Postcard from Perth 37
2014 Postcard Awards
I’m not a
believer in star-ratings or ‘best-of’ awards in categories like ‘best actor’,
‘best play’, ‘best production’ or even ‘best company’. At the risk of repeating
myself: I’m not really sure what such phrases mean, or how to compare or measure
art in quantitative terms, as if it were some kind of sport. This doesn’t mean that
I don’t believe in making qualitative aesthetic judgements per se. It simply
means that I believe in making them by evaluating performances, productions or
works according to their own criteria. So I prefer to give awards based
on categories derived from the performances, productions or works themselves.
That said: here are my Postcard from Perth Awards for 2014
in chronological order, with apologies for everything I didn’t see – a
substantial amount this year, as I was in more or less continuous work myself
between April and November, for much of that time performing five nights a week.
For those interested, longer reviews and discussions of many of the productions
referred to can be found by searching the archives of this
blog.
The year kicked off again in fine style with an even bigger
and better Fringe World than last year, and with Perth International Festival
hot on its heels. The True Grit Award for Non-Stop Treadmill Action and Stamina
goes to Melbourne outfit Grit Theatre for Run
Girl Run at PICA as part of Summer Nights: a relentless, edge-of-the-seat, alternately
hilarious and hideous physical theatre journey to the dark heart of
gender-as-performance. Also at PICA for Summer Nights, New Zealand devisor-performer
Trygve Wakenshaw gets the Pied Piper
Award for Inspiring Audience Participation (by eating invisible packets of crisps)
and Evoking Multiple Characters, Narratives and Universes (using an endearingly
ludicrous DIY costume) in Squidboy: a
surreal one-man comedy show which I found irresistable. And last but not least,
Mark Wilson’s Unsex Me for Melbourne
company MKA at Noodle Palace/The Ken Dome (inside the former Picadilly Cinema)
gets the Gene Roddenberry Award for Boldly Going Where No-Man/Woman Has Gone
Before Onstage using drag, karaoke, Shakespeare and a well-lubricated microphone.
Honourable mention should also be made of local writer-director-performer Will
O’Mahony’s Great White, restaged at
PICA for Summer Nights after an inaugural production at The Blue Room in 2013.
Will gets the Trifecta Award for Writing, Staging and Performance (sharing the
Award with co-performers Adriane Daff and Mikala Westall, set designer/producer
Alicia Clements, sound designer Will Slade and lighting designer Joe Lui).
In the ‘main’ Festival, two theatre shows stood out that were
perhaps more ‘traditional’ or ‘mainstream’ but nevertheless ‘poor’ in the sense
defined by Grotowski. Yaël Farber’s gripping contemporary South African
adaptation and production of Mies Julie in
the Octagon Theatre (with Hilde Cronje and Bongile Mantsai in the central roles)
shares the Peter Brook Award for Poor Theatre Adapation with the fleet-footed
and deftly touching version of An Iliad, staged
in the Sunken Gardens at UWA by NYC-based two-person company Homer’s Coat (writer/performer
Dennis O’Hare and co-writer/director Lisa Peterson). Mies Julie also gets the Last Tango Award for Rough Sex Onstage,
while An Iliad conversely gets the
Mahabharata Award for the Indirect Representation of Violence (in homage to the
minimalist war scenes in Brook’s great production).
