[2013080] KnickKnack

[2013080] KnickKnack

Etched Dance Productions @ Adelaide College of the Arts – XSpace

6:00pm, Sat 2 Mar 2013

Now, I love me some weirdness. I love it when productions get their abstraction hats on. It’s only rarely that I dislike someone’s genuine attempt to think outside the box.

But I’m still not quite sure how to take KnickKnack… because it’s walking a very fine line.

First impressions are pretty lousy: it seems the Etched Dance crew are trying to evoke the Mad Hatter with a curious chap introducing the notion of Tony… who is he? What is he? Does he even really exist? While this narrator prowls the floor, stumbling with his attempt at a lofty accent, two heads can be seen peeking through the curtains at the back of the stage… this is either unprofessional as fuck, I thought, or quite odd.

The heads belonged to two female performers, who subsequently burst onto the stage with exaggerated movements accompanied by non-stop non sequiturs. Their “dance” – and KnickKnack is, ostensibly, a dance performance – is bold and brash, with oodles of movement that could best be described as “colourful”.

And then Tony appears. He does exist, and he’s a banana. And he’s a morbid bugger: we’re all going to die sometime, he mopes, but he offers no insight or hope… Tony is, quite clearly, the counterpoint to the exuberance of Red and White (the female characters, who I think were supposed to be dolls).

And that’s KnickKnack in a nutshell. Effervescence on one hand, morbidity on the other, with the whole lot doused in a colourfully eccentric sauce. Nope, I’m still not sure about how to take KnickKnack. But I’m pretty sure that’s a Good Thing.

[2013079] Agnes of God

[2013079] Agnes of God

Blue Fruit Theatre Company @ Holden Street Theatres – The Arch

4:00pm, Sat 2 Mar 2013

Itsoseng runs late, so it’s a mad dash to the tram stop, followed by a brisk walk to Holden Street. It’s also a bit of a sticky day, so I’m not entirely comfortable when settling into my front-row seat in The Arch.

Personal discomforts are forgotten when Agnes of God kicks off, however. A local adaptation of the Broadway play, it is a multilayered story centred on the “immaculate conception” of the titular Sister Agnes, a Novice nun whose steadfast belief in the beauty of the Almighty’s Creation is corralled by the abuse she suffered as a child. Simplistic and naïve, Agnes is convinced that the baby she carries was conceived by God alone; Dr Martha Livingstone, a psychiatrist concerned for Agnes’ wellbeing, sceptically prods for a more plausible reason for her pregnancy. Agnes’ Mother Superior, Miriam, tries to deflect any claims of impropriety, and defends the integrity of the Novice in her care, whilst constantly balancing her belief in miracles and the almost irrefutable proof that Agnes’ baby is not what she so desperately wants it to be.

The play flits scenes between scenes of the three women: Martha prying Agnes for the truth, Miriam challenging Martha’s lack of faith, and Agnes assuring Miriam of her righteousness. A large amount of the script is delivered through flashbacks (triggered by a character stepping into a spotlight), and it is loaded with threads of connections between the three women – the psychiatrist’s sister, Agnes’ mother, and Mother Superior’s sister all being named Maria was one overt example – and the use of metaphor is also less-than-subtle.

Michaela Burger’s role as Agnes is epitomised by two things: her angelic singing, imbuing Agnes with a sense of purity, is contrasted by her bone-cutting screams, which typically occur when Martha’s questioning starts insinuating that all is not as it seems. But whilst the first scream comes as a shock, their regularity makes the performance feel almost one-paced and predictable… one can almost plot a sawtooth graph of tension.

That’s not to say that Agnes of God is not good; it’s a meaty theatrical piece, with all three performers handling their roles well. But the predictability of the delivery detracts from the subject matter at hand, and unfortunately stops this production from reaching greater heights.

[2013077] The Breakfast Club – Stand Up for the Early Risers

[2013077] The Breakfast Club – Stand Up for the Early Risers

Mickey D, Lindsay Webb, Hard Core Damo, Mark Trenwith, Scott Mangnoson, Stuart Goldsmith @ Nexus Cabaret

11:00pm, Sat 2 Mar 2013

Look – it’s fair to say that mistakes were made. After last night’s Giovanni Experiment, the night bounced along at a rapid rate of knots until… well, morning came. And then I found myself, ticket in hand, trudging timidly towards the Nexus, head throbbing with the success of previous proclivities.

At least Mickey D and Boo were there to greet people at the door, ready to prop the adults up with coffee… which was very much appreciated. After a quick chat with Mickey D (always good for a natter), I navigated my way through the sea of bubbling kids (and less-than-bubbly parents) and took my seat to nurse my headache as far back in the Nexus as I could.

