[2015043] mix juice

[2015043] mix juice

Makoto Inoue @ Gluttony – The Bally

10:00pm, Wed 18 Feb 2015

There’s one person waiting inside The Bally as I rush in at the last possible minute: he’s sitting in the second row from the back, but I – in trying to support the artist – sat in the second row from the front. I turned around and beckoned the stranger forward; it was only when he reluctantly sat across the aisle from me that I noticed he was a Honey Pot delegate.

Great – I was the only paying punter at the show. Again.

We got to talking, and it turns out that he’s the Artistic Director for the Hi Seoul Festival, so we rambled about Seoul and swapped notes about other shows. It was a really lovely chat, and he gave me his business card; later in the week, we ran into each other at another show, and he gave me the Hi Seoul programme… and another life goal.

The house lights dropped, and a pre-recorded backing track sprang to life: a spotlight picks out Makoto Inoue as he mimes his way onstage in the form of a robot. His moves are good – sharp and crisp – and the convergence of the mime and sound effects works well… until the sound abruptly shifted from a mechanised beat to the gurgles, screams, and cries of a baby.

Inoue’s mime loses its stiffness as he creates the impression of a baby suckling at a giant teat. How weird! I thought… How Japanese! But the scene kept going and going and going and more suckling and more crying and more suckling and this is getting awkward now nope let’s keep grabbing that giant imaginary breast and keep going on and on and on…

Inoue suckled at that mimed breast for what felt like an hour. It was painful to watch. I glanced across at my new Honey Pot friend, only to discover that he’d already moved back to his original seat at the back of the venue. I glanced at my phone – the show had been only been going ten minutes.

The suckling eventually (thankfully!) stopped, and we return to the robot; it’s being improved, it’s now a warrior, and the Terminator 2 theme accompanies the robot’s deployment to the battlefield… cue another painful hour (or perhaps five minutes) of protracted gunfight sequences, sound garish and mime convincing.

And then the robot finds a baby on the battlefield. A baby. A crying, screaming, anxious-to-suckle baby.

…and at that point, I couldn’t wait for mix juice to end.

Regardless, I tried to support the man onstage, miming his heart out in this story that was acoustically assembled and competently performed. When he reached his audience interaction bits, I did what I could. And when the show was over, I offered him polite applause… and then looked around for my Korean friend. He had already left. I was the only audience member left (apart from the bored-looking tech).

Inoue came up to me and shook my hand. “I’m sorry you didn’t have more people,” I offered noncommittally; he smiled, and still holding my hand, pulled me closer to him: “I need word of mouth!” he said in a practised phrase that was more-than-coloured by desperation.

I’ve never felt more pressured in my life. And I didn’t like that at all. And my lingering memories of mix juice will be a lovely Korean man, a sweaty Japanese mime desperately telling me to shill for him, and that fucking mewling baby character.

And I started musing about all disputes between Japan and Korea, and wondered whether I’d inadvertently seen that played out this evening.

[2015042] Marcus Ryan – Love Me Tinder

[2015042] Marcus Ryan – Love Me Tinder

Marcus Ryan @ Producers Cranny

8:45pm, Wed 18 Feb 2015

Although this show wasn’t initially on my Short(ha!)list, friends had talked up Marcus Ryan’s performance to the point where I thought I should check him out.

You know what? My “instincts” are a better judge of a show than my “friends”.

Things were promising early: Ryan starts the show in the character of his own manager, and there’s a few awkward, self-effacing laughs to be had at his expense. But when Ryan himself takes to the stage… well, that’s when things went downhill.

I’m guessing the first fifteen minutes of the show were self-aggrandising career highlights – “I’ve performed in a squillion countries, I’ve been a professional comic for ten years” – which made the hackneyed “welcome to the show / isn’t my venue shit” padding seem a little whiny. I managed to glean a couple of half-smiles from Ryan’s early online dating material, but the Tinder-related content (which only appeared in the back half of the show) was predictable, at best. In fact, the only “material” that managed to rise above the “meh” rating came as a result of the couples in the audience that had met via online dating (including one platonic couple)… their quips eclipsed anything Ryan himself had penned.