Three other outstanding Festival shows took place in
non-theatre and gallery spaces and were in the realm of installation and visual
art, although all I would argue were also works of theatre even without the
presence of live actors. In the case of Situation
Rooms – an immersive participatory work by German collective Rimini
Protokoll about the ramifications of the weapons industry – the audience were
themselves performers, armed with iPads, following instructions and moving
through the interactive and hyper-real ‘set’ installed at the ABC studios in
Claisebrook. This show wins the Augmented Reality Award, and also shares the Mahabarata
Award for Indirect Representation of Violence with An Iliad – thus proving that there’s more than one way to skin a
cat. In fact if I could I’d probably
give both works a Nobel Prize for Peace. Across town at Curtin Gallery, The Tenth Sentiment by Japanese artist
Ryota Kuwakubo – featuring a tiny toy train with a light-source inside it
travelling through a landscape of domestic found objects and throwing their
shadows on the walls – was also an enchanting work of theatre for me and gets
the Minimalist Lighting Award. Meanwhile South African maestro William Kentridge’s
enthralling film/sound/sculpture installation The Refusal of Time in the central atrium gallery space at PICA
(courtesy of a loan from AGWA) gets the Henri Bergson/Albert Einstein Award for
the Philosophical Investigation of Time. Here it was the setting, formal
multiplicity and durational nature of the event that made it a theatrical
experience for me – an experience anchored by the animated machine sculpture (the
metaphorical ‘elephant’) keeping time in the centre of the room. PICA itself (and
curator Leigh Robb) also gets an Award for Courageous Curatorial Collaborations
and Spatial/Architectural Interventions for their shows throughout the year –
most notably allowing Perth-born, now LA-based artist George Egerton-Warburton to
punch holes in the walls of the West End Gallery Upstairs revealing random glimpses
of the cityscape outside for his provocative
installation Administration is a Form of
Oulipian Poetry.
It was during Festival time that Black Swan Artistic Director
Kate Cherry brought voice training legend and Shakespeare expert Kristin
Linklater to Perth for a series of workshops with various smaller and larger
groups of local theatre artists. As a participant I can testify to the
powerfully transformative nature of these workshops – but also to the sense of solidarity
they inspired in a local theatre industry that can otherwise feel somewhat
fractured along artistic and generational faultlines. For facilitating this
work – and that sense of solidarity – Black Swan, Kate Cherry and Kristin
herself share the E.M.Forster ‘Only Connect’ Award, for that famous dictum in Howard’s End. ‘Only connect! Live in fragments no longer!’ This
was a State Theatre Company doing its job and generously sharing its resources with
Black Swan affiliates and others, young and old.
Shortly after the Perth Festival was over, the brouhaha
erupted in March over Transfield’s sponsorship of the Sydney Biennale, and the
group of artists who threatened to withdraw their work over the company’s involvement
with the offshore detention of asylum seekers. Without rehearsing these arguments
again, I give the Wesley Enoch Award for Leadership (if Wesley will forgive me
for invoking his name and Platform Paper in the context of a topic on which we
have slightly different views) to the artists concerned for persuading the
Biennale to severe its ties with Transfield, and opening up a much broader
debate over the nexus between corporate sponsorship, government funding, arts
organisations, individual artists, art and politics.
Back to Perth, and theatre: while I felt Kate Cherry’s take
on A Streetcar Named Desire for Black
Swan at the Heath Ledger Theatre in
March ultimately softened the edges of the play’s cruelty and underlying sexual
violence, Luke Hewitt was a revelation as Mitch, and his scenes with Blanche
stood out in sharp and painful clarity. Similarly, while I didn’t warm to Roger
Hodgman’s dumbed-down production of As
You Like It in May (again at the Heath for Black Swan), I doff my cap to
Steve Turner’s intense, understated, uncompromising Jacques. Luke and Steve
share the Rudyard Kiping Award for Keeping Your Head When All About You Are
Losing Theirs: two fine mid-career all-round character actors who bless every
production in which they appear.