When I think of Mickey D, the first thing that springs to mind is his ice material – sharp and loud and profane as fuck – so it was a real surprise when he took to the stage and quickly won the younger audience over with a perfectly-pitched set of jokes that took the piss out of their parents. Sure, there was a lot of juvenile toilet humour in there… but this was the perfect audience for it. Who knew that the ultimate secret – that Mums fart too – would be so crowd-pleasing?

And as pleasantly surprised as I was regarding the host, the first guest comedian had me initially bemused – Lindsay Webb. Again, I think Webb is a fantastic comedian, with a motor-mouth and instantaneous comebacks, but to see him perform a G-rated five minutes whilst clearly suffering from a big night was a treat… even more so when he was momentarily speechless due to a relentless junior heckler.

Ah yes, Darcy – the unintentional extra cast member. Darcy had been discovered by Mickey D early on, and he was determined to play a role in the rest of proceedings. Whilst his exuberance – and innocence – was certainly charming as he peppered the performers with ADD-ish non sequiturial heckles, it made me wonder whether his inclinations now will evolve into last night’s boorish behaviour.

Anyway – Darcy heckled Webb, and his response to Webb’s comeback left Lindsay stunned with a mystified grin on his face. In an attempt to wrest back control of the situation, Webb asked Darcy what he wanted to be when he grows up: “a ninja.”

Glorious.

Webb made way for one of Hard Core Damo’s characters, Skitzy the Fisherman, who was accompanied by Pebbles the Dog Shark (Damo’s diminutive dog with a fin tied to his back). I can’t remember much of Damo’s material, because the screams of delight from the children as they laughed at Pebbles licking her own arse onstage drowned out the PA system.

Mr Snot-bottom – Mark Trenwith’s successful character – made an appearance, but the kids were still a little hyper after Pebbles’ antics to really concentrate on his work. A shame, really, because I think Snot-bottom is a great little crowd-pleaser in small doses. Scott Mangnoson’s magic was perhaps a little too subtle for the youngsters to latch on to (though a treat for this adult to ruminate on), and Stuart Goldsmith – who I’d not seen before – didn’t really seem to cater to the younger audience at all.

Mickey D rounded out his emcee duties by letting the kids in on a secret – “your parents are all going to buy you ice-cream after this show!” – before trying to win the adults back – “remember, KFC is bad for you: nuggets are deep-fried chicks.” And, in the end, The Breakfast Club managed to do the same thing that Huggers does: deliver a family-friendly comedy variety show. But an 11am start? Like I said at the top, mistakes were made.

[2013076] The Giovanni Experiment

[2013076] The Giovanni Experiment

Hew Parham @ La Bohème

10:00pm, Fri 1 Mar 2013

La Bohème is chockers for this opening night of The Giovanni Experiment, and there’s a bubbly sense of supportive excitement in the air; I get the feeling that a fair chunk of the crowd is family and friends, though I also spot a few media passes proudly worn. Luck sees us sharing a cocktail table in front of the bar stools on the side of the stage; friendly company at the table, and some clearly lubricated friends-of-the-show behind us.

Giovanni is an Italian waiter working in his mother’s floundering restaurant; in fact, he tells us, it’s their last night of business. People like us (he half-sneers, half-welcomes) don’t feel the need for traditional Italian cooking anymore… though the dishes he reels off sound comically tragic. And nor do we appreciate quality waiters… leading him to passionately describe his three years of training, which seemed to fixate on moustache grooming and the correct treatment of female patrons.

His moustache, it must be said, is splendid in its slickness, and his treatment of audience members also demonstrated a search for perfection, tainted by his exuberance. Giovanni is quite the stereotype, from his appearance down to the Italian-infused gibberish he rattles at a million-miles-an-hour (usually to his off-stage mother). When he’s not addressing the audience, he’s whisking up an increasingly messy meal, or slicking his hair back with olive oil, or setting a table in perfect sync with his backing music.

Hew Parham has already proven that he’s a great character comedian with his charming clown, Schmoo; Giovanni (who, at times, is extremely reminiscent of some of Schmoo’s antics) doesn’t falter in the slightest, with a strongly defined character that facilitates a lot of comic tomfoolery. The Giovanni Experiment was a comprehensive demonstration on how to do character comedy right

…which is why it was all the more disheartening that one of the women sitting behind us was such a fucking shit-head. Early on in the performance, Giovanni had spent some time attending to the every need (especially in the vino department) of a gentleman in the front row (who happened to be sporting a media-badge – an amusing case of reviewer sycophancy, maybe?). Unfortunately, that seemed to set an expectation with the aforementioned woman that audience interjections were okay… and she was happy to oblige. I struggled to understand why she thought yelling out “show us your tits!” was so hilarious, let alone warranted… and when she not only received, but also made phone calls – “yeah, nah, I’m at a show… a show!” – it’s fair to say that there was more than a bit of unpleasantness in the air.

