Sunday, August 10, 2025

THE CHOSEN VESSEL

 


The Chosen Vessel.  By Dylan Van Den Berg after the short story by Barbara Baynton

Director Abbie-Lee Lewis. Set designer Angie Matsinos. Costume designer  Leah Ridley, Lighting designer Nathan Sciberras. Sound designer Kyle Sheedy. Stage Manager Zsuzsi Soboslay. Actors Craig Alexander. LailaThaker.  The Street. World premiere August 9. Season August 9 – 24 Street Two. Bookings 62471223 or foh@thestreet.org.au

Reviewed by Peter Wilkins

 

Craig Alexander as The Husband. Laila Thaker as The Woman  

‘If the dead can see why can’t you?”  It is the haunting admonition of the ghost of an aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander woman. The final line of Dylan Van Den Berg’s adaptation of Barbara Baynton’s nineteenth century short story The Chosen Vessel is unsettling, recriminatory and ultimately a vessel for truthtelling. Van Den Berg has established himself as a Palawa playwright of enormous significance with previous award winning works, the autobiographical Milk and White fella Yella Tree and Way back When. Van Den Berg’s adaptation not only attests to the power of his voice for First Nations Australians but his place as one of the most significant Australian playwrights to emerge in the twenty-first century.

Laila Thaker as The Woman in The Chosen Vessel
 

The Chosen Vessel presents a different approach to Van Den Berg’s previous works. He has chosen to adapt Baynton’s short story of a white woman, isolated in a remote bush setting and threatened by white males. In Van Den Berg’s transformation, Torres Strait Islander and Indian actor Laila Thaker plays a Blak mother, living alone with her baby in an isolated home in the Australian bush. White actor Craig Alexander plays multiple archetypal roles, a swagman. a young childhood friend, a brutal husband, a horseman and a priest.

Van Den Berg has stated that he has, as a First Nations playwright commandeered the Gothic genre. Aboriginal Gothic genre varies in certain respects from traditional Gothic as we may perceive it in the Western theatre tradition. In Abbie-Lee Lewis’s evocative production, Gothic conventions are superbly realized in Angie Matsinos’s atmospheric set design in the intimate Street Two setting, Nathan Sciberris’s shadowy lighting design and Kyle Sheedy’s dramatic sound design. The production plumbs the psyche. Dark imaginings, fear and terror, the chilling threat of danger and the brutal violence of anger are all aspects of the human experience in The Chosen Vessel.. However, Van Den Berg’s introduction of the Ghost from the very outset reminds us of connection to the spirit and ancestry. Emerging from the dark, the Ghost, also played by Laila Thaker, breathes life into landscape with her description of  Country, once unspoiled by the invasion and destruction of colonial occupation. Country is character in Van Den Berg’s adaptation. The language of the Ghost is the poetry of beauty, comfort and silence. In contrast the voice of the white characters becomes the language of violence and destruction of Country. The Chosen Vessel is a story of wrongs done and never righted, of Country lost and not regained. It is set at the time of Baynton’s short story and the turn of the 20th Century. And yet in Van Den Berg’s poetic prose of protestation we are compelled to see the plight of the displaced, the deprivation of the oppressed, the theft of Country and the injustice of colonial invasion. Baynton dared to reveal the injustice faced by the white woman of her time.  Van Den Berg reveals the injustice faced still by the indigenous people of his time. It is in the re-imagining of this story that Van Den Berg’s transformative power as a storyteller will provide hope for a retelling of his people’s reality.

Craig Alexander as The Traveller in The Chosen Vessel

 

Van Den Berg could not wish for two more accomplished actors to play the multiple roles in The Chosen Vessel. As the Ghost, Thaker imbues the dynamic art of storytelling with the wisdom of her people and forthrightness of generations of experience. Her transition to the woman and mother of the infant child, isolated and vulnerable is heartrending, her fear and terror at her violent abuse shocking and visceral. She is Everywoman and one woman.  Alexander’s agile transition from one role to another endows each character with a distinctive persona from the ominous looming shadow behind the screen to the clumsy slapstick of the young boy, the vicious brutality of the swagman, the vision sighting horseman and the sanctimonious priest. In twelve short scenes and at little more than slightly over an hour of gripping theatre, Thaker and Alexander weave a tale of truth telling that reveals a damaged history. Unlike some western gothic literature the Aboriginal Gothic genre promises a possibility of transformation and  change..

The Street World Premiere of Van Den Berg’s The Chosen Vessel is a triumph of collaboration. This production may remind us of the wrongs of the past, but Van Den Berg’s skill as a playwright and the brilliant support of cast and creatives reinforces the Ghost’s opening lines;

“The truth’s like a whisper , aint it? You heard ‘em before”?

You’d think our tales would cure deafness, wouldn’t ya ?

But here I am –

Dragged back to tell ya –“

The Chosen Vessel is a lesson for our time. It is a powerful story you need to hear and see.

Photos by Nathan Smith Photography 

 

   

    

 

 

M'AP BOULE' - The Q, Queanbeyan Performing Arts Centre

Nancy Denis - Mick Stuart (Keyboard) - "M'ap Boule'"

Writer, Creator & Performer:  Nancy Denis –  Directed by: Anthea Williams

Dramaturgy by Liza-Mare Syron – Composer Carl St Jacques

Musical Director & Performer: Victoria Falconer – Set & Costume design by Maite’ Inae

Lighting Design by Karen Norris – Performer: Kween G Kibone – Drums: Mick Stuart

The Q, Queanbeyan Performing Arts Centre. August 8th, 2025.

Reviewed by BILL STEPHENS.


Victoria Falconer (violin) - Nancy Denis - Mick Stuart (Keyboard)


Every so often one comes across a performer and a performance, so unique, authentic, and extraordinary, that it defies categorisation, or even a description that does it justice.

 Such is the case with Nancy Denis and her show M’ap Boule’.

According to Denis, the words M’ap Boul’e are Haitian Creole for “I’m on Fire”. 

Denis certainly lives up to that description, powered by her enthusiasm to spread the word on Haition history.  Who would have thought history could be so entertaining?

Although Australian born from Haitian parents, Denis’s passion for the history of her ancestors was ignited when as a small child a relative revealed that he killed people in their sleep.

From the moment Denis steps onto the stage, there’s an electric charge in the air—a sense that the audience is about to witness something both intimate and spectacular. Her storytelling weaves personal anecdotes with broader cultural narratives, drawing the crowd into her exploration of heritage, identity, and belonging. With each shift in pace and tone, Denis blurs the line between performer and participant, inviting everyone present to share in her journey of self-discovery.

Music, movement, and memory intertwine as Denis navigates the complexities of her dual worlds—Australian and Haitian—highlighting how histories are inherited but also constantly reinvented. The raw honesty and humour she brings to every scene ensure that, even in the show’s most poignant moments, there is space for laughter and connection.

How she reconciled her life as a child in Redfern, with a mother obsessed with Young Talent Time and E Street, and stories of how her black slave ancestors revolted against French and British colonial oppressors, resulting in a free sovereign state ruled by non-whites, becomes the gist for this absorbing, delightfully frank, refreshingly uninhibited, and surprisingly educational cabaret.

Directed with insight and a gentle hand by Anthea Williams, who allows her the freedom to constantly surprise, shock and convulse her audience with her unconstrained exuberance,  Denis is  also armed with a repertoire of original songs by Carl St Jacques that express her passion for her ancestry.

Because besides being a compelling raconteur, Denis is also an extraordinary singer with a voice capable of raising the roof in anger or whisper sweet with compassion and empathy.

A trio of accomplished colleagues surround Denis and her songs with striking accompaniments.

