Postcard From Perth
Theatre Reviews and Reflections from WA
Fringe Benefits
Spring is burgeoning into summer here and Christmas
trees are blooming along the verges of increasingly cluttered freeways and roads as the festive season approaches. I’m not talking about traditional
introduced European conifers but the native WA Christmas tree: a variety of
mistletoe that blooms at this time of year with spectacular orange flowers. It’s
actually a tree-sized parasite that feeds off the roots of surrounding plants
within a radius of 50ms and doesn’t like too much water, so you don’t tend to
see them in gardens or nurseries but on neglected roadside stretches of sandy
soil all the way along the south-west coast from Geraldton to Israelite Bay. It
even fastens on underground electrical and telephone cables and irrigation
pipes given the chance. It’s not particular about soil or host-plants either; in
fact it survives when all other native vegetation has been replaced by
introduced grasses; and the trunk will grow back even when knocked over
provided the root isn’t too badly damaged. Like most parasites it sounds scary
but it’s actually defined as an ecological ‘keystone’ species that supports
biodiversity, especially bird and animal life.
For all these reasons the Christmas tree is a pretty good
image for the local fringe and independent theatre scene. I’ve seen three shows
in the last week that exemplify the strengths of this scene. Two are at The
Blue Room One and one at Perth Institute of Contemporary Arts.
*
The Blue Room is the cradle and home of independent
theatre in Perth. Located in an old heritage school building (the atmospheric main
space is in a former science lab) in the heart of the so-called Cultural Centre
in Northbridge just near Perth Station, it was set up in the late 80s by a collective
of actors and started programming seasons of work in the early 90s. When I
first came to Perth it was already a hive of activity; now thoughtfully
renovated it sports a refurbished front of house, bar and theatres, the main
space seating around 70 and the studio around 50 depending on the seating
configuration, which is pretty much up to the hirer. Confession: I’ve done
about ten shows here, and seen hundreds, and it’s pretty much my favourite small
‘found’ venue in Australia, both from an artist and audience perspective, with
Belvoir St and La Mama not far behind. It’s also the only venue in Perth
producing continuous work all year round. Diversity is high and
quality…diverse, ranging from what I would call (with no disrespect intended)
student theatre through to fringe, independent, experimental and alternative
theatre and dance, some of it easily the equal of what you can see on the
main-stage, or indeed anywhere else in the country. I’d happily go there any
night of the week and buy a ticket (if I can get one), have a drink at the cosy
and stylish bar, take it inside either of the atmospheric theatre spaces and
take my chances.
PICA next door was also set up in the late 80s as an
alternative arts space with an overtly contemporary and critical edge in a former
school building that boasts a magnificent clock tower (inside which I recently
performed as part of the Proximity Festival of one-on-one performance, about
which more later). It also has an excellent bar and café that hosts live music
and gets a pretty hip crowd after work on a Friday night. PICA has a magnificent
huge central exhibition space and a multitude of smaller galleries and studios but
also hosts an interesting medium-sized performance space. The focus here is
more firmly on contemporary and alternative performance; the previous Director
of PICA, Sarah Miller, was formerly Director of the Performance Space in
Sydney, and an erstwhile performance artist herself.
If The Blue Room is currently going from strength to
strength as a small independent theatre venue, PICA’s identity is now arguably
more defined by its visual art exhibitions than its performance program, which
offers less financial and production support to hirers than The Blue Room, is
less consistent in its programming and seems less of a priority for the current administration.
Perhaps this is also a reflection of the direction that contemporary performance
is taking: away from conventional (or even unconventional) theatre spaces and
practices, and towards more hybrid work by artists from multiple disciplines.
Indeed it’s interesting to note that the current performance work at PICA, Crash Course, is staged in one of the
upstairs studios (and is the work of a multi-skilled artist), while the
preceding Proximity Festival staged works throughout the building (by
performers and visual artists in equal measure). As a footnote, this tendency
is also reflected in the Australia Council’s recent decision to dissolve the so-called
‘silo’ structure represented by the more traditionally (or not so
traditionally) defined individual art-form Boards and replace it with something
less defined, more fluid and responsive. (Another confession: I was briefly on
the Theatre Board, and my mother Ros Bower was founding Director of the
erstwhile Community Arts Board, later the Community Cultural Development Unit,
now extinct.) Whether this will lead to a loss of diversity in terms of
art-forms, skills, artists and audiences – or even, in the language of arts
funding bureaucrats, a loss of ‘excellence’ in favour of ‘innovation’ – remains
to be seen.