Hearing her argue with Hew and his director (Craig Behenna) after the show was even more demoralising; she was clearly known to them (a “friend” indeed), but for some reason she couldn’t seem to make them understand that her behaviour was helping the show out. I wonder why.

[2013075] Charles Barrington in one character or less

[2013075] Charles Barrington in one character or less

Charles Barrington @ The Tuxedo Cat – Alley Cat

8:30pm, Fri 1 Mar 2013

This Friday was, in retrospect, an exercise in too-tight scheduling: and, after Sylvie ran long, I wound up running from Festival Theatre up to TuxCat, ducking into the Alley Cat around ten minutes late. There was little more than a handful of other people in the room; Charles Barrington spotted me as I tried to slink in, and his dry admonishment encouraged the audience to turn and watch me enter the room.

“I apologise, Charles Barrington,” I offered as I slid into my seat.

He smiled: “Charles Barrington accepts your apology.”

It’s fair to say that not much has changed with Charles Barrington since I first met him. All the character traits are still there: the pompous sense of superiority, hidden behind ugly stubble and a suave seventies veneer, is still strangely endearing. Some of the material was familiar, too; his much-built-up bee joke was sadistically milked for laughs after an almost-too-long pause.

The other seven people in the audience – all in one social group – could have been the worst audience imaginable; they were more than happy to engage (or attempt to engage) in conversation with Charles Barrington, and provided an outspoken running commentary throughout. They could have been the worst audience… but, in the context of this performance, it totally worked. After Barrington expressed surprise that he failed to get an uproarious reaction from his bartender joke – “that joke was gold, my friends” – the immediate retort was “so – when does it start?” And when a joke died, Charles Barrington would address the group, and attempt to explain the joke… “no, we got it” they’d say, which had Barrington pausing momentarily before exploding “My name is Charles Barrington, goodnight!” and feigning his exit from the stage.

That happened about five times. And it kept getting more and more laughs.

On another night, I could imagine that this performance would be deemed the bombiest show that ever bombed… but there didn’t seem to be any animosity from the audience. And, even if they were laughing at the performer in Andy Rodgers (as opposed to his creation), Charles Barrington was more than happy to chuckle along… and that made it a comically surreal exercise in self-deprecation.

[2013073] Stuperstition

[2013073] Stuperstition

Stuart Lightbody @ Holden Street Theatres – The Studio

5:00pm, Fri 1 Mar 2013

I feel like I’ve seen a lot more magic performers in the last couple of years, and whilst I’ve not got to the stage where I can recognise how we – the audience – are being fooled, I’ve become… well, a little blasé about the usual tricks. Weary, even.

So why did I find myself at yet another magic show, then? Because I was on the hunt for something different, something new… something vital. And, after a slightly stiff opening, Stuart Lightbody warmed the small and sceptical crowd with smooth banter and a likeable personality; he trotted out a few well-worn tricks and I sighed a little inside. Oh dear, I thought: more of the same.

But then he demonstrated how the tricks were done.

Hmmm, I thought as I sat up straighter, that is indeed different.

And that’s Lightbody’s hook: he mixes his subversive magic with overt explanations, and attacks the unscientific and paranormal with a rational mind. He cracks jokes about astrology before cold-reading an astonished audience member, using just her zodiac designation; he talks about the law of large numbers whilst tearing homeopathy apart and overdosing on sleeping pills; and there’s a fantastically funny piece where he makes balls of tissue disappear from in front of the increasingly incredulous audience member parked onstage. Those in the crowd were treated to a demonstration of just how easy it is to distract a mark as Lightbody casually tossed the tissue behind him, a colourfully stark demonstration within the inky blackness of The Studio.

But then there’s the flat-out unexplainable: the swallowed needles, threaded onto a piece of cotton – surely an exercise in sleight-of-hand. Card visualisations from afar – surely marked cards? Or reflections? More cold readings of people’s faces – and I’m completely lost. I have no idea how he’s performing some of his psychological tricks, and his assurances that there’s a rational explanation for this witchcraft fail to convince.