Kween G Kibone - Victoria Falconer (Accordian) - "M'ap Boule'"

Rap artist, backing singer, and occasional dresser, Kween G Kibone demonstrates talent worthy of her own showcase. Similarly, multi-instrumentalist and vocalist Victoria Falconer, excels on the singing saw, accordion, violin, keyboards, and just about anything else she can get her hands on, while percussionist Mick Stuart impresses with his ability to constantly alternate between drums and keyboards.

Packaged in a setting of dozens of lit candles and a large circular screen for projected images,  M’ap Boule’  not only provides Denis with a compelling showcase for her many talents, which also include tap-dancing, courtesy of the Performing Arts College she attended, it also guarantees anyone lucky enough to experience it, 90 minutes of unique and captivating theatre.


                                                      Images by Jacqui Manning



     This review also published in AUSTRALIAN ARTS REVIEWS www.artsreview.com.au

Saturday, August 9, 2025

Wandering in Australia – the journey begins

Photography e-Book Review: Brian Rope

Wandering in Australia – the journey begins | Pele Leung

Publisher: Pele Leung Photography

Chinese Edition first published 2018

English Edition translated by DeepSeek AI in 2025

Pele Leung has travelled extensively in Australia chasing images and interesting travel stories. He considers writing to be one of the best ways to complement his photography.

I’m not able to assess how well DeepSeek AI has translated the Chinese words in the book. However, the English looks fine and is very readable. By way of illustration I share the opening words, which are overlaid on the sky area of a double-page landscape:

I greet the dawn with sunlit hands,

Through endless blue my voice expands.

The crescent moon, a silent string,

Stars pluck its notes to hear me sing.

Alone I walk where pathways end,

The wind just hums-‘Press on my friend.’

Yet every mile sings you belong-

The road just grins and leads me on.


This volume runs to 638 pages. I haven’t counted them, but the vast majority of pages show at least one image. However, this is not simply a book of wonderful photos. Words also tell numerous stories about different and interesting experiences whilst wandering and gathering images. We learn about the author’s philosophical reasons for wandering, his “driven passion” for photography, and the highs and lows of his travels on five journeys covering nearly 70,000 Km.

His first wanderings took him around Tasmania in 2003. For Leung, the most unforgettable part was trekking into the remote Walls of Jerusalem National Park. Poor preparation, plummeting temperatures and snow, and his first encounter with “the humbling power of nature” was the beginning of the adventures covered in this book and the second volume. A chance encounter with a family at Cradle Mountain led to a friendship continuing two decades later.

Four years later he took an eight month long 40,000 Km odyssey around Australia. Cradle Mountain was revisited. Then it was back to the mainland to head north along the coast to Sydney and Brisbane, and back to Melbourne via a different route. We read about such things as lessons learned, subterranean wonders, beaches and mountains, waterfalls - and sandflies! Trees, the Great Barrier Reef, gorges, indigenous rock art – everything adds to the visual feast.

Cape Conran, VIC

Pambula Beach, NSW

Millaa Millaa Falls, QLD

Next, he went through the centre of the continent to Darwin, then followed the western and southern coastlines all the way back to Melbourne. We learn about Leung’s “lesson in driving”, visit the Remarkable Rocks, explore rugged terrain in the scorching days and bone-chilling nights of the desert, and observe public morality.

Rollercoaster

Katherine Gorge, NT

Bell Gorge, WA

May 2014 saw the author head off to Central Australia again, but also to other places not previously visited in this book. The Grampians are very near to my first Australian home, and I spent many happy times exploring them, with family and also in a Scout group – including climbing to the Pinnacle Lookout. These and others of Leung’s images reminded me of places and events in my own Australian journey.

Pinnacle Lookout, Grampians NP, VIC

Stuart Highway, SA

Three months later it was Melbourne to the Gold Coast and back. In 2018, he started again, retracing previous routes with fresh eyes. Stories of warmth encountered on the road, fearless fools, cheap accommodation, sharing quiet anticipation with a stranger, and countryside discoveries.

