Saturday, May 10, 2025

LIGHT | INTERSECTION and NUDES

Visual Art (Photography) Exhibitions Review | Brian Rope

LIGHT | INTERSECTION I Alex Walker
NUDES | Skye Thompson

Photo Access, Canberra | 11 April - 10 May 2025

I will start by suggesting these two exhibitions have no obvious or apparent relationship to each other. One is about drawing us into “a dynamic encounter where light is both subject and material.” The other “floats towards” troubling family histories and “re-sensitises.” I will return to this later but first let me discuss each exhibition quite separately.

Alex Walker is a trained darkroom photographer interested, amongst other things, in analogue processes and spatial perception. Her work seeks to explore how light travels. Showing it in Light | Intersection, she changes our perception of what we see. Information on the gallery website and in Kathryne Genevieve Honey’s essay in the room sheet explain that it is a site-specific exhibition exploring the role of light in photography and architecture.

The “architecture” of the gallery is not exactly spectacular. However, the moment I walked in and saw coloured lights moving around and across the surfaces of the first space and of the exhibits within it, I was drawn in. The light impacted on the sensory information which I received and endeavoured to understand and interpret. That, after all, is what perception is all about.

Alex Walker, Window Warp II, 2025

Light | Intersection installation image – Brian Rope 

Light | Intersection installation image – Brian Rope 

In the second gallery space Walker has placed illuminated light boxes within the ceiling - and above mirrors on the floor. Walking carefully between the mirrors whilst looking into their surfaces and at the changing lights overhead is a joyous sensory experience revealing more new ways of considering and experiencing photography.

Light | Intersection installation image – Brian Rope

Light | Intersection installation image – Brian Rope

The second exhibition, Nudes, is in the separate third gallery space. The artist, Skye Thompson, has reimagined what she describes as “the overlooked material of 8mm home films - transparent leader, light leaks, and physical blemishes - as a space for reflection and repair.”

The “vaguely sexual titles” of a number of artworks brought smiles to my face. A copy of her Nudes zine in a fabric bag alongside a handwritten instruction “touch me” and an arrow pointing to it. A vibrating artwork about the clitoris. Even a copy of the room sheet is somewhat cheekily displayed within an article of feminine underwear.

Image of Thompson’s vibrating artwork on light box – Brian Rope
 
Image of displayed room sheet – Brian Rope

However, the important message in this exhibition is not humorous. The artist has written in the room sheet “Architectural shapes, the body and vaguely sexual titles all speak to my longing for a connection that is not predicated on denial. The aura of violence and its disavowal can be felt in these works. Past and present are touching each other in a dream space. My Nudes call for intimacy and repair.”

Thompson studied screen production in the late nineties, directed film clips for bands, and shot her own vignettes and small documentaries. For these artworks, she has drawn from 8mm films created by her family forebears - slicing and overlapping selected fragments. The resultant delicate compositions “explore memory, the body, and the politics of visibility.”

Skye Thompson, Sun Bake, 2024

Through a practice grounded in disruption, she embraces imperfection as a form of resistance. Her digital scans of film retain whatever particles are on the material – dust, saliva, whatever. Quite the opposite of cinematic clarity and control, the result is an alternative archive - intimate, fractured, and quietly radical. Each artwork is well worth spending time with - looking, exploring, noticing, doing what every good photographer does – SEEING! 

So, was I wrong to suggest there is no connection between these two exhibitions? Yes, I was. Both are very much about sensory experiences. Both should impact on the viewer’s perceptions. Both challenge us.

This review is also available on the author's blog here.

Harold Pinter Double Bill - Ensemble Theatre

 

The Lover and The Dumb Waiter by Harold Pinter.  Ensemble Theatre, Sydney May 2 – June 7 2025.

Reviewed by Frank McKone
May 10

Director: Mark Kilmurry
Set & Costume Designer: Simone Romaniuk
Lighting Designer: Matt Cox
Composer & Sound Designer: Daryl Wallis
Stage Manager: Lauren Tulloch; Asst Stage Manager: Yasmin Breeze

Cast:
Nicole da Silva; Gareth Davies; Anthony Taufa


Harold Pinter.org
www.haroldpinter.org › plays › plays_lover offers an interesting view of The Lover when it was first presented at the Arts Theatre UK in 1963.  

‘Richard’ (husband) or ‘Mark’ (lover) both played with precision by Gareth Davies is English upper middle class to a T.  ‘Sarah’ or ‘Whore’ even more so by Nicole da Silva, I thought – partly because I think Pinter gave her opportunities for more varied emotional responses to situations.

But an un-named reviewer in The Financial Times (who perhaps may have attended the same long boring meetings as Richard) wrote in 1963:
Harold Pinter is [by] far the most original, as he is also the most accomplished, of the younger generation of playwrights. And lately he has added to his other remarkable qualities an extreme formal eloquence. This quality will not, I suppose, endear him to the sterner of my younger colleagues, who regard formal eloquence as a sign of frivolity. They are all for ragged ends edges and untidy ends. But for those with any feeling for shape this addition to Mr. Pinter’s range is an uncommon delight.”  

He (I assume all financial journalists were ‘he’ in those days) goes to praise Pinter’s “absolute economy of means to produce a ... precision of effect. The little play works simply beautifully, like a perfectly adjusted piece of miniature machinery; except that machinery is dead and this play is scintillating alive.

Gareth Davies as 'Richard' and Nicole da Silva as Sarah
in The Lover, Ensemble 2025
I was young at 22 in 1963 (Pinter was 33) and could not have agreed with The Financial Times more.  Now I have some doubts.

Mark Kilmurry and his actors, including Anthony Taufa as the milkman in The Lover, have honoured Pinter’s reputation for precision exactly, but what else has Pinter left us with 60 years later?

The idea of risky game-playing between a couple now ten years into their marriage seems to offer a warning – if we feel there needs to be a serious intention behind the play – in just one line.  She asks why does he want to stop, and he replies “Because of the children.”  I’m not clear whether Pinter meant only a plot device – that is, the sons will be home soon from boarding school – or whether he meant that parents need to stay married without having to play such games, to prevent emotional confusion damaging their children.

Today we would perhaps ask for more on this kind of issue from the most original and accomplished playwright of our younger generation.

And I wonder, too, then, about The Dumb Waiter.  Davies and Taufa got their Londoner accents pretty well from the Teddy-Boy parts of the city my father made sure I didn’t go near, and the play makes something out of the idea of political power coming down from above, but my literary studies in its year, 1959, emphasised The Dumb Waiter as a clever writer playing another kind of theatre game – called Absurd Drama.

Not only are the two thugs waiting to kill on the orders from an unknown gangster above their station in criminal society, but they were clearly just a variation of Samuel Beckett’s Waiting for Godot.  Beckett was in his fifties by now, and Pinter barely 30 – and ready to prove himself as good at absurdism.  I still think Beckett was better.
Gareth Davies and Anthony Taufa
in The Dumb Waiter, Ensemble 2025
Ensemble’s production of the two plays as a Double Bill certainly brings up plenty to laugh at, especially with such top-class actors (and an amazing scene change in only 20 minutes during interval); and for people much younger than a stern oldie like me there is much to learn from Pinter’s originality and “extreme formal eloquence”.

I see plenty of being “all for ragged ends edges and untidy ends” on social media today.  Stop it, I say – as I suggest Pinter meant.

Friday, May 9, 2025

WHEN THE RAIN STOPS FALLING

 

When the Rain Stops Falling by Andrew Bovell. 

Directed by Chris Baldock. Assisted by Zac Bridgman. Stage manager Rhiley Winnett. Properties Natalie Trafford and Chris Baldock. Set design and realization Chris Baldock. Projection Realization Rhiley Winnett. Sound design Chris Baldock and Rhiley Winnett. Lighting, sound and projection operation Rhiley Winnett. Costumes The cast and Chris Baldock.  Mockingbird Theatre Company. Belco Arts Belconnen Arts Centre. May 8-17  2025 Bookings:  belcoarts.ticketsales.com

Reviewed by Peter Wilkins

  

Dyllan Ormazabal (Andrew Price) and 
Chris Baldock as Gabriel York

Mockingbird Theatre Company’s production of Andrew Bovell’s When The Rain Stops Falling continues to present Canberra audiences with works that capture the imagination and stimulate the intellect. Playwright Bovell is a master of the dramatic construct. In telling the story of four generations of the Law family, Bovell weaves a tapestry of ingenious storytelling that leads audiences through a labyrinth of family secrets, scandalous conduct, fateful relationships and the desperate search for elusive answers to one’s identity.

