ff2010, Day 18

…and with the onset of the Festival of the Arts, things start slowing down somewhat. Bigger shows, more awkward time investments.

  1. Shanghai Beauty
  2. Felicity Ward reads from The Book of Moron
  3. Lady Carol

I’m still a bit pissy that the Artist Talk associated with Shanghai Beauty was moved from the initially scheduled time (after tonight’s show). That was the only reason I chose this evening! Harrumph.

I found it quite ironic that I was spruiked for Drags Aloud whilst prominently holding the Shanghai Beauty programme, too. It’s the little things, eh?

[2010030] Angels vs Demons

Angels vs Demons [FringeTIX]

Lumina Vocal Ensemble @ Barr Smith Library – Reading Room

3:00pm, Sun 21 Feb 2010

I’ve discovered that an injection of taurine into my mid-afternoon routine (in the form of Red Bull) is almost necessary to be able to push through the day with my eyes open at all times; so, ambling towards Adelaide Uni’s BSL, I dropped by the KBS Convenience Store (two Red Bulls for $5.50!) and neck one before heading to one of my favourite places in Adelaide – Wills Court, within the Uni Grounds. I find it remarkably tranquil – more so when they’ve got water flowing in the pool there – and the warm day and quiet surroundings soon have my eyelids drooping. Anxious to keep the drowsiness out of shows, I decided that the right thing to do was to meditate for a bit.

Forget good versus evil, or light versus dark… Red Bull versus meditation is where the real battle is. It’s bloody hard to drag a racing heart into a meditative state, let me tell you.

Eventually, a bit better rested, I head down to the Reading Room of the Barr Smith Library for this performance. The Reading Room is another of my favourite places in Adelaide, partly because of its inspirational beauty, but also because of memories of lustful teenage fumblings within it’s sleepy hallowed halls. The Room is implicitly split into two – one half providing ample space for the performers (and which they utilise well), the other containing a surprisingly large audience.

The Lumina Vocal Ensemble consist of a healthy fifteen choral singers, and they seemed to exude a distinct mood that felt like I imagined “renaissance” should feel. The opening piece, Dies Irae, Dies Illa, sees half-a-dozen men from the Ensemble perched at the far end of the Reading Room – an aeon away, but the space adds a stunning echoic ambience to the sound.

The men move to the implicit barrier that separates Them from Us, and are joined by the rest of the Ensemble for Anna Pope’s The Traveller. Part I features some lovely gender-split overlays and alternations between the men and the women, and Part II is simply thrilling – explosions in tempo create a real rollercoaster of a listening experience. James Scott’s baritone solo in Part III, though, is absolutely amazing.

Saam Thorne’s The Common Perception of Demons is brilliantly constructed, with the Ensemble clapping and stomping the pace into the piece; The Truth of Demonic Existence is an almost mirror-image of a follow-up, with wind-whistles and clicks creating ambience. The penultimate song Faire is the Heaven has a stunning conclusion, but then Rachel Sag’s Speak Of The Devil kicks in straight away… complete with a breakdown and a rap(!), this is a very contemporary end to an otherwise classical performance.

I loved this, I really did. With the sun streaming through the BSL windows, it’s an utterly ethereal experience hearing these soaring voices and orchestrations echo throughout the Room. The Ensemble themselves were glorious; the songs (mostly penned by members of the Ensemble) worked brilliantly.

Possibly the only technical negative to be levelled at this show would be that the accompanying projected images & videos added nothing, providing only the opportunity of distraction. And what was up with the snippets of Metropolis during Faire Is The Heaven? What’s that about?

There was one other downside, though – the reluctance of the audience to applaud at the end of each song, leaving uncomfortable pauses heavy in the air. The fact that I feel guilty not starting the applause myself is a handy reminder that I’m quite a sheep in that regard – awareness of which comes back to bite me further into this Fringe. But more on that later ;)

[2010029] The Grimstones – Hatched

The Grimstones – Hatched [FringeTIX]

Asphyxia @ Bosco Theater

10:00am, Sun 21 Feb 2010

So: I’m a little groggy – after all, I’ve had some sleep – but I had that creeping-death feeling where you feel a deep need to feel the sun’s rays on your skin. I sit across the Garden from the Bosco, drinking in the Vitamin D and some coffee, watching families assemble in front of the steps, wandering aimlessly like some sort of human Brownian motion experiment.

