Otago Daily Times

Frame’s first work leaps to new heights of creativity and life on stage

-

JANET Frame and Red Leap Theatre are a match made in arts heaven.

For both of them, rules and convention are there to be stretched and broken for artistic effect, leading to Frame’s strikingly rich descriptiv­e power and Red Leap’s uncanny ability to ignore the literal and startle audiences with unbridled creativity.

Red Leap’s version of Frame’s classic partlyauto­biographic­al

Owls Do Cry

Lake Wanaka Centre Tiny Ruins

Pacific Crystal Palace Friday, April 16

first novel explodes into the theatre, elevating her word images from the page to the stage and giving them new dynamic life

WANAKA QUEENSTOWN CROMWELL ALEXANDRA by adding music, song and dance and a technical toolbox of tricks to tickle the senses.

Director Malia Johnston’s six actor/collaborat­ors emphasise the emotions of Frame’s early life and the hurdles she and her family faced before she found herself as a writer. It’s not easy watching, at times confusing and often beyond fringe.

This is not Frame’s version of the book, but it is extraordin­ary, inventive, immersive and highly energetic. It’s Frame’s imaginatio­n seen and raised by profession­al players who are comfortabl­e taking extreme risks for great returns.

Red Leap’s production of Owls Do Cry might be way out there — but then so was Frame

TWIZEL

OTEMATATA RANFURLY OAMARU PALMERSTON all those years ago.

And somehow I could imagine Janet sitting in the audience a few seats away in the darkness, eyes glittering as she takes in the spectacle, quietly chortling with glee.

Tiny Ruins, either Hollie Fullbrook solo or with her band, has been quietly gathering high praise for albums, collaborat­ions and excellent live gigs, hence the full house for a great set of old and new songs touching on indie folk, intelligen­t pop and bursts of discord and psychedeli­a.

Despite a 20minute power outage and playing with the full band for the first time in a year, it was effortless, warm and delightful­ly unpredicta­ble. Rare treasure.

FORECAST

p31

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand