Manon by The Australian Ballet; Rebecca play at MTC; DanceX Festival Week 1; Trio Isimsiz, Musica Viva; The Tallis Scholars at Melbourne Recital Centre
The secondary schemers are more fun. Maxim Zenin’s Lescaut is a lovable rogue – quick, witty and impish in attack. And Isobelle Dashwood is eye-catching as his mistress: tall and graceful but also funny, especially in the drunken duet with Zenin.
Isobelle Dashwood is eye-catching as Lescaut’s mistress.Credit: Kate Longley
It feels every bit of its more than 2½-hour length. There are group dances galore and variations, as well as many heavy touches of verismo. Is that child working in the brothel? Well, it’s all part of Manon’s operatic largeness.
Conductor Nathaniel Griffiths gets a ravishing sound from Orchestra Victoria. Those intimate but faintly menacing pieces such as the Nocturne from La Navarraise, used in the second act, are particularly effective – perhaps the most delicately human things in the whole ballet.
Reviewed by Andrew Fuhrmann
DANCE
DanceX Festival Week 1 ★★★★
Playhouse, until October 11
The DanceX Festival is a curious beast. The Australian Ballet – that bastion of a prestige art form – has built a festival for the whole sector. Everyone – or nearly everyone – has a place at the table.
Seeing Through Darkness.Credit: Matt Byrne
And yet, it doesn’t feel like a festival. There’s not a lot of buzz and the Playhouse was far from full at Wednesday’s opening.
The timing doesn’t help because DanceX is wedged between the Australian Ballet seasons of Prism and Manon. So it doesn’t have much oxygen. It also overlaps with the Melbourne Fringe Festival, with its own diverse program of dance offerings.
Audiences should come anyway. There’s a generous selection of shorter works. The standard is very high – these are works that have toured repeatedly – and the contrasts are instructive. It amounts to a welcome digest of where Australian dance is now.
A notable international guest, the Royal New Zealand Ballet, offers an excerpt from Te Ao Marama, created for the company’s 70th anniversary by Moss Te Ururangi Patterson. It’s an intriguing experiment in which the haka form is combined with more lyrical material.
An excerpt from Te Ao Marama is presented as part of of the first week of DanceX.Credit: Stephen A’Court
Restless Dance Theatre’s Seeing Through Darkness is welcome programming. The company’s inclusive ensemble is accompanied by live violin and cello. It’s the most polished work I’ve seen from them, but it still left me wishing the company would take a few more risks.
Balanchine’s Allegro Brillante is performed by artists from the Australian Ballet and the Australian Ballet School. Charming, yes, and a bit schmaltzy. It’s performed with speed and some feel for the music; nonetheless, it looks a little stale on these dancers.
The standout piece is Lucy Guerin’s Ground Control. If Samara Merrick is plausible but not dazzling in Allegro, here she is a galvanic phenomenon: focused, precise and attractively strange. She proves an ideal interpreter of Guerin’s art of the uncanny. The four dancers first work themselves into the floor, sinking their feet as the arms flicker. Then there’s shift when Merrick puts on her pointe shoes. Now we see structures melt away as she wafts into the darkness.
Lucy Guerin’s Ground Control is a highlight.Credit: Kate Longley
The evening closes with an excerpt from Dancenorth’s Wayfinder – that effervescent rainbow fantasy from Townsville. Honestly, every evening of dance should finish with something from Wayfinder: it’s the surest way to send the audience off with a smile.
Reviewed by Andrew Fuhrmann
THEATRE
Rebecca ★★★★
Melbourne Theatre Company, Sumner Theatre, until November 5
Rebecca is the second gothic fiction from Daphne du Maurier to be adapted for Melbourne’s main stage this year, after The Birds at the Malthouse in May. Both were popular bestsellers made into Hitchcock films, so it’s fair to ask: what can theatre bring to their retelling that film can’t?
In Matthew Lutton’s no-frills adaptation of The Birds, the intimacy of sound predominated. Paula Arundell’s almost conspiratorial storytelling coaxed audiences into the claustrophobic monodrama; audio tech immersed us in the horror of unexplained avian attacks individually, creating a private, and deeply unnerving, soundscape for each spectator.
Nikki Shiels in a scene from RebeccaCredit: Pia Johnson
Anne-Louise Sarks’ Rebecca has frills. This is commercial theatre with elegant production values, poised and atmospheric design, a formidable cast, and a script that allows the seeds of this iconic romantic thriller to bloom into morbid flower.
An unnamed young woman (Nikki Shiels) meets grieving aristocrat Maxim de Winter (Stephen Phillips) by chance in Monte Carlo. A whirlwind romance leads to marriage, and she moves with him to Manderley – a stately manor home by the sea in Cornwall – where she quickly falls under the shadow of Maxim’s recently deceased first wife, Rebecca.
As the severe housekeeper Mrs Danvers (Pamela Rabe) begins to manipulate the new lady of the house, Maxim becomes remote and emotionally withdrawn. All roads point to Rebecca as the cause. Is Maxim still in love with her? How could anyone ever live up to Rebecca’s reputation for feminine perfection? And how, exactly, did Rebecca die?
Scandalous revelations and sudden twists await as she probes the secrets her haunted husband is hiding from her.
Design elements fuse into a triumph of Gothic sensibility: the brooding insistence of the sound design (Grace Ferguson and Joe Paradise Lui); Paul Jackson’s nimbus-smeared lighting; Marg Horwell’s astute eye for period fashion; and the visual precision behind each scene change, every mist and mirror.