We wander inside, and I take a seat on the far side of the venue, away from the majority of the children. As soon as the house lights drop, the crying starts – and continues for five minutes until it’s determined that the kid is really upset and taken outside. I bite my lip – after all, it’s a calculated and conscious decision to go to these “family friendly” timeslots, and I’m trying to be a bit more tolerant of these things. After all, the Fringe is for everyone.

Luckily, the performance is strong enough to make ignoring the mewling masses easy. The deaf and mute Asphyxia plays the narrator Gertrude Grimstone, with her assistant August (Paula Dowse) translating her signed narrative. Both women also act out the story of the Grimstones using some wonderfully evocative marionettes.

It’s a relatively short performance: young only-child Martha Grimstone, able to see the dreams of others, discovers that her mother, the widow Velvetta, still grieves for her husband – and the additional children that they never had. Martha then casts a spell (discovered in her grandfather’s books of magic) and creates a large egg which, when hatched, reveals the three-legged baby boy, Crumpet. Though the Grimstones are initially horrified by Crumpet, in time he unites the family and brings joy to them all.

What makes The Grimstones stand out are the little things. All the beautifully detailed sets emerge from within suitcases; they’re a marvel of both craft and engineering. The puppetry shows an amazing amount of delicacy, the subtlety of which may have been lost on the children present: Velvetta turning the pages of her book and working the sewing machine, the heaving sighs and weeping of various Martha and Velvetta. And the manner in which Asphyxia and Dowse handle up to four puppets at once is superb.

Even though The Grimstones may appear relatively… well, grim, these drawn and sorrowful puppets have a great sense of poignancy – and still manage to evoke genuine joy. I was utterly charmed by this show, and the pièce de résistance was the Q&A session that the women handled at the end of the performance, answering any questions the children had. The posed questions were full of innocence and wonder – but one young chap, in particular, was utterly fascinated by Asphyxia’s signing. Funny stuff :)

ff2010, Day 17

Well here’s a surprise blog entry: I’m not drunk, and have managed to get home before midnight. ‘Twas a tough run, though, with sleep dep contributing mightily to the battles of the day… well, that and getting inadvertently hit in the face by one of the cleaning staff at the Norwood Food & Wine thingy.

  1. Vs Macbeth
  2. En Masse
  3. Zack Adams: Love Songs For Future Girl
  4. Parasouls

A couple of notes that I’d not mentioned in the last couple of days: firstly, my favourite venue of the last couple of years, the Tuxedo Cat, will be losing its wonderful rooftop home after this year’s Fringe: the building is slated for demolition. My heart goes out to Bryan & Cass and the rest of the TuxCat crew – I loved that place (well, I still do love it, but… you know what I mean). Here’s hoping they can cultivate a similar venue elsewhere in 2011.

Saturday night led me to discover that Anniene was in town with her show, The Hamlet Apocalypse. Great talking to her again (or at all coherently, since our previous encounters have been of the inebriated variety).

Had a lovely little chat with Lili La Scala this arvo, too. She insisted that I “pull my finger out and write more.” Your wish is my command, Lili – tomorrow. Tonight is for sleep :)

ff2010, Day 16

Cor, what a great day. Even if I did miss the fireworks – described by a friend as “pretty damn spectacular” – I managed to see Megan Washington perform… twice. (The Grab Bag could well be a Festival winner, I reckon).

  1. Songs of Misery & Despair
  2. Julia Zemiro’s Comfort Zone (featuring Megan Washington)
  3. Egg
  4. Melinda Buttle – Sista Got Flow

5:10am. Who knew San Giorgio’s was open that late? Not me, that’s for sure.