Cape Woolamai, VIC

Lake Tyrell, VIC

This e-Book is volume 1 of a two-volume product. The second volume Wandering in Australia – the journey continues will be reviewed separately. It also is available in both Chinese and English language versions. I’ve written about and shown you just a tiny part of this volume. You need to get hold of a copy and read all its words and photos for yourself. Both e-Book volumes can be purchased (for a most modest cost), either separately or as a bundle, on Leung’s website, peleleung.com. He is on Facebook at peleleungphotography and has videos on his YouTube channel @peleleung2688, including one about Wandering in Australia.

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

Thursday, August 7, 2025

Mr Burton



 Mr Burton – Movie.  Dendy Canberra preview August 7 2025.

Reviewed by Frank McKone


Director: Marc Evans
Producer: Trevor Matthews, Ed Talfan, Josh Hyams, Hannah Thomas
Writers: Tom Bullough & Josh Hyams

Cast 
Toby Jones as teacher Mr. Burton; Harry Lawtey as his student, Richie Jenkins who becomes Richard Burton.
With  Steffan Rhodri, Lesley Manville, Daniel Evans, Aimee-Ffion Edwards, Aneurin Barnard

Rating: Mature themes and coarse language

Film making is an enormous undertaking.  For the full cast and crew listing go to IMDb at www.imdb.com/title/tt5171016/fullcredits/ 

___________________________________________________________________________________

Whatever view you may have of the one-time world famous Welsh actor, Richard Burton, you must see this remarkable movie to appreciate what he really was like – as an actor and as himself.

The publicity overview is useful, especially if like me you had no idea of Richard Burton’s personal life: Set against the grit of post-war Wales, MR BURTON is the extraordinary true story of a working-class boy destined for greatness and the teacher who saw it first. When Philip Burton, a principled and passionate schoolteacher in Port Talbot, meets Richie Jenkins, a volatile yet gifted teen from a fractured home, he recognises a spark that others have overlooked. Through mentorship, discipline, and love, Philip shapes Richie’s raw talent, setting him on the path to becoming Richard Burton, one of the greatest actors of the 20th century.

The details of Richie Jenkins’ family and how he was brought up by his elder sister, and his relationship with Philip Burton, form the central through-line of the drama, which brought me to tears, of fear for his future and joy for his success as he performed Prince Hal at the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre in Stratford upon Avon in 1951, directed by Anthony Quayle.

The remarkable thing about the film is how these actors – particularly in the key roles of Philip Burton and Richie Jenkins developing into Richard Burton – have to be such wonderful actors that they can make us believe in these other actors.  Philip Burton realises from Jenkins’ reactions in English class that he has the capacity to perform but needs to be trained.  So we see Richie being trained in some surprising, sometimes very funny, ways, which means that we see Toby Jones acting demonstrating how to act, and Harry Lawtey acting innocently badly until finally he acts Richard Burton acting as he really did as Prince Hal – after he has acted Richard Burton become a drunkard and smoker, and telling off Anthony Quayle (played by Daniel Evans) in rehearsal.


After you’ve seen the movie, and know how you feel about how Richie Jenkins felt from the age of about 13 to 26, it’s interesting to read, for example, what his younger brother Graham Jenkins and other local people told of the family in the setting of the mining country in Wales in Memories of Richard Burton at https://dramaticheart.wales/our-valleys/afan-valley/richard-burton/memories-of-richard-burton/.  And at https://lisawallerrogers.com/tag/richard-burtons-father in Lisa’s History Room there’s more fine detail about Dic Jenkins (played by Steffan  Rhodri).

And I have to confess, only two years after Burton’s first great success in 1951, my English teacher had this 13 year-old, in Form Two, up on stage in a public reading at Enfield Grammar School – as Prince Hal!  Of course, though I had no Philip Burton to adopt me and change my name, it is true that that was the beginning of my drama interest and future academic and teaching career.  

