Dave Callan – A Little Less Conversation 3

ByĀ Elyce PhillipsĀ Dave Callan less Conversation 2

Dave Callan has returned to Melbourne Fringe with the third and final instalment of his dance trilogy. Itā€™s an uplifting hour of cheesy pop, unbridled enthusiasm and infectious energy. The festival might not be over yet, but seeing A Little Less Conversation 3 has got to be the most fun you can have at the Fringe.

In this new show, Callan once again takes the audience on a musical journey from the beginning of time through to today, performing dances to some classic hits that he missed in the first two rounds. The dance medleys are broken up with stand-up, some FAQs and some fantastically funny videos that Callan has put together. As a special preview show treat, Callan also performed Beyonceā€™s Single Ladies dance in its entirety as an extra finale, which was truly a sight to behold.

This may be the third instalment of Callanā€™s dance-themed shows, but thereā€™s still tremendous comedic value in seeing this wizard-viking shake his booty to the likes of Britney Spears and T-Swift. Callan’s back-up dancers (Jess Quinn and Emma Russell) are wonderful performers in their own right, and act as a choreographic foil to Callan’s occasionally fumbled moves. Thereā€™s an array of dazzling and ill-fitting costumes and some gloriously ridiculous props. Ā The amount of work that has gone into this show is really impressive, and you can see that all three performers are giving it their all on the stage. By the end, Callan appears to be almost entirely composed of sweat and glitter.

A Little Less Conversation 3 is a show that leaves you with joy in your heart and a dance in your step as you walk out. Itā€™s a whole-hearted celebration of pop culture, in all its weird and wonderful glory.

A Little Less Conversation 3 is on at the Fringe Hub ā€“ Ballroom until October 3

https://www.melbournefringe.com.au/program/event/view/5abdf612-f6dc-4e04-811c-c75ae7763ab7

Peta and the Whale

By Lisa ClarkĀ Peta and the Whale pic

 

The extraordinary talent going into this production of Peta and the Whale are there for you to see. The puppets are gorgeous, the technical skills of everyone involved are top notch and there is a beautiful simple tale at its heart.

I fell in love with Philip Millarā€™s puppetry when he did Tyrannosaurus Sex at Fringe several years ago and it blew my mind. For some reason phallus puppets popped up in several shows (Like Nina Contiā€™s) around that time but none were wielded as brilliantly, intelligently & hilariously as Philip’s. And now for something completely different. Well, apart from the brilliant, intelligent bit.

Peta and the Whale is mostly Black Theatre, with puppeteers in black wielding puppets on sticks and wire. Peta is a marionette and her sailor grandfather is played by famous childrenā€™s entertainer Franciscus Henri made up to look a little bit like a puppet. The entire performance takes place behind a scrim which has drawings projected onto it and helps mask the puppeteers, giving a sense of being in a magical, possibly underwater world. It works beautifully.

With Fransiscus on board, you know there will be great music and there was, some fabulous sea shanties, not a lot, but enough to add great atmosphere. This is no wiggles style singalong, dancealong kids show though, it is thoughtful, gentle and had the kids (mostly aged under eight) engaged and sitting surprisingly quietly all the way through (Thereā€™s always one kid who pipes up in a quiet bit ā€œWhatā€™s That Mummy?ā€ making everyone giggle). The seating is raked but the smallest ones are best sitting on adultā€™s laps to see clearly (the three year old next to me had no problems and was mesmerised), or sit as far up the front as you can. It was sold out the day I saw it. So get there a bit early for best seats.

Petaā€™s Grandfather tells her stories of the sea and magically her pictures of sea creatures come to life out of her book before our eyes. The creatures are stunning, with my only quibbles being that it took a while to finally see the whale of the title and that there are not quite enough sea creatures, so thereā€™s another reason to see this; your ticket sales can go into more puppets being made!

Peta and the Whale isĀ in the Kids section but this one is enjoyable for all ages. A beautiful soulful puppet show about love, imagination and magic that cast a spell on its enchanted audience.

Peta and the Whale is on at the North Melbourne Town Hall until October 3.