When I read my tweet about this show, I smiled in recollection… I really enjoyed writing that at the time. But now, nine months later, thinking about Love Me Tinder actually makes me a little bit angry. I found it absolutely banal and a waste of my time… but maybe that was just me, or this night, or this audience, or a confluence of events that conspired to create a crappy event. I’m sure Marcus Ryan is a nice guy, but I really did not enjoy this chunk of my life.

[2015041] Handle It – A One Woman Show

[2015041] Handle It – A One Woman Show

Laura Jackson @ Bakehouse Theatre – Studio

7:30pm, Wed 18 Feb 2015

I was beginning to think that we’d returned to the halcyon days of the 2000 Fringe, when every second show was a one-hand, multi-character treatise… after my previous show, Handle It featured writer/performer Laura Jackson performing a seven-character narrative exploring one of the darker sides of social networking: the posting of compromising photos without consent, or revenge porn.

It opens with a bloke sitting on the couch, putting his Playstation 4 controller through its paces with hungover determination. James answers his phone, and at once we can see the conflicted male ego on display: equal parts bravado and fear, as the one-sided conversation lays bare the premise of the show: last night, revealing photos were taken of 18-year-old university student Kelsey Armitage without her knowledge, and they were being posted on the usual networking sites.

As Jackson performs a quick costume change, a Facebook chat is projected onto the stage: it shows the aftermath of the photos being posted online, and the response of the guys felt absolutely true-to-life… and sickening, with vicious objectification and testosterone-fuelled bullshit on display. Thereafter comes the fallout: Jackson flits between two of Kelsey’s sisters (with differing views on the perpetrator, and Kelsey herself), an internet sexologist lecturing on modern social behavioural issues, a young solicitor, and a local cop, already weary of cases like Kelsey’s.

Frustration with the lack of legal recourse – not to mention the fact that the photos are already “out there” – propels the story along at a rapid clip; but the persistent secondary thread – a chat session between a male and one of Kelsey’s friends, projected onstage during costume changes – feels terribly contrived. Apart from the toned-down language, that chat is the only part of the dialogue that doesn’t ring true.

Handle It swings for the fences early, attacking rape culture and the pervasive undercurrent of the patriarchy in society with deserved venom… but as the play touches on Kelsey’s fragility – and the eventual “resolution” of the crime as being a domestic violence issue – these big intentions feel watered down and, worse, trivialised. And that’s a bit of a shame, because the bulk of the performance deals with the big issues really well… it’s just let down by some loose writing elsewhere.

[2015040] Media Release

[2015040] Media Release

Isabella Valette @ Producers Warehouse

6:00pm, Wed 18 Feb 2015

April Fools wants to be a star, and isn’t afraid of a little compromise to get it. After an ex-schoolmate suggests that reality TV would offer an easy path to stardom, April worms her way into the faux-reality star factory… and, along with the cast of characters that surround her, discovers that there is a price to be paid.

Isabella Valette wrote and performed all the characters in Media Release: April gets the majority of her time, but April’s agent is a wonderfully insidious creation, with her (closeted gay) brother bringing both humour and a hint of darkness. The characters of April’s celebrity boyfriend and sister-in-law, however, feel a little less developed.

Her performances were sound, but I found the plot – and a fair amount of the dialogue – to be hopelessly familiar and stereotyped… and maybe that’s the point, except that there were few twists or surprises in the script. Sprinkling musical mash-ups into the performance helps liven things up a little: Valette can certainly sing, but her voice was often drowned out by a hot mix, meaning that the satire and snark of her songs was mostly lost.

Media Release‘s saving grace is its denouement: rather than some contrived happy ending, an appearance on This Is Your Death puts a deliciously grim spin on the preceding actions, and appealed mightily to the misanthrope in me. But it’s not really a sufficient payoff for the effort of wading through the hackneyed majority; I’m sure Isabella Valette will produce some great work in the future, but Media Release should probably be considered a well-intentioned stepping-stone.

[2015039] Rhino Room Late Show 10th Year Anniversary!

[2015039] Rhino Room Late Show 10th Year Anniversary!

Mickey D, Dave Campbell, Demi Lardner, Damien Power, Matt Vesely, Tom Ballard, Celia Pacquola @ Rhino Room – Upstairs

11:00pm, Tue 17 Feb 2015

It’s only now that I’m writing this post – nine months after seeing the show – that I realised that I only rocked up to Rhino’s Late Show once this year. Previous years have seen me previewing comedians at multiple Late Shows; but the prevalence of other late-night ensemble shows, as well as Rhino’s refinement of their schedule (with Set List taking a prominent spot) meant that the Late Show just wasn’t as convenient for me this year. Apparently.