And for Canberra readers especially, it was only last Tuesday that the invited speaker, at our Canberra Critics’ Circle gathering, was Lexi Sekuless, producer at the Mill Theatre, whose work is reviewed here.  She gave us a fascinating run-down of her actor training in London, and the differences between the approach at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA), with its more formal convention – something like the Royal Shakespeare Company style which Richard Burton faced in Stratford upon Avon – and the more modern style of the Royal Central School of Speech and Drama, where Lexi acquired the far more varied skills and approaches to characterisation and staging styles which we see in Mill Theatre’s production of Enron, finishing shortly.

Watching Richie Jenkins under Philip Burton’s tutelage reminded me of Lexi Sekuless’s explanation of how that Central approach had broken actors away from the other famous technique – the American Method – and how working all these ways through in Australia has resulted nowadays in a kind of practical strength in our actors who do so well in the modern film industry.

And, I suspect the acting in this film, made in Wales – not in the English establishment setting – has some of that flair that we have in Australia.  Whether you thought you liked Richard Burton with Elizabeth Taylor or not, you can’t not like Harry Lawtey with Toby Jones, with the women, Lesley Manville and Aimee-Ffion Edwards as Ma Smith (Philip Burton’s landlady) and Cis (Richie’s sister) who held the real Richie together and whose acting hold the movie together, in my view.

Not to be missed – from August 14th.





Toby Jones as teacher Mr. Burton; Harry Lawtey as his student, Richie Jenkins

 

 

 

Wednesday, August 6, 2025

Ballet International Gala VI

Presented by BIG Live
Canberra Theatre Centre
August 2
Reviewed by Samara Purnell


I was chatting to someone in the foyer before BIG VI (Ballet International Gala), who was commenting on how much “rolling around on the floor” they had seen recently in dance productions of various kinds and how they missed “elevation”. Boy did they come to the right show!


This Australian company invites dancers from across Australia and the world to join their ranks to perform touring productions that (in the case of the Gala) showcase the “best bits” of classical ballets. The evening usually includes one or two contemporary pieces by their star dancers too. 


The production began its medley of perfect partnership pairings with Summertime, danced by the director of BIG, Joel Burke, and Brisbane-born Abbey Hansen. They were accompanied by the BIG band, featuring singer Lily Burke.


Returning star Daniil Simkin partnered Alice McArthur in Le Corsaire where the lifts brought on goosebumps. McArthur also performed the solo from Giselle, giving her a demure, Edwardian-ghost appearance. This emotionally intense performance, with brilliant characterization and light footwork, felt like seeing Giselle through fresh eyes. 


From goosebumps in Le Corsaire to tears in the absolutely exquisite Thais, set to Jules Massenet’s Meditation, where the chemistry and ease between Iana Salenko and husband Marion Walter was on display. This intimate pas de deux by the returning stars was composed of beautiful lifts and ended with Salenko, in a soft, golden satin dress, held above Walter’s head, like a dancer in a music box, as the spot-light faded.


Salenko danced to the heart-wrenching strains of Arvo Part’s Spiegel im Spiegel in Sola, a contemporary piece exploring schizophrenia, sadness and fragments of memories. 

Iana Salenko in Sola. Image from Instagram
@iana_salenko


From the elegance of Makar Mikhalkin (Bolshoi Ballet) in Talisman and Romeo and Juliet to the youthful joy and male energy in Diana and Acteon (performed by Hansen and Ervin Zagidullin), each pas de deux had beautiful arm and leg lines, executed in perfect unison. The lifts were unusual, complex and graceful and the men’s leaps, jumps and splits were ridiculously good, eliciting gasps and “phwoahs” from the audience. 

  

The second half began with an excerpt from BIG’s upcoming production of Dracula. Don Quixote perhaps should have closed the show (it was the penultimate number). Salenko, held in the air in one hand by Adamzhan Baktiyar, casual as you like, for an extraordinary amount of time, delighted the audience, who clapped them on in their solos and spins. 


