From February 2010, The Lumière Reader will publish from its all-new website. This existing website will remain online in an archival capacity until we relocate its content.
Silo TheatreApril 20-May 20 | Reviewed by Imogen Neale
ONE WORD: brutal. A few more? Confrontational, awkward, inspired, demanding and riotous. Welcome to sixteen versions of one night in Sydney, welcome to the life of a prostitute, an aids victim, a has-been musician with a pethadine habit and a costume designer who thinks she has adopted an alien; welcome, in other words, to The Jungle.
Circa TwoApril 22-May 20 | Reviewed by Neil Furby
THE PROGRAMME notes said that a Drawer of Knives was a sexually charged surrealist thriller exploring each side of a triangular relationship. So was it? A ringing phone opens the play with a seated Russell (Paul McLaughlin sprawling on the seat staring upwards); a blood red couch, the only colour on stage, pulses with foreboding menace. The other two members of the triangle are quickly introduced: Denise (Miranda Manasiladis), Russell’s partner, and Sarah (Lucy Briant), the solo mum from the flat below. A comic scatter-gun dialogue begins.
Auckland Town Hall, THE EDGE®March 19 | Reviewed by Imogen Neale
THE PREMISE of this theatre-does-speed event, would seem, to even the most optimistic dramaturge (isn’t that in itself an oxymoron?), mad, messy and merciless. Take eight of New Zealand’s top playwrights and directors, marry them up with twenty-eight, equally talented, actors, give them two random props, split them off into eight groups, grant them permission to get mad theatrical and leave them to it for 24hrs. Then, when everyone is worn out yet well wired on sponsors caffeine products (Red Bull and Allpress) – give them the stage, an expectant (and paying) audience, ten minutes and the promise of a prize and see what happens.
Circa OneApril 1-May 6 | Reviewed by Melody Nixon
JUST OVER a year after the death of Arthur Miller, Circa theatre brings us a scintillating rendition of his most celebrated play, Death of a Salesman. A classic almost from its inception, Death of a Salesman won Miller the 1949 Pulitzer Prize for Drama and has played in theatres and been taught in schools throughout the world since.
Luxembourg GardensApril 5-22 | Reviewed by Imogen Neale
Stories Told To Me By Girls is not, strictly speaking, only produced and made possible by those people with their names on the credits page. Rather, as writer Julie Hill and Director Stephen Bain point out, it is a play whose narrative threads, quirks, charm, depth and frivolity are an amalgamation of stories that have, quite literally, been told to them by girls. However, while the press material may state that the play draws on woman’s stories, and that the way they are told, the way they focus on certain themes, the way they move is imbued with an essential womanness, I have to disagree. Most of the stories revolve around woman’s relationships with men – be they sexual, platonic or familial. Thus, the stories are as much about gender relations and roles as they are about a womanly essence; l'eau de hysteria.
SEEyD Theatre Company Circa Two, Mar 11-Apr 15 | Reviewed by Melody Nixon
THOSE used to SEEyD Theatre Company’s thoughtful, quality works will not be disappointed by their latest offering, The Brilliant Fassah. Written by Tim Spite, James Ashcroft and Gabe McDonnell, this play is cleverly constructed, flawlessly presented and genuinely comic, with an engaging and creative use of props and theatre space. Its ending however is a little contradictory to the essence of the play, and feels slightly at odds with the earnest drive of the main body.