But it’s still a pretty good late-night venue for a giggle. You’d think that, having seen Mickey D emcee a number of times, that his Adelaide references may have started to get old; they haven’t, and his increasingly athletic appearance seems to be bringing a much more focussed assault on the audience’s funny bones as he worked the crowd with ease. Dave Campbell was the first main act of the night, and contributed his fantastic crap-share-house-in-Prospect story, which is always good for a laugh; Demi Lardner followed him with a fantastic (and typically surreal) bit on the Dyson Airblade (two words: ghost fisting). Damien Power – who I’ve yet to see perform an entire set – rounded out the first bracket with a storming piece on cyborg advertising; whilst pre-bought tickets precluded me from seeing him this year, I’ll most certainly be seeking him out in the future, because he was brilliant.

Matt Vesely (one of the young Next Gen comics) opened the second bracket with some amiable discussion of basketball shorts and dubious Alanis Morissette pranks, and the ever-appealing Tom Ballard kicked off his spot with some cheap laughs at his mike stand, before moving on to some “celebrity” nightclub toilet hijinks… never afraid to gossip, our Tom! Finally, Celia Pacquola took the headline spot; whilst I was initially concerned that I may hear some material repeated from earlier in the evening, she smashed out all-new material: the joys of being single and the protocols of farting within couples both provided heaps of laughs, and – once again – she proved that she’s a comedic force to be reckoned with.

Once again, the Rhino Late Show proved to deliver a solid ninety minutes of entertainment, with Pacquola and Power being the picks of the acts, and Mickey D hosting like a champion. And, with the future of the Rhino Room up in the air, I’m kinda sad I didn’t make it to more Late Shows this year.

[2015038] Dr. Brown: Bexperiments…with Terry Nameo

[2015038] Dr. Brown: Bexperiments…with Terry Nameo

Philip Burgers & Terry Nameo @ Tuxedo Cat – Perske Pavilion

9:45pm, Tue 17 Feb 2015

Dr Brown I know and love… and, more importantly, I already knew was in top form this year. But who was Terry Nameo? A neo-clowning guru? Brown’s sensei, or protégé? As Brown and Nameo walked among the crowd from the TuxCat box office to the Perske, an attempted chat with the pair didn’t really enlighten me at all… I decided that the best thing to do – as with all Dr Brown shows – was to go in without any preconceptions.

Just as well, really.

After casually wandering around the near-capacity crowd and misting us with water spray bottles, the two men met each other mid-stage and started greeting each other. The greetings became longer, wordier, and started to be accompanied by light touches: a shake of the hand, a brush of the shoulder. But the words soon became secondary, as the physical contact started to linger. A sense of longing developed.

And I was thinking: man, those boys have totally nailed physical expression. Everything about their movements started emitting love, and before long they were silently screaming lust… I felt like I was watching two lovers hook up for the first time.

…and then they leapt into a buttered-bread food fight (which just happened to engage the crowd). No biggie.

Brown sat with the audience and directed Nameo in an old man sketch… but the intent behind it was obtuse. In fact, the intent behind all of the show was murky.

That’s not to say it wasn’t funny: it certainly was. That’s not to say it wasn’t well performed: Nameo appeared to keep up with Brown’s exemplary clowning, and (as mentioned above) their general acting skills were quite astounding. But – as with all of Brown’s shows – there’s an element of “What are they doing?” incredulity onstage, where you can’t quite figure out whether the entire show is improvised or not. After all this time, I’m still left confused… amazed, and confused.

After the show, I hang around and say hello to Phil: he greeted me warmly and introduced me to Terry. I bit the bullet and asked them how much they were improvising: “It’s still forming,” they said. I told them that I’m amazed there’s a structure at all; they both smiled cheekily.

I liked that.

[2015037] Matt Price: A British Bloke’s Guide to Being a Man

[2015037] Matt Price: A British Bloke’s Guide to Being a Man

Matt Price @ Austral Hotel – Red Room

8:30pm, Tue 17 Feb 2015

In my experience, seeing back-to-back standup shows can often be fraught with danger: a bad show early on can sour the mood for subsequent performers, whereas a great show can expose the flaws of those later in the run.