Shifting focus to another of Perth’s four so-called Major Performing
Arts Companies, the WA Symphony (the other two being the WA Opera and the WA
Ballet): new Principal Conductor Asher Fisch has raised the bar in terms of programming
and sound (especially from the strings) and the orchestra has risen to the
challenge with flying colours. My first experience of Fisch and the ‘new’ WASO
in action was their inaugural concert together in March, with a program
featuring works by Mozart, Wagner and a thrilling performance of Richard Strauss’s
epic tone poem Death and Transfiguration;
followed in May by a sublime rendition of Mahler’s immense 9th Symphony;
and culminating in September with the monumental achievement of the Beethoven
Festival, featuring all nine symphonies performed over two weekends. Fisch
shares the Gough Whitlam Award for Vision and Ambition at the Helm with Paul
Selwyn-Norton at STRUT Dance (see below); and the Beethoven Festival also shares
the Dionysus Award for New Festivals with STRUT for the Move Me Improvisation
Festival (ditto). With WASO’s Brahms Festival just around the corner next year,
this is the kind of vision and ambition that justifies the existence and
funding of Major Performing Arts Companies in the first place.
From Major Organisations back to local grass-roots theatre,
my next two Awards go to productions at The Blue Room that were both directed
by Joe Lui. Coming at the tail-end of Season One in June, Giving Up the Ghosts was a no-frills two-hander about mutually
assisted suicide, written by local stand-up comedian and storyteller Sarah
Young and performed with a commendable lack of judgement on their characters by
Georgia King and Paul Grabovac. Ghosts gets
the Harold Pinter Award for the Telling Use of Pauses, Ellipses and Silences
Onstage. I don’t know how many were in the script, but they certainly enhanced
its already terse, staccato vernacular eloquence. Later in the year towards the
end of Season Two in October, Welcome to
Slaughter was a devised work of Oz-road mock-horror with a text by Jeffrey
Jay Fowler, co-devised and performed by Michelle Robyn Anderson, Jo Morris and
Emily Rose Brennan, with a set design by Shaye Preston, sound design by Brett
Smith and lighting design by Joe Lui – who also took the wheel as director at
the last minute due to a previous cast-member dropping out and the original
director-devisor taking their place onstage. I found the script a little
two-dimensional but the performances, direction and design deliciously
enjoyable. Slaughter gets the
Halloween Award for Involuntary Audience Screams and Nervous Laughter. Together
with Ghosts it also confirmed my suspicions
that Joe is now a fully-fledged director of other people’s work as well as his
own. On that score, he also gets the Tightrope Award for writing, directing and
performing his own autobiographical solo work Letters Home at The Blue Room in September without falling into
trap of being narcissistic or mawkish – a rare feat indeed.
Across the road at The Studio Underground in July, Declan
Greene’s artfully excruciating 8
Gigabytes of Hardcore Pornography was a co-production between Perth Theatre
Company and Griffin in Sydney, directed by Griffin’s Artistic Director Lee
Lewis and featuring toe-curlingly truthful performances by Andrea Gibbs and
Steve Rodgers. A courageous verbal and physical exploration of contemporary online
addictions and the fear that underlies them of real as opposed to virtual
connection, 8 Gigs gets the Award for
Proving that Live Theatre is More Relevant Than Ever in the Age of the
Internet.
Upstairs at the Heath Ledger in August, Black Swan’s
traditional period-costume Seagull was
graced by a sublime turn from Rebecca Davis as Masha, and featured a revelatory
Act 4 scene change for the final duet between Nina and Konstantin. Director
Kate Cherry and designer Fiona Bruce share the Heath Ledger Theatre Award for Using
the Fly-Tower to Reveal New Meaning in a Classic Without Updating It; and
Rebecca Davis gets the Heath Ledger Performance Award for Finding the Creature
Beneath the Skin of a Character (I’m thinking of Ledger’s late, great
breakthrough performances in Brokeback
Mountain and The Dark Knight).
Outside in the State Theatre Centre Courtyard in September,
Yirra Yaakin Noongar Theatre Company presented a revival of David Milroy’s King Hit directed by the company’s
current Artistic Director Kyle Morrison. Vigorous performances were set within
the carnival ambience of an old-style boxing tent beautifully designed by India
Mehta, which completely eclipsed the usually penitentiary/corporate surrounds
of the courtyard and the STCWA itself. India gets the Award for Imaginatively
Conceived and Scrupulously Realized Set Design with this and her hauntingly
atmospheric set for Black Swan’s The House
on the Lake upstairs in the Heath Ledger earlier in the year.