Iana Salenko and Adamzhan Baktiyar.
Image from Instagram @iana_salenko

A second contemporary piece concluded the show - Simkin’s Lohengrin. The drawcard of this work was the shape of his muscular body and the shapes his body made, along with his perfect balance. 


Daniil Simkin.
Image from official program
A few of the dances were accompanied by the band, with the rest performed to recorded music, which could have been louder - not a comment often made these days. The pre-recorded clapping on one of the numbers was accidentally amusing and certainly not required to get the audience of this sold-out show involved and enthusiastic.


As with former productions, there were no sets and minimal lighting design, with clunky black-outs in between as they reset for the small cast, performing multiple dances.  


The hectic finale, with band included, used the same formula as previously. Control and poise gave way to complete abandon, with men hurtling themselves across the stage and lifting their partners above their heads. The size of the stage meant some nervous moments as some sequences ended almost in the wings and at times we worried they might fly right off the stage. 


BIG Live is a chocolate box of ballet with all your favourites. It showcases wonderful dancers from here and abroad, with lovely casting of each role, in a night that sold out well in advance. No doubt people will be looking in the calendar for next year’s production. In the meantime, BIG Live will be presenting Dracula and The Nutcracker later this year. 


Tuesday, August 5, 2025

2025 BALLET INTERNATIONAL GALA - BIG VI Canberra Theatre


Iana Salenko and Marian Walter



Artistic Director: Joel Burke        Executive Director : Khalid Tarabay

Company Manager: Jennifer Burke - Marketing Manager: Jonathan Oakes

Canberra Theatre. August 2nd, 2025. Reviewed by BILL STEPHENS


BIG Live premiered its 2025 Ballet International Gala tour before a capacity audience in the Canberra Theatre with a performance that was sold out a week before the company arrived in town.

Established four years ago by dancer, Joel Burke, and entertainment lawyer, Khalid Tarabay with an ambition to create stable, long-term employment for Australian performers without relying on government funding, BIG Live has already succeeded in building an impressive national audience for its productions.

Founded on the belief that ballet should be open and inclusive, BIG Live has challenged public perceptions of the art form by presenting commercially viable, audience-focused productions that are respectful of tradition but adapted to contemporary audiences.

Central to this aim is its annual Ballet International Gala which each year brings together some of the world’s most accomplished dancers featuring guest artists from leading ballet companies from around the world performing iconic solos and pas de deux.

Daniil Simkin performing "Le Corsaire"

 
This year’s guests include three celebrated principal dancers from the Berlin State Ballet, Daniil Simkin, Marian Walter and his wife, Iana Salenko who is also a guest principal with the Royal Ballet.   

Adamzhan Baktiyar is a principal dancer with Astana Opera Ballet, and from the Mariinsky Theatre are soloists, Makar Mikhalkin, Maria Khoreva and her younger sister, Sofya Khoreva.

Maria Khoreva and Sofya Khoreva

Originally from New Zealand, Alice McArthur trained in Stuttgart, danced with Paris Opera Ballet before joining the Australian Ballet. She is moving to the Vienna State Ballet in September this year.

The Gala lineup also includes principal dancers from BIG Live. Company co-founder, Joel Burke, the first dancer to represent Queensland Ballet Academy in the prestigious Prix de Lausanne; Ervin Zagidullin, a former principal with Ankara State Ballet; Brisbane born Abbey Hansen who trained with the Australian Ballet School before becoming a principal with BIG Live; and soloist, Huw Pritchard, another Queenslander who graduated from the New Zealand School of Dance and danced with Ballet Collective Aotearoa before joining BIG Live.

Ervin Zagidullin


The lineup for the gala also includes a rock band which featured in the opening and finale. With one other exception, all the other items were performed to recorded music.

An unfortunate lighting glitch as the curtain rose, marred the opening item, which was meant to be a romantic duet choreographed to Gershwin’s Summertime by Joel Burke and performed by himself and BIG Live principal, Abbey Hansen.