Day 16. Over the hump.

[2010028] Die Roten Punkte – Rock!

[2010028] Die Roten Punkte – Rock! [FringeTIX]

Die Roten Punkte @ Le Cascadeur

11:15pm, Sat 20 Feb 2010

This was my sixth Die Roten Punkte gig – and their crowds keep growing. Le Cascadeur is packed this Saturday night, and there are a lot of people who seem familiar with a lot of the new staples of DRP‘s act – Ich Bin Nicht Ein Roboter and Rock Bang seem to be really well known, now, but I’ve no idea how they’ve become so popular… maybe their YouTube videos?

But the thing is, I could almost copy’n’paste last year’s DRP post in here, and it would still be perfectly appropriate. The extended Ich Bin Nicht Ein Roboter piece is still in there, and new songs Burger Store Dinosaur and Banananana(?) show a complexity in their composition that was absent from their earlier work.

And that, I think, is where they lose me a bit.

As I keep saying in every DRP post since 2007, the absence of those simple audience singalong songs – the ones where the crowd almost drive the song along – creates a gaping hole in the DRP experience. And that’s demonstrated in this evening’s show by the fact that my highlights were the (audience selected) First Three Tracks From The First Album – the identical-sounding songs that sucked me into the DRP mystique to start off with.

I mean, really – the encore was Super Musikant. All they had to do was drop in Best Band In The World and leave me on a big singalong high. Sure, it was still a decent show – and I highly recommend it to anyone who hasn’t seen Die Roten Punkte before – but on this form they’re creeping closer to the day when I don’t consider them a must-see act every Fringe.

C’mon, guys. Best Band In The World. You know you want to.

[2010027] The Chronic Ills of Robert Zimmerman: AKA Bob Dylan (A Lie). A Theatrical Talking Blues & Glissendorf

The Chronic Ills of Robert Zimmerman: AKA Bob Dylan (A Lie). A Theatrical Talking Blues & Glissendorf [FringeTIX]

Tamarama Rock Surfers @ The Bakehouse Theatre (Main Theatre)

9:30pm, Sat 20 Feb 2010

From the outset – I’m not a massive fan of Dylan. Yes, I appreciate his impact on music as a whole, and I can understand why he has his avid fans… but, in general, the snippets of his catalogue that I’ve listened to just haven’t rung my bell.

Which is just an elaborate way of saying that I didn’t pick this show because I was a Dylan aficionado. Rather, I was here because of the Tamarama Rock Surfers.

Last year’s Death in Bowengabbie was a stunner: a return to the simple, heart-felt theatre that made me fall in love with the Fringe in the first place. And, given the divine production values evident in that show, I figured another Tamaramarific experience was justified.

Sometimes, scatterbrained associations really pay off – because Chronic Ills was fantastic.

From the outset, we are informed that this is most definitely not a tribute show; then Matt Ralph appears as Dylan and, over the next hour, talks us through his life, showing us his pivotal moments and struggles and contemplations. It’s not always a pretty picture – we’re with him in hospital, we’re with him during his seedier drug days. But we also see his interactions with Guthrie (and the search for his Holy Grail of Songs), Lennon, and…

…look. I can’t explain it, really. And, even if I could, it would take away from the impact of the work. There’s enough up there to remind me of what the performance was like (and, after all, that’s the whole reason I started this blog), and hopefully there’s enough there to entice you to go and see this show. Because this production is almost without flaw. The writing is tight and always in motion; the three principle actors are perfect. Matt Ralph is fantastic as Dylan, and Andrew Henry & Lenore Munro flit between a plethora of characters, from Abe Lincoln to Marilyn Monroe.

Even the programme is deeply informative and bloody funny. All the songs, snippets of songs, and musical textures are wonderfully done – the electric set was superb – and Henry’s stints as Johnny Cash and Daniel Lanois are spot-on (as is Munro’s Jesus and Yoko Ono). In short, this was a bloody brilliant show, every bit as entertaining as Bowengabbie… and that’s a massive compliment.

