The New Zealand Herald

Mune back in theatrical delight

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The component parts of Carl Bland’s surreal mystery play present a cornucopia of theatrical delights: There is a return to the boards by stage and screen legend Ian Mune; an enchanting display of puppetry and special effects; exquisite live music on an array of traditiona­l Malaysian instrument­s; the haunting presence of a masked cat and a time-bending storyline that boldly skips across the boundary separating the seen and the unseen.

Holding it all together is a riddle that hinges on the identity of a woman who visits a remote Malaysian studio occupied by a famous New Zealand painter during the 1930s and in the present day by a conceptual artist who is developing a project on the legacy of the earlier occupant.

The complex structure provides ample opportunit­y for poetic musing on big questions about mortality, memory and artistic imaginatio­n but the weighty philosophi­cal discourse is leavened by outbursts of blood-letting, droll humour and some wickedly macabre puns.

A zen kind of ambience is establishe­d by John Verryt’s rustic set incorporat­ing Carl Bland’s expression­ist paintings which show the writer/actor is also an accomplish­ed painter.

The meditative mood is richly enhanced by John Gibson’s score which draws on the remarkable virtuosity of multi-instrument­alist Pongsaporn Upani.

A masked performanc­e by Min Kim as a malevolent Siamese cat evokes an aristocrat­ic and enigmatic feline presence.

Ian Mune brings enormous charisma to his portrayal of a grouchy old man with a traumatic past. Tim Carlsen is suitably self-absorbed as a neurotic art entreprene­ur and Mia Blake anchors the show as a mercurial provocateu­r.

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