At the PICA Performance Space in September–October, Perth
indie supergroup The Last Great Hunt gave us visionary theatremaker Tim Watt’s
latest excursion into the outer reaches of lo-fi animation, mask-work,
projection and puppetry with Falling
Through Clouds, created and performed by Adriane Daff, Arielle Gray, Chris
Isaacs and Tim himself. This was a
work whose formal virtuosity and thematic reach I felt ultimately exceeded its
narrative grasp, but it nevertheless gets the Robert Lepage Award for Dazzingly
Inventive Dramaturgy in the Imaginary Representation of Dreams. Fantasies about
flying and being haunted by one’s double never looked so real.
Also in the field of animation, Spare Parts Puppet Theatre in
September–October completed an epic cycle of regional community-based
development with their epic visual theatre work Farm, written by Ian Sinclair, directed by company AD Philip
Mitchell and co-devised by two of the performers, Chloe Flockart and Rebecca
Bradley. I reviewed this production critically at the time for its claims to
represent life on the land and some aspects of the script and staging; but in
retrospect I find myself wanting to honour the poetry of Ian’s writing, the
humanity of the performances, the sheer scale of the enterprise and the vision
and ambition of Spare Parts and Philip in bringing the whole thing to fruition.
For all these reasons Farm gets the
Paul Kelly ‘From Little Things, Big Things Grow’ Award: a production that no
doubt gave back in spades to the regional community that nurtured its
development.
My next Award goes to STRUT Dance and its new director Paul
Selwyn-Norton for a busy year taking the organisation to the next level as a
National Choreographic Centre: initiating, supporting and hosting new work, residencies,
worshops and classes, culminating in the inaugural Move Me Improvisation Festival which took place across Perth venues
in November. As mentioned above, Paul
and STRUT share with Asher Fisch and WASO the Whitlam Award for Vision at the
Helm and the Dionysus Award for New Festivals. As with Kate Cherry and Black
Swan bringing Kristin Linklater to Perth, these are fine instances of exisiting
organisations large and small extending their reach and resourcing events that
enrich the local artistic community and their audiences. In particular, I
applaud the seeding of grass-roots, thematic and even one-off ‘micro-festivals’
– in contrast with the increasingly generic, globalized and institutionalized
‘mega-festivals’ that otherwise dominate the national landscape.
And finally, the Billy Bragg/Mao Zedong Great Leap Forward
Award goes to Perth Theatre Company for their 2015 Season announced in November,
with an increased output of five shows: two in the Studio Underground, one
upstairs in the Heath Ledger, one in the STCWA Courtyard and one at PICA. These
include three directed (and one also written) by artistic director Mel Cantwell,
and two directed and/or devised and performed by local independent
theatremakers. This feels like the realisation of a vision that’s been brewing
in Mel’s head for a long time now as the AD of Perth’s alternative mainstage
theatre company – one that reflects and connects with the city’s distinctive contemporary
grass-roots theatre culture.
That’s it from me for 2014. Apologies to everyone I missed
out on seeing or including in this list of Awards. As always, I’m circumscribed
by the limits of time, space and of course subjective tastes and priorities. I
hope this round-up gives local and national readers a sense of Perth as a place
to make and see theatre, dance, music and art. Bring it on!
*
For the record, Humph
was busy rehearsing and performing in Perth from May till November with Wish (PTC/Night Train, Studio Underground), Jasper
Jones (Barking Gecko, Studio
Underground), Laughter on the 23rd Floor (Black Swan, Heath Ledger Theatre) and Overexposed (Danielle Micich/ Performing Lines WA,
Studio Underground). Postcards from Perth will resume at the end of January
with the onset of Fringe World and Perth International Festival 2015.
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