While the dancing was quite lovely, the mood was ruined by over-amplified live vocals and vocal phrasing at odds with the choreography.

Any flaws were quickly forgotten when Daniil Simkin and Alice McArthur took the stage with a bravura performance of the Le Corsaire Pas de Deux which drew the first of many cheers throughout the evening.

Iana Salenka performing "Thais"

Marian Walter and his wife, Iana Salenko, followed with an exquisite performance of the Thais Pas de Deux set to Massenet’s Meditation. Abbey Hansen returned to the stage, this time partnered by an ebullient Ervin Gagidullin for an exhilarating performance of the pas de deux from Diana & Acteon.

Marinsky theatre soloists Maria Khoreva and Makar Mikhalkin enchanted with their elegance and precision in a dreamy performance of the Talisman Pas de Deux which proved the perfect entre to a breathtakingly exquisite performance by Alice McArthur, this time partnered by Adamzhan Baktiyar, of the Act 2 pas de deux from Giselle.

Other pas de deux featured in the program were from Romeo & Juliet performed by Maria Khoreva & Makar Mikhalkin, and a sensational version of the famous pas de deux from Don Quixote performed with exactly the right amount of playful competitiveness by Iana Selanko and Adamzhan Baktiyar, that had the audience screaming with excitement.


Adamzhan Baktiyar

There was also a sneak peek from BIG Live’s forthcoming full length ballet Dracula, performed by Abbey Hansen and Huw Pritchard accompanied on keyboards by Tobi Clark. Dracula will tour widely later in 2025.

Outstanding among many highlights and superb dancing was a poignant mini-ballet Sola performed by Iana Salenko and Marian Walter set around a ballerina haunted by schizophrenia.

A solo version of the Russian Dance from Swan Lake was performed with elegance and fastidious attention to detail by Sofya Khoreva, as was the stunning solo by Daniil Simkin entitled Lohengrin in which the essence of the opera was distilled into a transfixing solo which demanded extraordinary virtuosity and presence.

The program ended with a unique speciality of the annual BIG Gala. A ballet mash-up in which the entire cast takes to the stage to participate in a semi-staged finale.

However, freed from the restriction of repertoire, the dancers began to improvise. Egged on by the band and the audience, they risked life and limb to challenge each other to invent ever more daring balletic moves. The thrilling, good-natured competition may have given their entrepreneurs palpitations but sent their already charged up audience home thrilled at having had the rare experience of witnessing world famous dancers at play.

Following this Canberra performance the BALLET INTERNATIONAL GALA is scheduled for Brisbane on August 6th and 7th, Sydney on August 14th, Melbourne August 16th, Cairns August 22nd and Auckland 29th.

Ballet International Finale






This review also published in AUSTRALIAN ARTS REVIEW. www.artsreview.com.au









Monday, August 4, 2025

Are You Pulling My Leg? Accessible Arts and Crips & Creeps in association with Arts on tour. The B. August 2. Reviewed by Alanna Maclean

 


This was a one night stand for a somewhat wild and woolly night at The B, (which is the old Bicentennial Hall barn of a hall converted into a flexible theatre space  next to The Q).

Helmed by the dry and one armed MC Maddie Stewart, a very adroit bunch of comics took to the microphone to share stories of the world from the point of view of those who have more than the usual set of life challenges.

Jamal Abdul warmly took the audience into the world of those with minimal sight and Elliott McLaren put together some pretty sharp observations on being gay, a Maori in Sydney and  having more than a few medical obstacles in his life.

Loz Booth has hands that may not be conventional and that’s no obstacle to the power and humour in her perceptions and the fun of her performance.

Alexandra Hudson’s dry comments on the ableist world around a person who’s seen as disabled had an understated power that said it all.

Add to this a screen where the on stage patter was rolling through in print, an Auslan interpreter with a great personality and a large  audience who clearly understood the territory. It was an evening that was both funny and an education.