Most of all, however, Lightbody carries the show with a refreshingly approachable personality: well-spoken in a charming accent that’s more British than South African, his affable nature is immediately endearing. That he feigns to show you how his tricks are performed is a potent hook, and his purported skepticism is just icing on the cake; but he’s also a bloody good magician, and these ingredients all combine to create a compelling performance.

[2013072] Huggers – The Family Friendly Comedy and Cabaret Show

[2013072] Huggers – The Family Friendly Comedy and Cabaret Show

Nik Coppin, Nick the Bubble, Sullivan and Bok, Benny B @ Austral Hotel – The Bunka

3:15pm, Fri 1 Mar 2013

I was really wary of booking anything too early on the day after a Barrio Preview Night… whilst there was not as much damage done to one’s liver (or brain, or relationships) as at the 2013 drink-fest Preview, it was certainly a struggle to drag myself to a mid-afternoon Huggers session – the hangover, it was a-thumpin’. Lemon, lime, and bitters was the best I could manage.

Another show in Nik Coppin’s ensemble stable, Huggers is the family-friendly version of his Shaggers compendium (which is always a suitably crude way to round off a day); this Friday arvo, however, the crowd was sparse, with a quiet collection of four families (a total of eight or nine kids) in attendance… which left my Event Buddy and I feeling a teensy bit out of place.

Nik’s affable manner eventually warms the (initially) frost crowd, and his bribery techniques – throwing sweeties into the crowd to encourage some sugar-loading from the kids – was accompanied by his usual Anglophilic anti-Aussie cricketing jibes. Nick the Bubble (from Nick Brothers Family Show Hooray) was the first guest of the afternoon, and proved a gentle start with some kid-friendly magic… more cups and balls, culminating with a coconut reveal that caused some wide-eyed astonishment from the younger audience members.

It’s fair to say that Sullivan and Bok were absolutely brilliant with the kids, firing them up with a bit of Marco Polo (milking it for all the pantomimic goodness they could get!). Bok played the straight-person like the best teacher ever, and Sullivan’s surreal insanity seemed to mesh with the children’s imagination… the audience was positively bubbling at the end of their performance.

Benny B from Snarp! wrapped up proceedings: “why is the man in a pink leotard?” queried a girl in the audience of her mother, but no answer was forthcoming. But Benny B backed up his ludicrous appearance with some great juggling (especially the cigar box juggling) and some truly terrible puns that split the adults and kids in exactly the right way.

So while this episode of Huggers didn’t quite match the glorious variety of last year’s effort, it certainly provided more than a few grins… and a chance to ease away the hangover.

[2013068] Ex-German

[2013068] Ex-German

Paco Erhard @ Gluttony – The Pig Pen

10:45pm, Wed 27 Feb 2013

After last year’s curious 5-Step Guide to Being German, I figured Paco Erhard was worth another shot; I figured that if he got rid of the flat spots in that show, he’d wind up with a pretty well-balanced hour of comedy.

What I didn’t realise is that 5-Step Guide was a show that Erhard had already spent a lot of time polishing… and this show – by his own admission – was new. Fresh. Unpolished.

Unfinished.

Erhard opens up by explaining the central premise of the show – he’s getting older, he’s falling in love, and he’s starting to find kids cute (in a ticking-paternal-clock kind of way). But there’s little real connection between these feelings and the short jokes & experiential stories that he tells; but he always returns to that core, falling back by imagining whether the previous tale was something he’d want to teach his (future) son.

…and it’s always his son – never any mention of a potential daughter. And I found something about that to be quite grating.

Erhard also espouses liberal values, but the words never really seem to be convincing – especially when he veers into religion. There’s some international-comic observances of Australia, and some swipes at Julia Gillard that seemed to go nowhere; it was almost as if he backed off before his comments could possibly cause offence… or, for that matter, humour. And some of his decisions seemed really odd – he seemed to tiptoe around any kind of profanity, then – apropos of nothing – drops a c-bomb in the middle of an innocuous line… one of the two women in the audience was taken aback and gasped in surprise.

It must be difficult for a comic to perform in front of a quiet crowd of a dozen, but I’ve been to many shows where performers have connected to the crowd in a personal way, leading to a fantastic experience for those in attendance. Erhard failed to do that this evening; there was no attempt to engage with the audience at all as he trotted through his disparate set… it almost felt like a scattergun approach to comedy. And without that engagement, this performance just felt incredibly uninspired.

[2013067] Sam Simmons – Shitty Trivia

[2013067] Sam Simmons – Shitty Trivia

Sam Simmons @ The Garden of Unearthly Delights – Romantiek

8:45pm, Wed 27 Feb 2013

My Sam Simmons experiences have been occasionally rocky over the years… but I’ve gradually learnt to avoid his shows early in their season, allowing him to settle the act a little – to maximise the chance of a Good Show. That’s the only thing that stops me from inking Simmons in on opening night every year.