Leonidas Katsanis (Gabriel Law) Liz St Clair Long (the older Elizabeth Law)

Director Chris Baldock contains the epic scope of familial legacy, abandonment, tragedy and human struggle within the intimate confines of Mockingbird’s in the round setting. The play opens under a canopy of plastic umbrellas. The cast wander through the space to escape the rain leaving Gabriel York  (Chris Baldock) alone on stage and ruminating on the symbolism of a fish falling from the sky, and awaiting the arrival of his son Andrew (Dyllan Ormazabal). He is coming to learn his heritage, a legacy lost in the shadows of the past.

Bovell’s narrative transcends and interpolates time navigating the lives of 60 year old matriarch Elizabeth Law (Liz St Clair Long), her son Gabriel Law (Leonidis Katsanis),his father Henry Law (Zac Bridgman), the younger Elizabeth (Ruth Hudson), Gabriel’s girlfriend Gabrielle York (Jayde Dowhy), the older Gabrielle York (Jess Beange) and older Gabrielle’s husband Joe Ryan (Bruce Hardie). Bovell gradually unfolds the chapters of the Law story, revealing a dysfunctional family history, unable to communicate, torn apart by human failing, victims of fate’s tragic events and yet ultimately arriving at redemption and hope in a final scene of reconciliation of the past over a fish soup meal around the dining table. In Baldock’s production it is a moment that resounds with the victory of hope over adversity.


Jayde Dowhy (younger Gabrielle York) Jess Beange (older Gabrielle)

Bovell challenges his audience. His web of mystery beguiles and intrigues. He demands curiosity from his audience and from the production team of When The Rain Stops Falling. Each scene promises revelation, a piece of the jigsaw puzzle that illuminates the mystery but only provides the final answers to the puzzle when Gabriel York unpacks the contents of a suitcase and presents them to his son at the end of the play. 

Director Baldock and his strong ensemble cast rise to the challenge. We are compelled to care for each character, for their desires and for their failings.  Mockingbird’s carefully staged and engrossing production will cast a veil of reflection that will haunt you long after you leave the theatre. Ultimately we are confronted by the same question; “Who am I?” We are all a thread in Bovell’s tapestry of human experience. When The Rain Stops Falling rightfully earns a place in the treasure trove of classic Australian plays. Mockingbird Theatre Company’s reverent production does the play justice. Don’t miss it.


Zac Bridgman as Henry Law






Jess Beange as the older Gabrielle York
Bruce Hardie as Joe Ryan

Photos by Chris Baldock


When the Rain Stops Falling


When the Rain Stops Falling. Based on the play by Andrew Bovell. Mockingbird Theatrics at Belconnen Arts Centre May 8-17, 2025

Directed and designed by Chris Baldock

​Reviewed by Frank McKone
May 8

Cast:
Gabriel York – Chris Baldock
Elizabeth Law (Older) – Liz St Clair Long; Elizabeth Law (Younger) – Ruth Hudson
Joe Ryan – Bruce Hardie
Gabrielle York (Older) – Jess Beange; Gabrielle York (Younger) – Jayde Dowhy
Gabriel Law – Leonidas Katsinas; Henry Law – Zac Bridgman
Andrew Price – Dyllan Ormazabal

Production Team:
Director: Chris Baldock; Stage Manager: Rhiley Winnett
Assistant Director: Zac Bridgman; Properties: Natalie Trafford and Chris Baldock
Set & Projection Design: Chris Baldock; Projection Realisation: Rhiley Winnett
Sound Design: Chris Baldock
Lighting, Sound and Projection Operation: Rhiley Winnett
Costumes: Chris Baldock and Cast

As Gabriel Law and Gabrielle York


When the Rain Stops Falling is among the most significant Australian plays.  This is because it’s like an Argyle diamond.  Of all diamonds in the world, it has a special character, which is peculiar to Australia.  

The diamond itself at core is emotional as a study in more than 20 scenes of a family in regeneration over a lifetime.  The emotion is centred on Gabriel York’s need to re-connect with his only son after he left his wife some 20 years before when he was 30 and Andrew was 8.

But the diamond is bigger than it first seems.  Gabriel senses a connection back to his grandfather, through a series of family links over 80 years, which finally bring Andrew to find his father.  It is in the playing out of these links of loves, and failures to love enough, full of hopes and ironies, that the diamond shows itself to be Australian, of many colours.