*
Crash
Course is a stunning new work at PICA created and performed by
James Berlyn: dancer, community arts worker, director, facilitator, teacher,
instigator and co-curator of the Proximity Festival 2012 (at The Blue Room) and
2013 (at PICA) and champion of intimate, participatory and immersive theatre, his
one-on-one piece Tawdry Heartburn’s Manic Cures (involving manicure and
confession) having toured festivals around the country. Crash Course is directed by Nikki Heywood (who also has a venerable
history in contemporary performance) and features a cameo performance from
Sarah Nelson (likewise a multidisciplinary Perth-based performer with
particular experience in physical theatre and puppetry); but the bulk of its
conception and execution is very much made in Berlyn. In fact according the
program (which you receive in the form of a diploma after the show) he’s been
making it for four years. You can feel this in the work, which like the
Christmas tree sends its roots down deep into the earth but reaches high up
into the air.
James has said that his epiphany as a performer came
when he realized he didn’t want to go on ‘pretending’ anymore. I take this not
to mean he wanted to stop ‘dressing up and pretending’ (which is still
essential to what he does) but to stop pretending the audience wasn’t there.
This is the pretence known as ‘the fourth wall’. In participatory theatre, as
in stand-up comedy and other forms of audience-address, there is no ‘fourth
wall’; further, the defining boundary between audience and performer is
crossed, so that arguably there is no more ‘audience’ either, but rather
‘participants’ (although dressing-up-and-pretending is still used to allocate
roles). This crossing of boundaries and extension of role-playing makes
participatory theatre inherently transgressive.
Crash
Course is also immersive theatre, which implies not so much ‘no
fourth wall’ as ‘within four walls’. Indeed I’m reminded of the excellent
recent synonymous French film Entre les
murs (titled in English The Class) which semi-fictionalized the
experiences of a teacher of French in a multicultural Parisian suburban
secondary school. The real teacher wrote the screenplay and played himself in
the film, and in form and content Entre
les murs (like Crash Course) represents
and re-enacts a loss of boundaries and control in the context of
language-teaching and the way the latter enforces (or fails to enforce) other
aspects of culture, class, identity and power.
Crash
Course is only slightly less intimate but no less participatory and
immersive than Berlyn’s previous solo work, Tawdry
Heartburn. It involves a maximum audience (if that’s the right word for a
collective of participants) of (I think) twenty-four (I’m mentally counting
twelve school-desks each seating two participants, but I could be wrong). On
arrival, we’re asked to sign a form consenting to leave our phones and bags
with front-of-house. On a more ‘make-believe’ level (and here the properly
theatrical fun of dressing-up-and-pretending begins) we’re also asked to
consent to the fact that we’ve lost our language and the use of our dominant
hand as a result of an unspecified trauma. Enter Sarah Nelson playing the role
of a smartly dressed usher/ dominatrix who supervises the signing of the consent
form by the participants one-by-one, bandages our dominant arms in slings,
ushers us into a studio-classroom and seats us at desks in neat rows facing a
blackboard. Enter James as ‘Jakebo’, a language teacher. Chaos ensues, then
order, then a different kind of chaos, and a different kind of order.
Heralded by Nelson’s usher, Berlyn’s performance is a
piece of sublime clowning, drawing on his combined experience in dance,
education, community arts and contemporary performance. While ostensibly about
and using language, Crash Course like
all clowning is deeply embedded in
the body. But this is clowning of a special kind. We
have been ushered across the threshold of normality into the realm of carnevale: an interregnum of misrule, a
ritual disorder, that leads to profound renewal.
Beyond this it’s hard to review Crash Course without giving too much away. To go further: the
experience is in fact beyond language, and as such properly ineffable. The
reasons for this are exquisitely technical as well as philosophical and
political. Crash Course is on more
than one level an exercise in translation (its necessity and its necessary
failure) and to some extent the same is true of reviews and communication
generally. What does it mean to translate from one language to another, from
one culture to another, from one experience to another, from one’s own
experience to that of another (the famous philosophical ‘problem of other
minds’) or from experience as such to language itself (not least the language
of description)? Does language in fact ever simply describe or does it not also always do: define, arrange, command, pronounce – all examples of what
Austin suggestively called ‘performative’ language, or Deleuze and Guattari in
more overtly political terms called mots
d’ordre (literally ‘order-words’).
This is especially true in a classroom, and even more so a language classroom; but
also by extension in a review or a work of commentary or criticism; and
certainly in all theatre.
Crash
Course is also immersive in the sense that a language class is ‘immersive’
when the entire class takes place in the language being taught, and therefore
no translation literally takes place; although the word ‘translation’ literally
means ‘the act of taking or leading across’, for example from one place to
another – which in fact is precisely what James (or ‘Jakebo’) does for us in
the course of the lesson (which like all lessons is also an act or performance).
For Crash Course takes place entirely
in an invented (or forgotten) and beautiful language with its own beautiful
alphabet and numerals, some of which we learn to use during the show. We also re-live
and re-learn something about what it feels like to be in a minority:
linguistically, culturally, in terms of age, ‘seniority’ or physical ability. 'Minority' in this sense has nothing to do with numbers and everything to do with power. Crash Course is about resilience and adaptability, but perhaps for our species the original trauma is language itself: the opacity of our initial encounter with the mother-tongue into which we are born (or 'immersed'), and which we playfully repeat when we learn a new one.