But… I still find myself a little wary going into one of his shows, wondering whether it’s going to be a polished gem or a Melbourne Testing Ground. And the fact that Simmons has become ridiculously popular over the years doesn’t help: the audiences that are attracted to him aren’t the crowds I usually like to share an audience space with. But this evening’s crowd were in a good-natured and bubbly mood, and – flying solo – I managed to snaffle a seat in the front row, right in front of Simmons’ lectern.

Simmons receives a rapturous welcome, and… well, it’s a Sam Simmons show. He’s loud and abrupt, surreal and non sequiturial. There didn’t seem to be as many “pre-recorded thoughts” as in other shows, however, and this is the first time I can remember Simmons asking an audience member onstage – dozens of people immediately offered their help, and all (but one) would’ve been relieved when they saw what happened to the “lucky” Jesse. He spent most of the show sitting onstage, facing the audience, wearing the ceremonial Meat Hat and looking at Simmons’ back, with no real involvement in the majority of the material.

I still love Simmons’ sense of surrealism and attitude onstage… there’s a little aloofness towards his doting crowd, but he’s not afraid to knock himself down a peg or two – his worryingly small “Little Fuck Captain” t-shirt is testament to that. And, whilst the show had a central thread of Simmons’ Shitty Trivia (a series of cards with jokey questions – the audience would try to answer them, but Sam’s required responses were either ridiculously abstract or obscenely poor puns), there were still the callback non sequiturs – Mysterious Shoe was a cracker. Simmons also launched into a couple of his longer rants, with the highlight targeting the pop obsession with food: food-based TV programmes copped a little flack, but the bulk of his ire was reserved for people who quit their jobs to become full-time foodies.

But, to cut a long story short: was Shitty Trivia an instance of Good Sam Simmons or Bad Sam Simmons?

Most definitely the former… unless you foolishly volunteered to “help” Simmons out onstage.

[2013066] Frank Woodley & Simon Yates – Inside

[2013066] Frank Woodley & Simon Yates – Inside

Frank Woodley & Simon Yates @ The Garden of Unearthly Delights – Romantiek

7:30pm, Wed 27 Feb 2013

I was initially torn when I read the précis for Inside – whilst I will happily fling money at the Acrobat crew (with whom Simon Yates has worked in the past), I was wary of the association of Frank Woodley – the only time I’ve seen him in the past proved so disappointing that I’ve dared not waste another hour on his work. But the initial buzz around this show was positive, and a good friend assured me that I’d find something of interest in the performance; a quick dash in from my previous show saw me at the end of a long, snaking queue outside the Romantiek, leading to a seat well back in the crowd.

First impressions of the set were oppressive; there’s no overt humour to be found there, with a grim and spartan prison cell enclosed defined by an open-fronted wire-mesh cage. Woodley and Yates – Viktor and Vissilli – are likewise visually grim characters, sporting identical shaven heads, facial hair, and drab uniforms; their accents are heavily Russian. Together, the pair perform a series of short skits that are only loosely connected via the repetitive interactions with their off-stage Warden; and, while the skits have their comic moments (often derived from intricate wordplay), the overarching narrative relies on a constant threat of torture being used to separate the two comrades.

And while that tends to create quite a bleak atmosphere, it somehow doesn’t manage to feel out of place. Nor do the brighter, more positive moments: the pair’s periodical exposure to daylight (which shows off superb lighting and sound design) also fits within the overall story without feeling tacked on, as do Yates’ occasional acrobatics (using the cage as a kicking-off point).

Despite the camaraderie shared by the prisoners, they also descend into the kind of faux violence typified by the British new wave humorists (think The Young Ones or Bottom) that Woodley so deftly dealt with in his duets with Lano. But there were also some flaws on the night – the reappearing hand, the bird getting stuck as it “flew” into their cell – but it was hard to tell whether these were the kinds of “mistakes” that occur every night.

It’s only now that I look back on the ticket price – $48. That’s probably the most expensive Fringe ticket I bought this year and, though I can see a significant investment in the set and production values of the show, it’s pretty hard to justify that expense. For as much as I enjoyed the bleak comedy, the wonderful accents, and the great design elements, I’m not sure I enjoyed it that much.