For booking details visitĀ https://www.melbournefringe.com.au/program/event/view/2c4f4875-2f3c-4304-9a34-9ac2eaed057c

5 Good Reasons to See Good Show: ROBOTS ROBOTS ROBOTS

1. Sketch topics include: Love! Housefires! Corn! Bats! And many more.

2. This gender-balanced sketch group is made of four of Melbourne’sĀ MOST improv comedians and performers. That’s right. We know what we said.

3. Learn exactly how to please our glorious robot overlords.

4. As we hurtle toward the advent of artificial intelligence surpassing the sum of human achievement, what else is there to do but laugh?

5. Help us get Luke’s ex-wife back.

 

ROBOTS ROBOTS ROBOTS is on at The Lithuanian Club

https://www.melbournefringe.com.au/program/event/view/08978f69-075b-4ca1-9516-b15c7ecfaaca

The Improv Conspiracy ā€“ 3 Mad Rituals

By Elyce PhillipsĀ Improv 3 Mad Rituals

For the past few years, The Improv Conspiracy has been establishing itself as the company to see for longform improv. In 3 Mad Rituals, a team of fabulous performers take on a marathon of longform formats, displaying both incredible stamina and a talent for pulling comedy gold from seemingly thin air.

3 Mad Rituals is a 90 minute behemoth of improvised comedy. The players take part in three ā€œritualsā€ designed by Del Close (a legendary performer and director at Second City) ā€“ Deconstruction, The Movie, and The Harold ā€“ all working from the one suggestion. In the Improv Conspiracyā€™s version, the suggestion is taken from a line of poetry called out from the audience. On the night I attended, it was Emily Dickinsonā€™s ā€œHope is a thing with feathersā€.

First up is the Deconstruction ā€“ a series of short scenes playing off an initial opener.Ā  Performers Andrew Strano and Andrew Watt showed that they also had drama chops, starting things with a brutally emotional scene about a father caring for his drug-addicted son while he gets clean. The rest of the crew then skilfully created comedic scenes based on this relationship.

Following this was The Movie, in which the team created a half-hour ā€œfilmā€, complete with suggested camera and lighting instructions. From the embers of the preceding half-hour, they created ā€˜Noah and the Mecha-Angelā€™, an anime-style take on the biblical story, featuring Hayley Tantau and Mario Hannah as a pair of extremely unproductive water demons, intent on destroying the world but failing to do much about it.

Finally was The Harold, a long-form staple of The Improv Conspiracy. Here, things got a little hit and miss. A series of scenes about a murderous husband strayed into uncomfortable territory, with the dark subject matter not getting enough laughs to feel justifiable. However, there were also bright spots. Broni Lisleā€™s performance as a magician facing discrimination from his community was hilarious, as was Dan Pavatich as the nation of Chad, who inexplicably spoke fluent Japanese.

3 Mad Rituals is a wonderful opportunity to check out some of Improv Conspiracyā€™s strongest performers testing their skills in a gruelling format. Keeping a captive audience with a 90 minutes show that starts at 10:15pm is a tall order, but the team well and truly accomplished it, keeping the room in stitches for the duration.

3 Mad Rituals is on at The Improv Conspiracy ā€“ Theatre until October 3

https://www.melbournefringe.com.au/program/event/view/9f975071-6f4f-43e6-9ca5-c468c76da19f

Tony Martin – The Arse/Elbow Equation

ByĀ Elyce PhillipsĀ Tony-Martin-Arse-Elbow-Equation

There are few people in the Australian comedy scene more revered than Tony Martin. Since his early days with the D-Generation, he has earned a reputation for hard work and incredible wit through his output on TV and radio. The Arse/Elbow Equation serves to confirm that Martin is well-deserving of the hype. It is an utterly hilarious hour of storytelling, filled with clever prose and fantastic character work.

In this new show, Martin tells tales of getting older. He turned 50 last year, but still finds himself muddling through life. The only thing that has changed is the unexpected introduction of invasive medical procedures. The Arse/Elbow Equation highlights Martinā€™s fantastic skill at turning everyday occurrences, like a trip to the bank or the video store, into incisive works of comedy genius. There are no gimmicks here – most of the show is observational humour – but it feels fresh and insightful. Martin may not feel like he has mastered life, but he has certainly mastered this medium.