Pamela Rabe as Mrs Danvers is ideal casting.Credit: Pia Johnson
Shiels inhabits the insecurities of the heroine, her vulnerability, and her descent into domestic horror with compelling presence. There’s a jolting character transformation that might be more credible had it been achieved in a more graduated way, but the romance opposite Phillips holds your attention, and I particularly enjoyed Shiels going toe-to-toe with Rabe.
Long before her award-winning role in Wentworth, I’ve wanted to see Rabe as Mrs Danvers. It’s ideal casting, and Rabe’s husky apparition turns into a creature of flesh and blood as it builds a sapphic subtext (disallowed by censors in the Hitchcock movie) to the character’s deranged obsession. The fetishisation of the feminine, and the power play between the two women, has a transfixing, performative quality that reminded me a little of the murderous sisters in Jean Genet’s The Maids.
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And it’s Mrs Danvers, interestingly, who gives the staunchest rallying cry regarding social freedom for women. Sarks appears to deny no perspective on the sources of psychological horror in Rebecca, tantalising us with possibilities. It’s thought-provoking, even if they don’t all coalesce into effective drama.
Newcomers to Rebecca might strain, too, to make sense of plot twists hastily telegraphed toward the end. It’s a bumpy climax after such a smooth ride to get there, though a small flaw in an otherwise slick, solidly crafted entertainment.
Reviewed by Cameron Woodhead
MUSIC
Trio Isimsiz ★★★★
Musica Viva Australia, Melbourne Recital Centre, October 7
Blending youthful verve and bonhomie with seasoned intuition, Trio Isimsiz (Turkish for “trio without a name”) made this concert deeply pleasurable. Bookended by two great masterpieces (Brahms’ Piano Trio in C minor, Op. 101 and Schubert’s Piano Trio No. 1 in B-flat major, D. 898), the program centred on the Melbourne premiere of a new trio by contemporary Spanish composer Francisco Coll.
Brahms’ third and final essay in the piano trio form is highly compact; its four movements last just over 20 minutes. From the start, the trio fanned the music’s smouldering embers of passion into flame, confirming a solid collective commitment to their endeavours. Beautifully hushed playing in the inner movements caught the ear, along with some wonderfully resonant pizzicato before the fiery finale.
Commissioned for Trio Isimsiz, Coll describes his 2020 Piano Trio as kaleidoscopic. Moving from textural fragmentation to cohesion and back to fragmentation across its four movements constitutes a form of musical cubism. While an engaging and highly imaginative work, with allusions to Richard Strauss and flamenco, there is perhaps too much reliance on the piano to glue the texture together, apart from one spotlit moment for cello. Nevertheless, the dedicatees convincingly rose to the work’s considerable technical and expressive challenges.
Trio Isimiz.Credit: Verena Chen
Schubert’s evergreen trio sent the audience out on a high. After revelling in the buoyant optimism of the opening, the players revealed the poignant slow movement as the beating heart of the work, inhaling tenderness and exhaling a gentle melancholy. Deft, delicate touches in the scherzo led to a final rondo full of playful energy.
Pianist Erdem Misirlioglu, an astute chamber musician with technique to burn, violinist Pablo Hernan Benedi with his sweet, well-projected tone and cellist Edvard Pogossian’s musical handling of his gloriously rich-sounding instrument have certainly made a name for this “nameless” trio.
Reviewed by Tony Way
MUSIC
The Tallis Scholars ★★★★★
Melbourne Recital Centre, October 5 and 6
Melbourne turned on a rock star welcome for The Tallis Scholars, who, over half a century, have come to epitomise the classic English choral sound. Possibly because of the Elisabeth Murdoch Hall’s warm acoustics, the city is the only stop on this Australian tour, favoured with two concerts by the revered ensemble.
The Tallis Scholars.Credit: Hugo Glendinning
Such bounty enabled capacity audiences to savour the group’s stylistic versatility with music from 12th-century abbess and mystic Hildegard von Bingen, through to contemporary American composer Nico Muhly.
While some fans may have considered the absence of English music from the Tudor period conspicuous, there was much other fine music from the 15th and 16th centuries to enjoy.
Emma Walshe expertly spun out the glorious high Cs in Gregorio Allegri’s crowd-pleasing Miserere, supported by the group’s customary razor-sharp intonation and limpid diction. Another Tallis Scholars speciality, Tomas Luis de Victoria’s six-part Requiem of 1605, also plumbed great emotional depths. Director Peter Phillips unleashed plenty of Latin fervour in an evocative reading that cut to the heart of this powerful pondering of life and death.
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Classics such as Clemens non Papa’s Ego flos campi and Josquin’s Praeter rerum seriem rubbed shoulders with lesser-known gems, including Crecquillon’s Andreas Christi famulus, Obrecht’s Salve Regina and an eight-part Credo by Gombert. A sprightly Deus in adiutorium by Spanish Mexican priest Juan de Padilla added further delight.
Sung by an angelic quartet of female voices, four short chants by Hildegard provided interludes in the second program.
By contrast, works by living composers included Muhly’s 2023 commission A Glorious Creature, full of engaging brightness, while the quiet intensity of Arvo Part’s Triodion and Da pacem Domine were set against the insightful strength of his Magnificat.
Purcell’s Hear my prayer, with its plangent dissonances, and Pearsall’s exquisite Lay a garland were perfectly chosen encores. As with the rest of the music, these were animated by the enviable passion and precision for which this ensemble is famous.
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Due to the illness of one ensemble member, Melbourne bass Lachlan McDonald landed a dream job as a stand-in, blending seamlessly with the other singers.
Melbourne Recital Centre forfeited a massive opportunity for music education and did its reputation as a quality music venue no favours by failing to provide a proper printed program containing program notes, texts and translations for this “signature event” – the only blight on an otherwise radiant pair of superb musical experiences.
Reviewed by Tony Way
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