[2010026] Heavier Than Milk

Heavier Than Milk [FringeTIX]

[one8in] Dance Collective @ Gravity Studios

8:00pm, Sat 20 Feb 2010

Hopes were high when I arrived at Gravity Studios; the Heavier Than Milk programme looked very professional, and the eight pieces to be performed were presented in the form of a menu, as a series of courses. There was a curious shot of milk available for necking at the door, then upstairs to the performance space.

The first course was already in progress as we arrived: Sarah Glover sat scribbling on the principal wall of the space, as she did for the entire performance. Ummm… OK. The first dance piece felt like a lazy start, with plenty of movement but no real feeling of intent. There was a somewhat interesting exploration of space around a large cubic frame, however, and that bode well for upcoming pieces.

It’s a pity, then, that the following piece was utterly dire. Built around horrible characters dancing literally to Thou Shalt Always Kill (a decision which feels so utterly lazy I’m reluctant to even consider it to be choreography), this piece represented the turning point for Heavier Than Milk; from here, they took the express lane to Wrongville.

Jo Naumann’s “Milkshake” won me back briefly with a quirky giddy-chicken of an opening, and a few cute moments, before being let down by an appalling ending. I mean, really… “I’ve hurt my finger”? What the fuck were they thinking?

“Two Dollars” is a stumbling mess, only partially redeemed by some smooth movements and moments of real beauty in the subsequent “She Ain’t Heavy”. Unfortunately, the movie used as background for this piece had more of a lasting impact than most of the rest of the dance. And Jay Mullan’s Dessert Course film, “Morning After, In The Middle Of Nowhere” felt like it was cut with a meat cleaver – it may have been interesting had we seen any actual dance in the movie (which featured Jade Erlandsen – who I’ve got a lot of time for after last year’s Out of the Dark). The final piece featured film, some rear-projection shadows, and had a real feeling of energy about it – and then pissed any goodwill generated by those positives away with some ill-advised talking sequences.

This was my first visit to Gravity Studios and, while the space itself is great, the options for the audience are not. The layout of seating for Heavier Than Milk had two banks of three rows each; the big problem here is that there’s no elevation, so those sitting in the non-front rows – including myself – couldn’t see a fucking thing when the dancers moved low. Which, as you might imagine, was often. The constant scribblings seemed utterly pointless, too, given the almost complete lack of involvement in the dance pieces (only one of the dance “courses” had any interaction with The Scribbler).

In short: Heavier Than Milk was a complete mess. There were one or two glimpses of something attractive there, but they were swamped by a mass of poorly-conceived, self-indulgent crapulence. To say that this was a disappointment is a massive understatement.

[2010025] When 3 Meet

When 3 Meet [FringeTIX]

Flexiflight Productions @ The Birdcage

6:00pm, Sat 20 Feb 2010

I must admit, I was filled with fear as soon as I realised that The Birdcage was not the big tent on the Torrens Parade Grounds – that, of course, is the Circus Oz tent. It was stupid of me to have expected otherwise; The Birdcage is a new venue that has been set up with the goal of making it easier for smaller circus companies to get out there, performing in a cheaper venue built with their performances in mind.

The Birdcage is precariously erected on the banks of the Torrens, just across the road from the Parade Grounds. It’s a bare-bones operation – at least, it was on this Saturday – with the crew still running around putting safety flags on tent pegs, whilst two yellow-vested security guards man the gate with a mixture of bemusement and disdain. There’s no crowds for them to control – hell, there’s barely any people. The two staff in the small bar combine to deliver me a drink in exchange for payment with only a modicum of confusion, the woman handling ticket sales was utterly bemused when I said I already had a ticket, and there was a bit of frantic confusion when some punters strolled right into the tent without paying.

Still, eventually I take a seat inside. It’s an odd setup – for one thing, there’s a tree just to the left of the main stage area, and there’s an overall feeling of rough’n’ready, rather than the polish that The Ringbox now exudes. But it is a big top, which lends a very positive ambience to things with the hot afternoon sun peeking in through the rolled up skirt of the tent.