[2013065] Cracked

[2013065] Cracked

Caroline Melia @ Suzie Wong’s Room

6:00pm, Wed 27 Feb 2013

It’s my first visit to Suzie Wong’s Room since the Simple Minds & Devo show last December; a great night capped off by a very uncomfortable drink due to the altercation between my companions. No chance of that this evening, however; when I arrive, there’s just one other (non-staff) person in the place: Arnie Pie.

Arnie is a lovely chap to talk to, and – after discovering that he was here to support his friend Caroline Melia – I asked him about his Fringe assault; he seemed very open and honest and forthcoming, and we swap stories and recommendations. Eventually we’re escorted downstairs into the small performance space, and it’s set up like an seventies-ish kitchen: table in the centre of the room surrounded on three sides by chairs, with a bar in the corner; to the side of the bar sat the tech for the show, looking slightly sheepish.

Arnie and I magnanimously bicker over the optimal seats, and – just before the lights “drop” – we’re joined at the table by two more people. Caroline Melia then gently introduces herself, and set the scene: she’s English, she’s backpacking around the world, she’s found the (gorgeous) city of Christchurch. She’s happily sharing a (dubious) flat with another girl, she’s found a job at an Irish bar, she’s saving up money before moving onto her next adventure, and… an earthquake hit.

What followed that introduction (which included a charmingly lo-fi recreation of the earthquake (and its aftershocks) by a massive bass speaker and the tech wobbling furniture and knocking props over with a broom handle while flicking the lights) had less to do with the earthquake, and more to do with Melia’s interactions with other people in the subsequent days and weeks… and months. And with many buildings becoming unliveable post-quake, the affordability of backpacking had an impact on the backpacking community; as a result, the search for stable (both physical and psychological) lodgings also form a tentpole of Cracked.

There’s a wonderfully gritty tension set up following the quake, with her bar being one of the few spaces for people to congregate, but much of the narrative focusses on Melia’s search for solace in drink. And men, whom she somewhat bitterly abstracted away as bottles of booze – Rum, Corona, Margherita – but those references could inadvertently serve as double-duty for her own alcohol abuse. And this revealed a bit of a letdown with Melia’s storytelling: there doesn’t feel like a cohesive approach to telling her tales… she just jumps from story to story, in the same way she moves from share-house to share-house, or man to man.

The earthquake itself… well, its impact is never really felt (except via the bass speaker rumbles), and only ever obliquely referenced: it forms a very loose framework for the rest of Melia’s stories. And, whilst Melia is conversational in her presentation, she spends a lot of time hiding behind the bar checking her script notes… and the end of the show, marked by the passing around of holiday snaps, was a confusing denouement – was this a happy ending?

In the end, I get the impression that Melia was trying to suggest that the aftermath of the earthquake had a direct and adverse affect on her personal relationships… but I just couldn’t buy that. It felt far more likely that she was choosing to hang around some shitty people – though what influence her experience had on those choices is another story, and one not really explored. Which is a shame, really: Cracked offered so much potential, but only delivered glimpses of satisfying theatre.

[2013064] The Effervescent Shaggy Doo Beats

[2013064] The Effervescent Shaggy Doo Beats

Charles Crompton @ La Bohème

10:30pm, Tue 26 Feb 2013

Shaggy Doo Beats is another in the long list of events that I’ve Shortlisted – but never actually seen – for as long as I can recall seeing the name; the idea of beat poetry in a cabaret setting has great appeal to me, but I’ve always chickened out of seeing him… the short runs, the out-of-the-way-venues, and a touch of trepidation all contributed to my avoidance.

But I’ve tried to make a concerted effort to see repeat neglected Shortlisters this year, and so I dragged myself to La Bohème to find a… well, reserved crowd. Not packed to the gills, just a comfortable size… and quiet.

I must admit to being a little taken aback – but delighted – to see The Jazzcateers (Chris Soole as Musical Director and saxophone, Rob Eyers on drums, and Ben Fuller on double bass) open up the show (and provide musical backing); it’s the second time I’d seen Soole this Fringe (after The New Cabal), and The Jazzcateers pumped out some deep grooves and unexpected swing (and was that a bit of Bronski Beat that they covered?).

A video screen started playing clips of Charles Crompton interviewing various luminaries (including Raymond J. Bartholomeuz) around various Artist Bars of bygone Festivals and Fringes (was that the Red Square of 1996?); and when the band kicked in a rendition of the Scooby Doo Theme, Crompton alighted the stage in a silver space-suit with exaggerated flares (replete with yellow & brown trim), and Shaggy Doo Beats B.O.P. (Bachelor of Poetry) had arrived: a raconteur, a beat poet, a man of questionable fashion sense. That hat, whilst undoubtedly iconic, is a shocker.

