doctors who roam through the town and into the women’s lives.
Irina (Shaelee Rooke), Masha (Alison McGirr and Olga (Alixandra Kupcik) are said sisters, who dream of a more fulfilling, exhilarating life. They yearn for experiences that cannot unfold in the old, decaying manor in which they live. They are stifled by the house and the town.
The constant desperation of the youngest sister Irina who wants to work and to find love and to return to Moscow is reminiscent of the Theatre of the Absurd; she is waiting, always waiting for more to happen but it never does.
Coupled with the many scenes where the sisters and their friends take a glass of wine and ‘philosophise’, I was certain that the themes of the play must be absurdist and imposed so that we too can see the meaninglessness of our indecipherable lives. A challenge.
However, I learned that this play was written in 1900, at least 40 years before the term ‘absurdist’ was coined and expressed in theatre. If I was wrong about the original concept what else could the play have been about?
The answer – I have no idea.
There were 12 characters in this production and numerous instances when all 12 were on-stage at once. TAP Gallery is a very intimate space and it was overwhelming when this occurred. Sometimes the minor characters were merely reading a newspaper in the background. There was too much going on and focus was pulled from the action, pulled from the meaning of the script.
I was unsure what time period the play was set as the actors spoke as if from the late 19th century with their ‘my love’s’ and ‘whatever do you mean’s’ but these sentences were harshly interrupted by constant swearing (namely the f-word) and in one scene the c-bomb was dropped!
I felt the costumes and staging were abstract when such language was used, as if trying to drag a period piece into the modern world by only its vernacular. Oh, and a scene with a jelly-pink dildo, which I will be very interested to know if this was in the original script.
Nerves got the better of some when they spoke over the top of one another or fumbled their words, and some of the monologues appeared to be delivered just so the actor could have their moment. The cast lacked energy and a real interaction with one another. I will point out that it was the opening night so the cause for nerves can be somewhat excused, but not the energy levels.
The only character I found myself entranced by and actually listening to was the idealistic officer Vershinin, played by Ben Dalton. He understood the acting space and didn’t speak as if projecting to an entire auditorium, but just to whom he was speaking. He made use of the cosy theatre and concentrated on the delivery of his words and actions. He was a joy to watch and listen to.
I spoke with a couple of other people who were in the same mind about the production – too long and incomprehensible. Hopefully as the show continues and the actors slip into their characters it will become more enjoyable.



Wednesday 23 May 2012

Errors - Review

Errors – written by Dimitri Armatas
Showing at TAP Gallery Darlinghurst from 10th-20th May 2012
Reviewed by Lana Hilton
Obsessive Compulsive Kyle teams up with recently dumped, no-holes-barred Kylie in this seemingly ordinary love/hate tale where clashing with your roommate who won’t stop straightening the bedcovers, is nowhere near the worst that can happen.
BUT who is the hero and who is the villain? Is there a hero at all?
Recent acting graduate Dimitri Armatas has written and starred in a brilliantly executed play that takes you on a rollercoaster of emotions over 1.5hours. His character ‘Kyle’ is neurotic and desperate and Dimitri has you believing he is the vulnerable one, before unleashing one hell of a twist.
His character ‘Kylie’ played by Kailey Higgins is self-centred and clearly suffers from low-self esteem when it comes to relationships, as many of us do, but her character is unlike anyone we can relate to and therein lies the majestic plot of Errors.
Despite the characters beginning in somewhat typical fashion – a crazy guy meets an even crazier girl and they have awkward (sexual) moments – Dimitri has weaved a deeper plot underneath the surface which will leave you contemplating how and why he would write such a play, well after it’s finished!
Both actors take on the challenges of their roles with ease, humour and all-around likeability, their expressions and gestures never missed by the audience thanks to the intimate theatre at the TAP Gallery in Darlinghurst. You are seated in the characters living room and bear witness to hilarious, intelligent, confronting and dark acting.
I hope this play is run again and so should you!
If not, then I look forward to whatever Mr Armatas writes next!