When 3 Meet is a short piece based on the intersection of three very different people, all seemingly involved in one accident. It opens very slowly, with limited movement being used in the pre-accident exposition. Post-accident, it kicks off; the spurned-and-smitten guy performs some great work with the aerial silk, the hippy-esque girl does a great routine on the suspended ring, and the slick businesswoman performs a flashy hoops routine.

The reason I love watching circus acts is because they provide a glimpse of people doing stuff that I imagine to be nigh-on impossible, especially for a fat bastard like myself. And, when it’s in front of a small crowd, it feels like they’re performing for me – there’s an intimacy that’s missing with large, professional acts like Circus Oz and Cirque du Soleil. That intimacy removes the distance between me and the performer, and it puts my heart in my throat more than some spectacularly polished extravaganza.

In the case of When 3 Meet, the performances are solid – but there’s not a lot of them, and not much variety in them. Three performers, three disciplines, and some contrived semi-theatrics tying them together in a thirty-minute show. But I wound up urging the performers on because, essentially, they were my performers; they were doing all this stuff for me. And whilst I’d seen a lot of the tricks before in other acts, I’m still mesmerised by the silk, and hoops always confound my rhythm-less body.

Was it worth it? Maybe. But with a short run of three shows, and a mere handful of paying punters at this performance, it’s hard to see how this company could continue in this vein.

ff2010, Day 14

First show of the Festival tonight! And I’ve cracked fifty shows! How exciting :)

Any one of the shows listed below are great value, but I especially want to pick out Ro Campbell – he’s an absolutely fantastic comedian, and even repeat airings of some of his material still earned tears of laughter. Click here and buy a ticket to his show! :)

  1. Untrained
  2. Ivan Brackenbury’s Hospital Radio Roadshow
  3. Ro Campbell: Shooting From The Lip
  4. Circus vs. Sideshow

I tell you what, dear reader: I’m having the time of my life, here. I’ve had eight excellent shows in a row, had a load of laughs, some fantastic company, and am just really enjoying myself. I haven’t had as great a Fringe in many, many years :)

[2010024] Best of the Fest Late Show at The Gov

Best of the Fest Late Show at The Gov [FringeTIX]

Lindsay Webb, Andrew O’Neill, Mickey D, Eddie Ifft @ The Gov

10:30pm, Fri 19 Feb 2010

Last year, I saw a Late Show on a Saturday night in the latter half of the Fringe – and The Gov had been packed. There’s nowhere near as many people here this year – it’s maybe only about a quarter full. But none of that matters, really; the people least suited to sitting near the front have found their way there anyway, and it’s not long after emcee Lindsay Webb takes the stage that he’s being incomprehensibly heckled (in a unique dialect of slur and cackle)… and the Best of the Fest team have found some of their targets for the night.

Last year’s show was the first time I’d come across Webb, and I remarked then (well, I meant to, anyway) that he was entertaining, without being brilliant. As emcee, though, he came into his own – deflecting the heckles with ease, isolating the troublemakers in the crowd, and then pushing his own material into the mix. And his act has definitely stepped up a notch, too – last year his jokes were a little sedate in nature, but tonight he’s upped the filth-o-meter a bit and got more-than-a-little rude. Bloody good stuff.

I was stoked to hear that Andrew O’Neill was the first act – with a brain that’s always crunching numbers, I figured this would be a good opportunity to see someone who’s on The Shortlist and, hopefully, be able to rub them off the list afterwards. Unfortunately, O’Neill completely scuppered my plans by being fucking brilliant – even when appearing onstage wearing a hideous purple check dress, black tights, and bright red lipstick. See, his “occult comedian” show blurb mentions nothing about the T-word – that being “transvestite” – so the audience is taken aback at first. He wins them over, though, by getting a chant going and breaking it down with “that’s how racism starts.” Tales of reactions to his appearance on the street keep the laughter flowing, and I’m duty bound to not only keep him on The Shortlist, but elevate him up it, too.