So it was this evening.

I’d just seen Celia Pacquola perform a stellar set, then rushed in to Matt Price amiably chatting to the small crowd that had turned up for his show. And Price can tell a story, and most certainly has plenty of interesting stories to tell: drawing from his own life experiences, we hear about people and anecdotes that befell him during his blue-collar working life (who knew fisheries could generate such humour?) and, later, tales of prison (for the insane) gigs gone wrong.

The stories themselves are interesting and well-told: Price is an affable chap. But at times his connection to the audience seemed strained, and the segues between his tales are clumsy (at best) and – in contrast to my previous show – felt absolutely amateurish.

And I’m sure Price is not an amateur, but it’d be a lie to say that A British Bloke’s Guide to Being a Man (a deceptive title) wasn’t a massive let-down after the high of Pacquola.

[2015036] Celia Pacquola – Let Me Know How It All Works Out

[2015036] Celia Pacquola – Let Me Know How It All Works Out

Celia Pacquola @ Garden of Unearthly Delights – Studio 7

7:15pm, Tue 17 Feb 2015

After a huge amount of buzz, I was gutted to not be able to see Celia Pacquola at the Rhino Room last year; by the time I’d had explicit recommendations for her show, the remainder of her short run had been sold out. But I resolved to not miss out this year, and so – running late from my previous show, and with a plan for a quick escape to another show – I found myself on the aisle way down the back of Studio 7.

Pacquola’s entrance is almost ditzy, and she generates an immediate rapport with the audience. The central thread of her show – a meeting with a fortune teller – presents a deep mine of material, but she effortlessly dances around it with with well-written sidetracks, tying it all together with a fantastic denouement. Along the way, there’s plenty of self-deprecating remarks, a little bit of potentially-embarrasing oversharing, and oodles of charm.

And there’s not much else to say, really. Despite the hype that had been built up within me, Celia Pacquola exceeded all expectations with a remarkably charming presence and sparkling delivery of some gorgeously written material.

[2015035] Pale Face Cold Blood

[2015035] Pale Face Cold Blood

Mina Mokhtarani @ Tuxedo Cat – Mayall Room

6:00pm, Tue 17 Feb 2015

As I entered the Mayall Room, I was surprised and disappointed: surprised that the now-familiar rows of seats had been removed, leaving just a ring of seats around the edge of the room facing a punching bag in their centre; disappointed by the fact that I was the last of six audience members in the room. Next to the punching bag, with a look of bloody-minded focus on her face, was Mina Mokhtarani: clad in gym gear, she was skipping, the rope clipping the roofing beams.

With the door shut behind me, Mokhtarani launches into her monologue mid-skip: she is Zara, a translator working in an immigration detention centre. Her work has placed her in situations where she has witnessed detainees being mentally, verbally, and physically abused, and when she attempts to report the violence – and the poor living and medical conditions available to the detainees – she is ostracised from her cohort.

Mokhtrani delivers Zara’s tale whilst continually exercising: she’s always moving, always exerting, and her sweat is dripping onto the floor before the end of the show. Her script wraps around the exertion, and whilst the high-impact exercise early in the performance works well with her descriptions of violence, the later parts of her routine seem a bit dissonant as Zara returns to Australia, suffering from post-traumatic stress and professional isolation.

Pale Face Cold Blood is a curious creation: the weighty content was delivered quite deliberately, as necessitated by Moktarani’s constant physical activity. But the regular pace of her skipping, boxing, and weightlifting created an almost metronomic delivery, impeding my ability to engage. Maybe the decision to keep a relentless pace was meant to parallel the constant moral abuse that Zara was privy to; a brave decision, then, but one which perhaps impacted my ability to connect with the performance. And that’s a real shame, because Pale Face Cold Blood is a potent text, especially in our current political climate.

[2015034] Come Heckle Joshua Ladgrove whilst he talks at you for 52 minutes in exchange for some of your money.

[2015034] Come Heckle Joshua Ladgrove whilst he talks at you for 52 minutes in exchange for some of your money.

Joshua J. Ladgrove @ Tuxedo Cat – Rivers Studio

11:00pm, Mon 16 Feb 2015

Josh Ladgrove opens another show in his unplanned “Come Heckle…” series by stating that this would be a standup show… but also that his doesn’t “do” standup. That this show was going to be shit. That we were free to come and go as we wished. That comments from the audience (of which at least half were other artists) were welcome.