As I wrote about the original Sydney Theatre Company production in 2010, “‘The play is unrelievedly bleak but with a denouement of unexpected hope: a moving, almost revelatory evening of theater’ [Richard Zoglin, Time] while the Australian audience on opening night in Canberra responded to the many moments of ironic humour which are built into our culture.  We certainly found the unexpected hope, but not an unrelieved bleakness.  In fact, without laughter, I suspect, the unexpected hope at the end would have been maudlin and sentimental.  In this production, it was ultimately satisfying to know that Gabriel and his son Andrew, with the help of a fish falling from the sky, could at last enjoy each other’s company after four generations of emotional disaster.

Chris Baldock’s production of When the Rain Stops Falling, in a small scale in-the-round setting, captures Gabriel’s frustrations and final happiness in Andrew’s company, but is more subdued in tone.  This is because there are facets of the diamond which bring to light issues, especially about the natural environment and social behaviour – including the fish falling out of the sky – which encouraged a higher level of Australian ironic laughter on the bigger stage, particularly on the contrasts between the Englishness of the attitudes in Gabriel’s grandparents and the realities of colonial life.

Yet the seriousness, especially of the women’s lack of status as against the men’s belief in going their own way no matter what, certainly comes through as it should, perhaps even more so in 2025 than in 2010, making this production well worth seeing.

And not to forget that Climate Change is the brightest political facet of this play.

__________________________________________________________________________________

For follow-up, I think it’s fair to say that Bovell’s playscript is a twist-and-turn experience in trying to catch on to the stories in Gabriel’s family history.  

If you need help, here is a family tree, based on Cygnet Theatre; ShowerHacks.com. "Genealogy, the ancestry of When the Rain Stops Falling."; and www.sustainabletheatre.org/index.php/narrative/climate-change-generational-influence

 As they appear in their various scenes:

Grandfather Henry Law in his Forties in the 1960’s
Grandmother (younger) Elizabeth Law in her Thirties in the 1960’s
                        (older) Elizabeth Law in her  Fifties in 1988
Father Gabriel Law at Twenty-eight in 1988
Mother (younger) Gabrielle York at Twenty-four in 1988
                (older) Gabrielle York in her Fifties in 2013
                Joe Ryan (married to Gabrielle York) in his Fifties in 2013
Gabriel York at Fifty in 2039
Eliza Price – Andrew’s mother doesn't appear.
Andrew Price at Twenty-eight in 2039
 
The pictures below are from Cygnet Theatre, San Diego, California

 


This was created by the Cygnet Theatre while producing When the Rain Stops Falling to explain the connections of the characters. With this, we can understand the generational repetitive actions that involve the change in climate.  

 

 

 

 

 

WHEN THE RAIN STOPS FALLING


 

Written by Andrew Bovell

Directed by Chris Baldock

Mockingbird Theatre Company

Belconnen Arts Centre to 17 May

 

Reviewed by Len Power 8 May 2025

 

In Alice Springs 2039, a fish falls from the sky. What follows is a fascinating puzzle involving two families over four generations from 1959 in London to Australia eighty years later. This epic play explores family relationships across the generations. Pain, secrets, love, unanswered questions, destruction, longing and forgiveness come together to produce an extraordinary picture of hope and humanity.

Andrew Bovell’s play, first performed in 2008, is beautifully written and compelling in its construction. It has a lot to say about people and families and how unresolved issues can pass down the generations. The constant rain throughout the years and fish falling from the sky gives it a troubling feeling of impending apocalypse.

The audience is drawn deeply into the action as it unfolds. At first puzzling, the play stealthily takes its time to fully enlighten us. There is no interval in this almost two hour play, but the time goes very quickly as the pieces of the puzzle within are cleverly locked into place.


As the play jumps forward and back in time, the nine actors, Liz St Clair Long, Ruth Hudson, Bruce Hardie, Jess Beange, Jayde Dowhy, Leonidas Katsanis, Zac Bridgman, Dyllan Ormazabal and Chris Baldock play with confidence and skill, bringing these characters vividly to life and making them people we can understand and empathize with.


Director, Chris Baldock’s simple set design of suspended umbrellas, the constant sound of rain and the atmospheric lighting add considerably to the sense of time and place.

This is a fine, absorbing play from one of Australia’s great playwrights. Chris Baldock’s stylish direction in the round is masterly. His attention to detail, keeping the action clear and well-paced, as well as obtaining very real characterisations from his cast, make this another memorable and enjoyable production from the Mockingbird Theatre Company.

 

Photos by Chris Baldock

Len Power's reviews are also broadcast on Artsound FM 92.7 in the ‘Arts Cafe’ and ‘Arts About’ programs and published in his blog 'Just Power Writing' at https://justpowerwriting.blogspot.com/.