Mickey D is up next, and once again he launches into a familiar act based around the peccadillos of us Adelaideans. As usual, his observations are spot on the money, and once he’s hammered home our North/South/East tribal nature, discussed the discomfort of having your Mum sign “wanker” to you, and performed a cringingly good impression of a Sunday-night Ice Addict, he’s leaving the stage with a lot of laughs and good will – even if he was a lot more caustic with the more unruly audience members.

As the headline act, Eddie Ifft is… uncompromising. And, while his act continues to be refined and made generally more palatable to the average audience, there’s still something intensely vicious underneath the surface. He dispatches hecklers quickly and violently; he’ll toss “retard” into a joke and demand that you laugh; he’ll get overly explicit when talking about arse-fucking, look to see who cringes, then attack. His one concession tonight was asking the audience for a topic for his closing joke; the accepted response was “Tiger Woods”, and he turned it into another stream-of-consciousness filth-fest. Brilliant.

Four great comedians, and plenty of lively peeps in the crowd wearing big comedy targets (the pissed slut, the gentle biker, the accountant-who-didn’t-know-he-was-an-accountant). When the worst performer of the night still had me thinking “hmmm… I might see if I can squeeze him into The Schedule”, you know you’ve seen a bloody brilliant gig.

[2010023] The Adventures of Alvin Sputnik: Deep Sea Explorer

The Adventures of Alvin Sputnik: Deep Sea Explorer [FringeTIX]

Weeping Spoon Productions @ Holden Street Theatres – The Arch

9:00pm, Fri 19 Feb 2010

Now this was Proper Fringe.

The Arch is dominated by a large white circular screen. Creator / performer Tim Watts appears, dressed in black with bulbous goggles. He sits at a nearby computer and writes out the opening titles – they’re projected onto the circular screen, then washed away with the story of Alvin Sputnik.

Alvin’s happily married, living with his wife on a tiny island atop the debris of a flooded world. Sadly, she falls ill; backlighting the screen allows us to see through it, and we’re privy to the quiet and poignant death of Alvin’s wife (performed in live-action, with Watts performing some beautifully restrained puppetry for the fading woman). Her soul, embodied in a bright light, leaves her body and descends to the depths of the ocean; Alvin dives in and tries to follow her, but reluctantly has to turn back.

Distraught, Alvin sees an ad on TV – the human race is launching a last-ditch effort to try and find a new place to live, a way to save humanity. Of course, this just happens to require an almost certainly suicidal solo trip to the sea-bed; Alvin, making his way to the human HQ, volunteers for the job.

Donning a special diving suit – and adopting an incredibly cute puppet form – Alvin starts his descent, stunningly portrayed in the form of projected animation with seamless transitions to / from puppet form. Along the way, he passed though the flooded cities, finds a bizarre disco, and then finds his wife’s spirit again. Chasing her through the ocean, there’s frolics with a giant whale (again, excellent puppetry), before the spirit leads Alvin to the final destination of his mission. The subsequent ascension is eye-wettingly wonderful, and the ending… well, I’m running out of superlatives.

I cannot rave enough about Alvin Sputnik. The story is wonderfully sweet, and the execution is amazing – as previously mentioned, the transitions between live action and projected action are perfect. The puppetry, too, is divine, with the diving Alvin being wonderfully realised – one hand acting as all his limbs, quickly flipping around to create a stunning sense of character. And the audio accompaniment is lovely – well, I’m bound to say that of any show that includes Electric Dreams in its soundtrack.

And all of this is the work of one chap, Tim Watts – one of those quite obscenely talented youngsters that make me proud to be paying good money to see stuff at the Fringe. A quick chat at the end of the show revealed him to be incredibly humble, and yet buoyed and almost giddy with the accolades that were being proffered unto him by the departing crowd. He deserves them all, of course: Alvin Sputnik is a beautiful show, chock full of emotional whimsy whilst remaining aesthetically spectacular. I’ve got a good feeling that this will be finishing in many people’s Top Show lists.