With The Jazzcateers providing a platform for his performance, Shaggy Doo Beats’ poetry can veer between well-contructed, comfortable, comedic poems, to stream-of-consciousness so-weird-it’s-funny jumbles; the shorter pieces are fantastic, punchy enough to make their point and escape, with the longer poems occasionally outstaying their welcome. But Crompton is clearly a clever wordsmith, and his works (orated from a book) are accented by the musical backing; together, they form a very satisfying pairing.

For all the exaggerated oddballness of the Shaggy Doo Beats character, The Effervescent Shaggy Doo Beats delivered a surprisingly cool torrent of beat-inspired poetry. That it had an equally cool swing-jazz backing was a massive bonus; this was a bloody fun (and crazy cool) performance that reminded me that sometimes I should see more of those oddball shows that occasionally scare me away.

[2013063] Limbo

[2013063] Limbo

Strut & Fret @ The Garden of Unearthly Delights – Paradiso

8:45pm, Tue 26 Feb 2013

Strut & Fret’s reputation for producing shows that become poster-children for the Fringe is beyond compare: Cantina is the most recent example, but the Strut & Fret involvement in The Garden has also seen shows such as La Clique (and its more recent incarnation La Soirée) all became populist must-see spectacles.

But there’s a level of predictability that comes with these events – they’re all meticulously constructed, to be sure, but they become somewhat formulaic in their content – and so I wind up carrying preconceived notions into the shows that carry that flagship billing. Expectations are set: the show would likely have a loose visual aesthetic, possibly a complementary aural theme, and some polished feats of flexibility and strength portrayed with slightly adult overtones.

So… that’s what I expected from Limbo. And, truth be told, I was unsure whether I’d even bother going – that’s how convinced I was that there would be little new on display.

But when some relatively Fringe-savvy friends started reporting that Limbo was most certainly different (in a good way) to the aforementioned shows, I wavered; there were still some tickets available for Cheap Tuesday (this being the first time I can remember targeting the cheap seats!), so I quickly snaffled a pair. My usual Fringe Buddy was unable to attend, so the offer went out to my Twitter followers: a ticket for the price of a beer and a chat (what a bargain, eh? If only you followed me on Twitter! ;)

Jane took me up on the offer and, as we chatted in the beer queue (thus fulfilling the payment requirements), one of her friends kindly planted himself in the Limbo queue for us. By the time we had obtained our beverages and located him, the snaking line had just started filing into Paradiso; her friend was at the far end of the top of the u-turn in the queue (which then straightened out for the rest of the waiting patrons). To save walking the pointless ten metres up and back on the u-turn, the people in front of us were just waiting for the rest of the u-turn to move to the opposite side of the “u”, hence allowing them to close the loop and shorten the queue somewhat; however, the people behind us started getting incredibly irate, and the yelling began: “if you don’t fucking move, we’re cutting in fucking front of you.”

Which I thought was a little… well, harsh. Unnecessary, even.

The “waiting” group started pointing out the efficiency of their intention with… well, a sense of gloating superiority; this did little to reduce the tension, and the bickering and aggro continued until we were inside the Spiegeltent – not really a chill start to proceedings. Once inside, though, one of the Paradiso staff recognised Jane and ushered us away from the teeming masses; did we mind sitting across the aisle from one another if we were down the front? We barely even looked at each other for confirmation – “hell no!” – and so I found myself front-and-centre on an aisle (sitting next to another of Jane’s acquaintances), with Jane herself on the aisle one row back (and yet, due to a quirk of seating geometry I still haven’t quite figured out yet, level with me).

Anyway: awesome seats. I was very pleased; I was being given every opportunity to experience Limbo at its best.

And the show opened more-or-less as expected: Sxip Shirey led an eclectic musical troupe (including a tuba and trumpet) through a smokey number that matched the dreamlike dry-ice atmosphere, before Jonathan Nosan performed some feats of physical flexibility that, upon reflection, were pretty bloody amazing… but, at the time, I was somewhat blasé: after all, I’d seen some pretty good routines earlier in the evening, and these tricks didn’t feel that much more impressive.

They were, of course, but I needed distance and hindsight to be able to see it.

Some fire breathing and aerial routines followed, but – aside from the tuba player producing a brilliant dub-step musical number – I felt like I was being pleasantly entertained, rather than enthralled. Happy, but not delighted. I remember checking the time at about halfway through the show.

And then it all happened.

