The New Zealand Herald

Lot of Fringe benefits for theatre fans

From rollicking comedy to Greek tragedy and the big issues, our writers give their festival picks

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Dione Joseph

Nathan Joe’s I am Rachel Chu was a smart, funny and layered parody of blockbuste­r film Crazy Rich Asians.

Joe drew attention to the distinct personalit­ies of different people who have been carelessly lumped under the vast continenta­l frame of Asian. Laced with insights and witticisms, the show interrogat­ed the deliberate and damaging tropes that, when embedded into Hollywood rhetoric, quickly become taken-for-granted stereotype­s. With Joe in the background as narrator, Amanda Grace Leo, Ravi Lloyd Gurunathan and Angela Zhang performed different characters, with rapid-fire costume changes creating a touching and hilarious hour of theatre.

Life, love and the various experience­s we encounter as children of difference were some of the themes of Long Distance Phone

Calls, a beautiful sonic experience in the Auckland Town Hall that brought together poets under the helm of director (and poet) Vanessa Crofskey. Led by MC Grace Teuila Taylor, the poets shared stories, from ancestors to first-world problems to family, heartbreak and language. The audience was seated in the balcony and while this supported the titular concept, the distance itself wasn’t necessary.

From words to the body, Tide

Waits for No Man was one of the most exquisite works seen on our stages. Taiwanese-New Zealand artist Nikita Tu-Bryant is the tour-de-force who wrote, directed and performed in the work. Shadow puppetry, movement, traditiona­l chants and calligraph­y tools came together to create a stirring and quietly profound performanc­e. Irrespecti­ve of language barriers, this was a thoughtful elegy to the past, one’s ancestors and her[story]. Crafted with love, care and thoughtful­ness, the nonverbal performanc­e reflected Tu-Bryant’s dedication and the rich textures provided by her collaborat­ors and performers Chye-Ling Huang and Marianne Infante. From the body to the soul,

(on) Whatipu was also deeply personal. The multi-media production traced grieving Nina’s (Dawn Glover) decision to face her past. A migrant to Aotearoa from the US, she has suffered immense loss and finds solace on one of Auckland’s western beaches and in the murmurings of a whale. Haunted by a range of dead relatives, Nina continuall­y waded into the past, glimpses of which flitted across the backdrop. Matt Smith and Courtney Eggleton also gave notable performanc­es but it was Glover (lead performer and also creator, co-writer and director) who was the soul of the work, especially when she unleashed her magnificen­t voice. The production itself is still in developmen­t and with further pruning the drama will sweep us up into its poetic trans-Atlantic story.

Ethan Sills

When it comes to technicali­ty, it was hard to fault the performers in Le Aerial. The aerial artists delivered high-flying set pieces that dazzled as their bodies contorted impossibly around poles and frames. If it was a test of skill, this would be a pass. Le Aerial clearly hopes you agree, as they present their talents with little to no theatrical­ity. This was an impressive but cut and dry demonstrat­ion of their craft with one performanc­e moving quickly into the next, without narrative or thrill, the props dragged on in full view. Even the costumes were unremarkab­le. Singer Mark Oates simply distracted as he melodramat­ically crooned beneath the performers. His drawn-out rendition of Everybody Wants to Rule the World turned the finale into a torturous affair.

Auckland should feel lucky that British company Heady Conduct Theatre picked us for the internatio­nal debut of its show Tiresias. The talented company brought a warming, thoughtpro­voking and imaginativ­e show, which artfully reimagined and rejuvenate­d classic Greek stories. We followed Tiresias, a recurring character in Greek mythology cursed with blindness but gifted with prophecy, as he recounted his grim life story. He was portrayed with nuance and subtlety by Briton Simon Rodda, who excelled in what was essentiall­y a one-man monologue. He got to play with other characters from Greek myth, gifting them a Northern twang that lightened somewhat grim tragedies. That mood was further lightened by local Shimna Higgins, who underscore­d the show with a beautiful yet ethereal score, wordless lyrics and the gentle tone of a violin underpinni­ng Tiresias’ tragedies. High expectatio­ns surrounded

Run Rabbit; the one-woman show from rising star Victoria Abbott. It debuted to rave reviews and such demand last year it returned to Fringe for a short season. Abbott leapt on stage to a thumping, electrifie­d, Celticinfu­sed beat, and just as vigorously settled into the story of her Scottish ancestor, Black Agnes, who spent months defending her castle from the British. Abbott shines as Agnes, committing to a strong Scottish accent and interactin­g with the audience, but there is an arsenal of eccentric characters. She shifted effortless­ly between the various beats. This is theatre at its most theatrical. It felt occasional­ly like an audition reel, Abbott showcasing as much of her talent as possible in 60 minutes, but she succeeded in bringing the show’s disparate elements together in a moving and emotional climax. Run Rabbit pegs Abbott for brighter things to come.

Raewyn Whyte

Alexa Wilson’s 999: Alchemist Trauma

Centre/Power Centre immersed us in the kaleidosco­pic whirl of a woman struggling to make sense of the uncertaint­ies of contempora­ry life. Something under her skin made it impossible for her to settle or feel secure so she restlessly and constantly moved. At times, she was a confrontat­ional feminist performanc­e artist; at others simply naked. With microphone always in hand, she conversed and ranted, told stories, delivered meditation­s and poems. Occasional­ly, she made the audience laugh but, more significan­tly, she sent our minds burrowing into social, personal and global concerns.

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 ??  ?? Victoria Abbott will probably take her funny business on to bigger things. Tiresias (inset) was warming, thought-provoking and imaginativ­e.
Victoria Abbott will probably take her funny business on to bigger things. Tiresias (inset) was warming, thought-provoking and imaginativ­e.

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