This resulted in a bit of a buoyant mood in the room, and Ladgrove moved into some readings from some old Bond novels before flirting with a few other bits. The comments from the audience started early – surpassed only in frequency by sound-bite heckles from Josh’s tech, Nathan – and at one point Tessa Waters suggested that Josh drop the accent from a character he was performing; “That’s pretty ironic, coming from you,” retorted Ladgrove.

As to be expected when I sit in the front row (which is often), I was dragged up onstage… to help simulate sex with Josh. After a brief discussion about my shoes (again, to be expected, and they facilitated a cunning callback later in the show), Josh hesitated a little before deciding that I’d be a woman in this mimed sexual act. “Fine,” I said, and lay on the stage with my legs in the air. As his comically exaggerated fucking commenced, he asked me to moan for him; “No fucking way,” I protested, “I’m not a moaner.” Again he asked me to moan: “I can’t do it realistically,” I complained again, laughing. There had been some laughs from the viewing crowd throughout, but as Josh abandoned the scene and directed me to sit back down, there were some protests from a few audience members… “That’s stage rape,” they said only half-jokingly. I tried to placate them – “I was willing, just not a moaner” – but it felt like there was a temporary rift between the audience and the stage.

After a few other experiments – and many more perfectly-timed “Fuck you!” heckles from Nathan’s soundboard – Ladgrove decided that the show was pretty much done. He attempted to leave the room, only to discover Dr Brown waiting just outside the Rivers Studio. “Are you doing a show?” said Brown… and so began the second “half”, a ridiculously experimental period that saw Josh trot out new characters and old, engage in a pool noodle battle with Dr Brown, and – responding to Brown’s goading – threaten a perform-til-you-drop session.

(credit to Shane Adamczak for the photo)

There’s little in the title that speaks with any real truth: 52 minutes became an hour-and-a-half, there was no cash exchange, and the heckles were more constructive criticism than anything. But as an opportunity to explore a less familiar medium, whilst in a fairly safe and forgiving space, this would have been invaluable to the performer. As an audience member, it was a creative and confusing maelstrom of ideas that felt like a lightning strike.

[2015033] The Sound of Nazis

[2015033] The Sound of Nazis

James McCann, Hayman Kent, Kel Balnaves, Florence Bourke, Brandon Mannarino, Chris Knight, Leigh Qurban @ Tuxedo Cat – Mayall Room

9:45pm, Mon 16 Feb 2015

After the joyful success of Wolf Creek: The Musical, hopes were high for another James McCann-penned musical parody. Unfortunately, I’m a bit of a fussy bugger when it comes to tropes… and if there’s one trope I hate almost as much as zombies, it’s Nazis.

As a result, I was a little… well, skeptical about this pisstake of The Sound of Music.

The Sound of Nazis was pretty much what you’d expect given McCann’s input: cheeky songs and loads of bluster. While McCann sat at his keyboard throughout, mouthing the words to other character’s songs, Kel Balnaves uses his broad ocker voice to wonderful effect as Macca, the profane Australian nun, and provides an absolutely killer evil stare as Adolf Hitler. Chris Knight surprised with a great singing voice as von Trappe (whose buxom daughter and lecherous son brought a lot of groan worthy laughs to proceedings), but the star of the production was Hayman Kent as Maria: besides a gorgeous singing voice, the sequence with Maria in the nunnery was gold.

But really, The Sound of Nazis is all about McCann’s glorious songs… and god-awful puns, which were dictionary-definition so-bad-it’s-good. And whilst the overall package didn’t quite live up to the masterful Wolf Creek, the quality of the writing made this worth the effort.

[2015032] Stuart Bowden: Before Us

[2015032] Stuart Bowden: Before Us

Stuart Bowden @ Tuxedo Cat – Perske Pavilion

8:30pm, Mon 16 Feb 2015

Whilst I will enthusiastically state that I’ve loved Stuart Bowden’s work in the past, I’ve always felt a little… well, hesitant in offering a blanket recommendation to people about his work. Don’t get me wrong: I’ve enjoyed his shows very much, but I can’t escape the fact that the melancholy in which they’re marinaded can make them a little… challenging to get through. For me, anyway; his presentations have demanded that I, as an audience member, put some effort in to extract the satisfaction. It’s always been more than rewarding, to be sure, but I found myself trying to perk up prior to this show, anxious that I’d need to be in top form to get the most from it.