Sunday, May 4, 2025

Sweet Charity. Book by Neil Simon. Lyrics by Dorothy Field. Music by Cy Coleman. Conceived, staged and choreographed by Bob Fosse. Directed by Joel Horwood. Musical director Callum Tolhurst-Close. Choreographer James Tolhurst-Close. Free-Rain Theatre. Q Theatre, Queanbeyan. Until May 18. By Alanna Maclean.

Vanessa Valois -Amy Orman - Kristy Griffin - Photo Credit Ben Appleton

Sweet Charity is a strange old mixture with its origins in a Fellini film and its American development having a book by Neil Simon, but it’s a piece with its own bittersweet morality. 

And it was originally shaped by the great choreographer Bob Fosse. 

At its centre and wonderfully dominating the show is Amy Orman as the somewhat naive but ever hopeful Charity, belting out song after song as she tells her story. 

She’s working as a dance hall hostess but yearns for a better life. Friends and co workers Nickie (Vanessa Valois) and Helene (Kristy Griffin) join her magnificently in that great hustlers’ number Hey Big Spender. She meets Oscar (Joshua Kirk), who is a nervous young bloke right out of Neil Simon rather than Fellini and she hopes for a settled life with him. 

Beautiful Simon stuff; they are trapped in a lift, he turns out to be full of neuroses well captured by Kirk and a settled life with him might be as much an illusion as is the strange world of Italian film star Vittorio (incisively self centred performance by Eamon McCaughan) that Charity also dabbles in. You’ll know a lot of the songs and they are given a wholehearted performance by a strong cast. 

It’s a show driven by the central character but it also depends very much upon teamwork and the capacity of members of the team to step briefly into sharp cameos. This cast rises to the challenges. 

A splendidly spare set by Chris Zuber, easily manipulated by the cast, evokes settings from the dance hall to a broken down lift to Vittorio’s luxury apartment. Fiona Leach’s costumes give us a real glimpse of the 1960s. 

And it is good to glimpse musical director Callum Tolhurst-Close and the orchestra driving the show upstage behind screens. So if your favourite songs include Rhythm of Life or If My Friends Could See Me Now go out to Queanbeyan and enjoy.

CIMF: LIVING POEMS OF THE SEA

Sally Walker

Sally Walker, flautist

Lyle Chan, writer and composer

The National Film and Sound Archive May 3

 

Reviewed by Len Power

 

 



Described as a meditation on the enthralling world of dolphins and whales in music, sound, words and images, the world premiere of this work with renowned Canberra flautist, Sally Walker, was a feast for the eyes and senses. It proved to be even more than that, with an impassioned and persuasive plea to end noise and other pollution in our oceans and our planet.

Using a variety of flutes as well as percussive instruments, Walker created a haunting soundscape that complemented the beautiful, often dreamlike video on a large screen behind her. Often playing to pre-recorded music and voice as well as speaking much of the commentary live, it was an impressively mounted presentation that was both entertaining and informative.


Those of us lucky enough to have had close encounters with dolphins could relate to Walker’s description of her first encounter with dolphins at an early age. Her quest to communicate with them through sound was fascinating and the images of her on the bow of a boat speeding through the waters of Pt. Stephens NSW while playing the flute to a school of jumping dolphins was memorable.


Her lifelong fascination with cetaceans (marine mammals like dolphins and whales) has led her to friendships with people like dolphin researcher, Dr Olivia De Bergerac and others. Many of these people talk passionately in the video. Historical and recent footage is presented as well as first-hand accounts of amazing human-cetacean interactions.

Our complex relationship with these creatures is shown to have been both good and bad. The importance of protection and preservation of these and other unique creatures in our world is clearly stated.

The 70 minute presentation was spell-binding. During the bows, Sally Walker invited many of the people involved in the production of the show to join her on stage. Not being aware that these people were in the audience, it was a delightful opportunity to see and applaud so many of them including composer and writer, Lyle Chan, scientist Dr. Olivia De Bergerac, videographer Murray Farrell and Uncle Ossie Cruse.

 

Photos by Peter Hislop

This review was first published by Canberra CityNews digital edition on 4 May 2025.

Len Power's reviews are also broadcast on Artsound FM 92.7 in the ‘Arts Cafe’ and ‘Arts About’ programs and published in his blog 'Just Power Writing' at https://justpowerwriting.blogspot.com/.