If the preceding analysis makes Crash Course itself sound didactic, laborious or negative, I should
add that it is on the contrary profoundly positive, liberating and even
utopian. In fact it reminded me of the joys more than the anxieties of being
in class. In terms of staging, Crash
Course is minimal, elegant, beautiful, poignant and very funny. It also
features some choreography and possibly a giraffe. Perhaps more than one.
*
Both as an individual artist and with her own company
Steamworks, Sally Richardson has directed, devised and/or written a huge range
of works in theatre, dance, dance-theatre, object-theatre, puppetry and circus
over the last decade or so. Her work often deals with female and marginalized
experience and uses hybrid forms embracing the language of the body, objects
and images as well as words.
Standing
Bird 2 had an earlier incarnation at PICA as part of the Perth
Fringe World Festival in 2012; this version is both stripped back and
significantly advanced in terms of conception and execution. (A confession: I
was also briefly involved as a dramaturg/outside eye, mostly on the previous
version.) SB2 is in repertory at The
Blue Room with another contemporary dance piece, Verge, which was previously presented as part of Fringe World 2013,
and which I haven’t seen; Jacqui also performs in Verge, and Fiona’s set serves both productions.
I applaud the practice of not only remounting but also
revising and refining good work, and seeing it again is equally rewarding for
an audience. This is one of the great things about having work in repertoire:
an all-too-rare practice in Australia, at least in theatre. The original
version of Standing Bird included Sally
herself as an onstage presence at the periphery of the action; significant use
of mirrors at the perimeter of the set; video projection onto strips of cloth;
and visual and conceptual references to early colonial Australian feminine
experience, specifically the Eliza Frazer story. In this version these have all
been jettisoned in favour of a less referential (and less self-referential)
narrative focusing on Jacqui as a performer inhabiting an archetype that is
both more abstract and more emphatically in and of the here-and-now. This is
enhanced by corner-staging which makes the audience’s experience more immersive
than the previous front-on staging at PICA: once again, there is no fourth
wall. In fact the performance begins at The Blue Room bar in an almost
audience-participatory vein before taking us on a promenade into the Main
Space. There we find ourselves confronted by an experience of redoubled
‘stripping back’ of almost Butoh-like intensity that ultimately leads to an act
of individual and collective transformation, which in my book is the essence of
theatre.
*
Next door in the Studio Space is Bruce, a new work by young independent performer-based Perth
company Weeping Spoon, devised and performed by Tim Watts and Wyatt Nixon-Lloyd,
assisted by collaborators Arielle Gray and Chris Isaacs. I say ‘young’ but these
artists have been on the scene for some years and their work and artistry is
fully fledged. Tim and his collaborators took the world by storm with The Adventures of Alvin Sputnik which
began at The Blue Room in 2009, was adopted by Perth Theatre Company and has
since toured numerous international festivals; then came It’s Dark Outside in 2012, commissioned and produced by PTC in the
State Theatre Centre at The Studio Underground and also now on the touring
circuit.
Alvin and It’s Dark were both multidisciplinary works featuring the highly skilled use of live and shadow puppetry, object theatre, masks and disguises, digital animation and soundtrack, in a style at once performative and cinematic, home-made and spectacular, reminiscent of Prague Black Light Theatre and Pixar movies, lending itself to comedy but with the emotional courage to explore themes of environmental and personal catastrophe. Bruce is much more modest in terms of scale and content. It’s based on what was originally a sketch-comedy routine involving two performers in black lycra bodysuits and hoods, a pair of white gloves, a piece of yellow sponge with a mouth and eyes, and a continuous stream of ventriloquism (mostly from Tim). Together these make up a single apparatus capable of transforming into multiple characters, but principally Bruce. He’s supported by a soundtrack and two lights on stands, with a blue gel in one and amber in the other.
Much like the new Alan
Partridge movie, Bruce extends
this routine to feature (or at least short-feature) length. It accomplishes
this by applying itself to a story with a dizzying recursive twist which I
won’t reveal except to say that once again Weeping Spoon explores themes of
time and loss in a way that’s playful, virtuosic, hilarious and touching.
There’s a lot more surface comedy in Bruce
than Alvin or It’s Dark, making it the perfect indie Christmas pantomime; but
there’s an emotional basement here too, as with all the best animation, live or
otherwise. Fear is the enemy, and love conquers all.
*
Crash
Course is at PICA until 30 November.
Standing
Bird 2 and Verge are
at The Blue Room (Main Space) until 29 November.
Bruce is at
The Blue Room Studio until 7 December.
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