Introducing himself as a forest-dwelling creature, Bowden appears in a floppy green sleeping bag (or some such), as comical as ever. Through story and song (ukulele, keyboards, and vocals are looped in a gorgeous live musical score production) we learn that Bowden’s female character is the last of her species left alive; as is his wont, Bowden’s narrative conjures delight from the most morose details and emotions from the deaths of the creature’s parents.

And so we are taken on a lonely little journey, but one filled with unexpected cheer: Bowden’s green creature isn’t grimly upset with her lot, but you feel a real sense of hopelessness – pointlessness – as she demonstrates her day-to-day struggle to us. And it’s here that Bowden’s clowning skills come to the fore: the creature has a consistently odd style of walking when traversing the stage, and her power-walking was even weirder.

Once again, Bowden mines melancholy for much of the performance… but there’s a lightness, a sweetness, to his monologue that is refreshing compared to his previous works. At the end of the show, as the creature inches towards its demise (as forecast throughout), she encourages us to push the Perske’s seating aside so we could all lie with her on the floor, and Bowden leads us in a soft chant that (in retrospect) is hugely inappropriate, but felt oh-so-right at the time: We are all going to die.

I’ll go out on a limb and say that Before Us is Bowden’s most accessible work to date… and I think that’s because of the (relative) lack of whimsy. There’s still a tremendous amount of melancholy, but it’s presented in an almost dissonantly joyful manner; this presentation marks Before Us as a wonderfully unique performance.

[2015031] Discover Ben Target

[2015031] Discover Ben Target

Ben Target @ Tuxedo Cat – Perske Pavilion

7:15pm, Mon 16 Feb 2015

Even though the Fringe had only just started, there had been a bit of buzz around Ben Target; artist friends who were aware of my love of absurdist performances had already urged me to check him out. And I’d already been introduced to Target via a mutual friend whilst at the TuxCat one night… he’d appeared to be an interesting chap, quiet and very inwardly focussed.

It wasn’t just me feeling the buzz, though: the Perske was pleasingly packed for this performance, and – based on the laughs generated from Ben Target’s introductory battle with a ladder – they were here to relish the oddness.

And make no mistake: Ben Target brings some serious weirdness to the party.

Most of that weirdness comes in the contrast between his actions and his demeanour: Target leans heavily on audience engagement for his laughs, but he constantly holds them at arm’s length due to the blankness of his expression, which approaches affronted coldness. An example: he instructed a grinning orange-haired bloke in the crowd (i.e. me) to select a card, and presented a deck of cards held square, not fanned. I somehow thought that he meant that he wanted me to request a card, so I replied “I’ll have the King of Clubs, then.” There was no flicker in his expression, no quaver in his voice, as he expressed his disgust in my mistake; unflappable, he started flicking cards at me from the deck whilst addressing the rest of the audience. Faster and faster the cards came until the deck was exhausted, whereupon he moved onto his next bit.

Later in the show, he feigns an apology to me: he presents me with a flower. I thank him; he presents me with a small bunch of flowers. I thank him again… a bigger bunch is my reward, with increasingly large collections of flowers forthcoming. Eventually, I’m presented a (leaking) bag of cornflour… and I’m at a loss to explain why I was suddenly surrounded by all this crap.

A lot of Target’s bits seem opportunistic, leaning on the goodwill of the audience and the small collection of props that he’s brought with him; once again, I have no idea how scripted the performance was. I also have no idea why I found his blank expression so hilarious. I also have no idea what kind of mind can conjure humour from these trivialities. And I certainly have no idea why I find his web site so damn funny.

Ben Target is another one of those performers that the public will either Love (as in scream-it-from-the-rooftops) or Hate (as in this-isn’t-comedy-this-is-just-a-guy-doing-dumb-shit). As regular readers (ha!) might have guessed, I most definitely fall into the former category: Target has worked the minimalist form of (seemingly-)improvisational humour down to a fine art, and his equally-minimalist expressions helped conjure a delirious cycle of expectation and release within this purveyor. It’s a weirdly wonderful performance that absolutely worked for me.

[2015030] Flying Dreams

[2015030] Flying Dreams

Aaron Jessup @ Bakehouse Theatre – Main Stage

6:00pm, Mon 16 Feb 2015

Sure, it’s the first Monday night of the 2015 Fringe, but the crowd that turned up for the opening performance of Flying Dreams this evening was disappointingly small… the kind of size that makes my heart weep for performers. And Aaron Jessup has a very soft, almost quiet manner of addressing the audience… for some reason, I kept reading heart-breaking disappointment into those mannerisms.

On a stage accessorised with just a suitcase, Jessup presents an autobiographical tale of his pursuit of his passion: street performance and, in particular, juggling. There’s surprisingly little actual story here – youngster with dodgy family life makes a friend, they juggle a bit in San Francisco, there’s an inspiring leap-into-the-unknown as Jessup tries his hand as a pro street performer in Europe (battling his inherent shyness along the way), a comfortable return to San Francisco that spans 4 years, then a present day leap to Australia.

But whilst the plot may be thin (and bordering on twee), the performance is not. There’s plenty of juggling with some great set pieces – Jessup’s triples and quads are impressive within the confines of the Bakehouse, especially with the small audience huddled up close, and the drug-addled glow-in-the-dark sequence is bloody impressive.

It’s really hard to dislike anything about Flying Dreams – Aaron Jessup is a thoroughly affable host, and whilst the narrative aspects of the show may be a little thin, they’re at least delivered with conviction… and his craft is certainly well presented, with all the polish of his years of street performance. Having said that, it’s also hard to really rave about Flying Dreams, too… but it’s certainly engaging entertainment.

[2015029] Shotspeare presents Romeo & Juliet

[2015029] Shotspeare presents Romeo & Juliet

Shotspeare @ Garden of Unearthly Delights – Umbrella Revolution

10:45pm, Sun 15 Feb 2015

I’ve typed it a squillion times on this blog: I love me some Shakespeare. I also love me some drinking. The idea that the two could be combined? Brilliant.

Or that was what I thought when I plonked Shotspeare into my Schedule, anyway… but experience has taught me that while having a boozy eight-show day is difficult enough, trying to do that on a forty-degree scorcher is a good way to physically bludgeon oneself.

As a result, I walked into Shotspeare’s performance of Romeo & Juliet completely sober… and that made me stand out from the crowd, the majority of whom would be comfortable with Fez Faanana’s 2:30am Fringe Club “double-fist that shit” last-drink calls.

The premise for Shotspeare’s performance is the tongue-in-cheek interpretation of The Bard’s work by five actors, assisted by one audience member (carefully chosen to be not too sozzled… initially), during which they all drink copious amounts of beer. Along the way, three audience-held “Shotspeare” cards could be played at any time, forcing the entire cast to neck vodka shots… resulting in an increasingly silly rendition. Luckily, the audience member chosen was pretty adept onstage, and comfortable with the extra tasks issued unto him via the occasional “Speech Wheel” interlude (he received the Spank, Saltines, and Drink “rewards”).

The performance was actually pretty solid – sure, it’s played for laughs with costume tomfoolery (problematic balloon breasts, ahoy!) and an occasional production aside (the shadow puppetry sex scene, to the tune of NIN’s Closer, is oh-so-right in context). Sure, there’s a few throwaway lines that remind me of Sound & Fury’s “ad libbing”, but for the most part it’s genuinely entertaining as the cast get increasingly drunk: two of the “Shotspeare” cards were played in the first five minutes (at the same time), with the third not long thereafter.

And I would’ve been happy with that, if it were not for other sections of the audience. It appeared that a good percentage of the crowd felt that their own inebriation allowed them to partake in the action as well; the cast did a pretty good job of keeping many of the more unruly peeps under control whilst encouraging the more entertaining outbursts, but the really drunk guys who had sat in the front row seemed to be in a world of their own: a world in which they would cackle in glee after yelling “Suck him off!” at the stage. Every couple of minutes.

And that’s the thing, really. I reckon that Shotspeare would be a brilliant experience in the right (i.e. sozzled) state of mind, with the right (i.e. not-a-random-Garden-wad) of people. As it was, I was left a little disappointed by this performance of Romeo & Juliet: entertained, yes, but some of that entertainment came from my own misanthropy. And that’s never really a good thing.