The stage is clearly his natural habitat. Whether itā€™s a personal story or a pitch-perfect impersonation, Martin delivers his material with complete ease. The audience was kept in fits of laughter, with barely a chance to catch their breath.

Martin is a comedy legend that has lost none of his spark with the passage of time. He’s the comedian that other comedians come to see, and for good reason. If you get the opportunity to see this show, snap tickets up as fast as you can. This is dizzy stuff, folks.

The Arse/Elbow Equation is on at the Fringe Hub ā€“ Meeting Room until October 3, however tickets are currently sold out for the rest of the run.

https://www.melbournefringe.com.au/program/event/view/8f88eea7-bc23-4556-9258-258020dd779b

Hook Turn by Kin Collective

By Lisa ClarkĀ hook Turn

Iā€™ve seen a lot of sketch comedy in my time but here was something intriguing, sketch drama. With two Queens of Melbourne comedy involved, Marg Downey and Michala BanasĀ itā€™s not surprising that I traipsed out of the comedy section again to check this one out. Well there was a lot less comedy than Iā€™d hoped for, but Hook TurnĀ was a great show none the less.

Another thing that attracted me was the hook turn of the title, this uniquely Melbourne road rule that means cars have to keep left to turn right, so that trams can get through intersections can look like a beautiful ballet when done correctly. Iā€™ve seen a family of Canadian tourists watch one in awe as their dad pointed out how it worked. But they are rare and tricky and even I was caught out once not noticing that the intersection I was in required one. Luckily it was very late and the roads were clear but in the crux of this play is an accident that occurs.

Of course the Hook Turn is used as a metaphor for the characters situations but it gradually appears that all the disparate characters were somehow involved in an accident involving a tram at a hook turn. Some scenes more so than others; such as in the one with actress running slightly late for her performance because of an accident, to the more seriously involved as revealed later. It may be inadvertent (as it were) and the hook turn incidents not actually be connected, just a running theme that the performers riffed off, but that is the perception I was left with.

The sketches are all solo actor character piecesĀ andĀ eachĀ manages to paint a picture of a particular place in Melbourne. “5Ā minutes Until Beginners” (Marg Downey) and “Private Driver” are the most amusing, with Christopher Bunworth of the latter employing some standup techniques, breaking the fourth wall and asking for some light audience interaction from a member who becomes a small part of the piece. It works well and welcomes the audience into the work. The highlight for me was ā€œIt Starts With a Treeā€ by Keith Brockett because it tackled truly complex themes so intelligently, delicately and beautifully, portraying them physically as well, which lets face it, is what theatre does best. An Asian man (Keith Brockett) is reading a letter on a tram that gradually becomes more packed with people. He doesnā€™t speak, instead we hear the voice of the letter writer (Ally Fowler) whoā€™s beautiful letter dripping with warm nostalgia about a changing city gradually turns dark as the people in the tram start becoming uncomfortably close and overbearing. It surprised me by unexpectedly moving me to tears. “Judgement Days” (by Carl Sorheim) was about the downfall of an odious high flyer (performed by Dylan Watson) and his relationship with his dad and “Motherless Melbourne” was a show stopping two hander by Mark Diako set in a nightclub queue about acceptance, but became a bit didactic, underestimating the intelligence of the audience somewhat.Ā The closing monologue about motherhood, “Shoe Laces”, performed by Michala BanasĀ would not leaveĀ a dry eye in the house.

It was beautiful but a pity to end on such a dark note, leaving theĀ sadness to linger as we parted, but it did feel like we’d been on a journey. A great little play, like an album of photos that make a bigger pictureĀ and an ensemble of actors who each shine in their own piece. More drama thanĀ comedy but a fringe performance that’s certainly worth the experience.

Hook Turn is on at The North Melbourne Town Hall

For information and ticketsĀ https://www.melbournefringe.com.au/program/event/view/21445f13-daef-4358-bcaa-33ce64ad25e7