Three men swayed out over the crowd on metal poles, my proximity such that I could see the beads of sweat on the performers as they slid past… as well as the strain on the poles; I was gasping as much at the engineering as the spectacle. Elevated pole balancing a metre from me, muscles straining, then the implausibility of Mikael Bres hopping one-handed from pole to pole. Then the magic component: an impalement, again only metres away, as Nosan descends to purgatory (through the loose narrative of the show). And the closing act, a time-tested-and-true disappearing girl routine, that still has me scratching my head.

And it was all there. Right there in front of me.

For all my indifference regarding the first half of the show, the second half of Limbo was totally worth the price of admission. It felt new, fresh, innovative… and, what’s more, it was a quality spectacle that almost – almost – equalled the superb Smoke and Mirrors as my favourite big-budget variety show. Sure, it wasn’t worth a standing ovation (as much as one woman vainly tried to encourage), but it was certainly a bloody wonderful experience from my – admittedly superb – position in the crowd.

[2013062] Morgan & West: Clockwork Miracles

[2013062] Morgan & West: Clockwork Miracles

Morgan & West @ The Garden of Unearthly Delights – Le Cascadeur

7:15pm, Tue 26 Feb 2013

I had been really careful about scheduling Morgan & West in this Fringe; after not seeing them last year, I felt like I had to honour my friend Sam’s suggestion this time around. The Clockwork Miracles précis didn’t exactly attract me, but… I was there out of duty. I owed Sam.

But then, about halfway through the show, another act’s name popped into my head… and I realised that Morgan & West weren’t actually who Sam had suggested at all. And that was a double bummer, because I really wasn’t enjoying the show at that point… which meant that, on top of not actually satisfying the debt I felt, I was wasting a perfectly good prime timeslot.

Worse still, I’d first bumped into the self-anointed Time Travelling Magicians as I had scurried through The Garden towards their show; they had attempted to spruik me and, as I flashed my ticket when they expressed cool disbelief at my enthusiastic assurance that I was actually about to see their show, I actually felt like they cold-shouldered me. How odd, I had thought: I’m not even in the venue yet, and the performers have got me off-side.

And whilst their Victorian presentation and schtick is certainly unique, the language and mannerisms become tiresome after awhile; worse, there were few tricks that I hadn’t seen elsewhere in the previous fortnight. Card tricks and sleight-of-hand routines failed to excite, though the interest picked up when the audience was involved: the tricks were (again) familiar, but the panache of the two English gentleman (and, in particular, the handling of their audience marks) provided something worth smiling about.

In the end, though, I was left with the impression that Clockwork Miracles was better suited to a parlour presentation than the wide open spaces of Le Cascadeur… maybe in a tighter space I wouldn’t have felt as detached from the performance. Then again, maybe I just needed a more positive impression of the chaps going into the show…

[2013061] Another Point of View

[2013061] Another Point of View

AfterDark Theatre @ The Birdcage

6:00pm, Tue 26 Feb 2013

A curiously lyrical précis for a circus piece attracts me to Another Point of View, and initially I had flashbacks to the first show I saw at The Birdcage this year: after the house lights drop, the stage lighting is… well, low. Dim. But there’s (just) enough light to make out a trunk at the back of the stage, from which limbs appear in a strange dance.

Eventually two women (Jacinta Rohan and Vicky Aisha Blackthorn) extract themselves from the trunk – an impressive bit of contortion, now that I think about it – and start awkwardly wandering around the stage. They’re clearly friends (or sisters), but they communicate only through looks and small gestures; and despite the implied familiarity of the two, there’s also a tension present.

The circus elements of the performance are contemplative and refined; there’s a lot of balance and stretching routines that border on the impossible, but maintain a sense of elegance. And while the aerial hoop routine is decent, the hula hooping is flat-out amazing – one of the best of its kind that I’ve seen in years.

In between the (relatively infrequent) circusy bits, there’s a few narrative bits that, whilst almost dainty, somehow extend the idea of intimate friendship between the two; most involve the performers watching old “talkies” on the telly or engaging in some more menial balancing. But there’s also a really clever piece where they both eat breakfast cereal with spoons held by their feet whilst laying on their stomachs… go on, try it. It’s silly to look at, messy thereafter, but a gigglingly fun thing to witness.

There’s some really wonderful bits in Another Point of View – the women are clearly very talented, and some of the humour-imbued narrative interludes were quite clever… and that’s before I consider the sapphic overtones of the piece. But the torporeal pacing sadly left me feeling like it was an exercise in style over substance; as beautiful as the generated mood was, the audience was left to wallow in it for far too long before being presented another piece of… well, interest. What’s there was good… it’s just that there were too many points where I was given time to realise that I was not being engaged.