Has this been your way yet? Fabulous, just fabulous. Grab a ticket if you can.
Written by Andrew Upton, starring Hugo Weaving with a stellar support cast and directed by Phillip Seymour Hoffman this was a gripping examination of self-destructing burnt out rock stars thinking about holding a comeback tour. Everything was spot on from the over-styled kitchen/living room set to the different demons facing each of the characters. What you expect, yet not what you expect.
However, not everyone agreed. The old guy in front of me yelled out "What a W*nk!" just as the last scene ended and walked out looking disgusted.
Scary HR boss, bad mother to two teens, for no good reason knows every word to Evita The Musical
Saturday, 1 December 2007
Riflemind
Sunday, 15 July 2007
Can you spell "G-A-R-D-L-Y-L-O-O"?
Gardlyloo. (gär' dè lòò'). interj. (a cry formerly used in Scotland to warn pedestrians when slops were about to be thrown from an upstairs window.) [Anglicized form of F gare (de) l'eau beware of the water]
Webster's New Universal Unabridged Dictionary, © 1989 - Dilithium Press, Ltd.
Firegazer and I went to the Sydney Theatre last night to see a musical comedy starring Marina Prior and Magda Szubanski called The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee. Billed as:
"... six socially-challenged,philologically-industrious twelve-year-olds battling it out for glory: to be sole survivor in their local spelling competition".
It was excellent.
As STC subscribers we've been to a few great plays/shows this year but this was the first one where we felt the audience was applauding because they loved it and not because it was the right thing to do. There were no awkward should we applaud now? moments, instead the audience felt free to laugh, applaud and yell-out at any point they pleased - at times the actors has to motion for us to calm down.
Warning: possible spoilers ahead
This show has audience participation. Four (previously primed) members of the audience were called out to be spelling bee particpants. The idea was that they would be given a couple of easy words (cat, mexicans) then be gonged out a couple of rounds later on some ridiculously difficult words.
But this is live theatre so, of course, it didn't go like that.
The last audience member standing managed to spell "Gardlyloo" (pronounced Gar de loo) sending the whole cast into shock, and then fits of laughter, while they hurredly found a new more proposterous word.
I really hope this fun small-scale musical comedy comes to your city (it's been to Melb. already) - if it does make sure you get a ticket.