[2010022] Be Your Age Or Bust

Be Your Age Or Bust [FringeTIX]

The Royal Adelaide University Old Footlighters Club @ Holden Street Theatres – The Studio

7:30pm, Fri 19 Feb 2010

“Blimey, Pete!” I hear absolutely no-one say, “this is a bit of a different pick to your usual fare. A university revue show? What’s up with that? Come on, be honest – you’re just padding out your show count, aren’t you?”

To which I would respond (if I had any cause to, which I don’t, because no-one actually has asked – nor ever will ask – the above question): “Piss off. And no. In that order.”

The fact of the matter is that Be Your Age Or Bust made The Shortlist because… well, I’d never seen a revue-style show in the flesh before. And, with my dogmatic insistence that I not be in the City on Fringe opening night, it just happened to slot nicely into the Schedule.

The other determining factor is that, as I grow older, I feel more and more attached to my alma mater. I don’t know why, exactly – it’s not as though I had endless good times there, making lifelong friends and learning Important Stuff like all those Animal House and Revenge of the Nerds documentaries suggest; it just feels… I dunno, close. A source of comfort. Plus, one of my favourite places in Adelaide is Wills Court. And I love the old BSL reading room.

But none of that has anything to do with the show. So let’s get on with that, yes?

As you might have guessed by now, Be Your Age Or Bust is a good old-fashioned University revue show. There’s lots of little skits, political digs, enthusiastic singing and dancing, and tiny humour-filled barbs directed at our affluent society. The most pointed pieces were directed at the current University of Adelaide administration (who are proposing knocking down Union Hall to build a research facility – boooo) and our current Premier – doubly funny, given former Premier John Bannon was a member of the cast.

“Letters to the Editor Men” was a cracking song & dance routine, demonstrating an elegance of language that current musical humorists would do well to take lessons from. In fact, the songsmithery as a whole was wonderful, as were the “Superheroes At Rest” and “Leafy Suburbs Forum” bits. In fact, the only one of the 36(!) skits that fell flat was the ill-advised “Air Orchestra”… but the percussive brilliance of the Plumber’s Song (complete with a hose-and-funnel “trumpet” solo) more than made up for that little bump.

As mentioned before, John Bannon was a real surprise in the cast – but the real standouts for me were Mark Coleman (transitioning between the poncy East-suburban dinner party nerd to the young-and-dumb car-hunter with ease) and, of course, one of my childhood heroes: Rob Morrison. 85-year-old Jeff Scott was awesome, too – though the voice might be a bit fragile now, he’s still got impeccable timing.

I was surprised – really pleasantly surprised – by the number of people who turned up to this performance. They’ve had near sell-out shows for the entire season now, which is (a) charming, (2) wonderful, and (iii) slightly weird. Because, even days away from my 39th birthday, I was the youngest person in the audience – by far. And there’s something really lovely about the idea that there’s other people out there who are so attached to their alma mater too, and that the word-of-mouth and impetuous night-out thing still exists well into middle age; that Twitter and e-mail aren’t the be-all and end-all of buzz.

I left this show grinning like a loon, and you can’t ask for much more than that, really. Bravo, Old Footlighters :)

ff2010, Day 13

Day 13: unlucky for some. And by “some”, I mean “me”, because I spent about half the show on stage with Dr Brown this evening, wearing a crap wig or rubbing baby oil on a hairy, taut, mostly naked man. I’d be lying if I said the laughter and applause didn’t feel good, though.

  1. Sargasm
  2. Inanimate Eats Rage
  3. 3xperimentia: Live Cut
  4. Dr. Brown Behaves

Just looking at that list of today’s shows again, one thing sprang to mind – it’s pretty bloody good. Not a dud amongst them. Plus, I got to chat with Kate Skully, and tell Brad Oakes my 1998 Brad Oakes story… all the while fending off Nik Coppin’s wedding barbs.

It all made sense on the night, I swear.