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Apocalypse Perth

Thu, 23 Oct 2008, 08:40 am
Gordon the Optom78 posts in thread
‘Apocalypse Perth’ written by Kate Rice is a joint Blue Room and Always Working Artists production, showing at the Blue Room Studio, 53 James Street in Northbridge at 6.30 each evening until 8th November. There are late shows on Friday and Saturday at 9.15 pm.

On this web site in January and February this year, an amateur production, ‘Rock Apocalypse’, received an unfavourable review. There then followed an assassination of every aspect of the show and its venue. The actors and crew tried in vain to raise sympathy and put forward their case, but the insults continued unabated.

On recently re-reading these forty, or so, postings I wondered how playwright Kate Rice (last play at the Blue Room was ‘The Mozart Factor’, which won much acclaim, and achieved several nominations in the Actors’ Equity Guild awards) could make any sense of such drivel, let alone construct an interesting script. I suppose that there are some books, e.g. Shakespeare and Pinter, which on reading for the first time have given the same belief, yet in the right hands turn out to be stunning.

Kate does not merely list the string of contributions to the web thread, but has blended them with interviews, great characterisation, and even a song. There is plenty of humour and several gasps as some of the claptrap written on the web, is performed face to face by the writers with the people that they have denigrated.

With a superb choice of four very different cast member who, under the direction of Jeremy Rice, give us about six characters each. Greg McNeill’s portrayals include Tim, the show’s director who abandoned the play two weeks from opening and then returned as a performer.  One of the leading performers, Kelly (Whitney Richards) emotionally explains her heartbreak as she sees her dream of an acting career drain rapidly away. The committee member in charge of catering (Vanessa Trengove) is even attacked for charging $1 for orange cordial.

One of the final comments was from one of the show’s musicians (Craig Williams) ‘one Powerball and we will put the show on again - properly!’ I for one would love to see this show and decide for myself whether all this heartbreak and mental torture was justified.

All trolls, and generally nasty people, should see this unusual play and so discover how what they think is ‘a little bit of fun’ can actually do to those concerned. I can recommend this show to the cast of ‘Rock Apocalypse’ to see that all of their hard work was not in vein.

Composer Ashley Gibson Greig decided upon quite a heavy, but very effective style of music, similar to the radio detective serial themes of the fifties such as ‘Dick Barton’. With only a black drape set, the lighting by Lucy Birkenshaw was required to take us from the homes of the show’s performers, to the rehearsal room, the stage and committee rooms. Most effective with the use of an unusual style and mix of lamps.

I must be honest, I expected something dull and trite, but this show covered many emotions and the cast did a brilliant job. A very well constructed script, delivered with power, emotion, and at times finely choreographed movement. Most enjoyable.

Something else to chew on...

Sun, 26 Oct 2008, 09:02 am
....those amateur/community theatres that are lucky enough to have their own premises and pay a peppercorn rent are actually in a better space to make money from a show than these small professional productions at The Blue Room. For example, I was involved in a Christmas show in a rural theatre going back some 4 years ago. We sold out the show pretty much every night, took an absolute poultice of money over the bar, and by the time it was over we had made enough money to consider extensions to the building. Why? Overheads were low in relation to the takings. There was bugger all constuction required on stage - just standard flats, no expensive props, cast provided pretty much own costuming, no rent on the building, no payment required for script as it was written by one of the cast. It was pretty much power and water as regards costs. Oh, and we kept 100% of the profit from the bar - very important How can this be achieved? IT WAS AN AMATEUR PRODUCTION (and we kept the profits from the bar). Apocalypse Perth is a professional production and Kate's cast and crew are perfectly entitled to an appopriation of any profits. They act for a living. I think it's rich to suggest that the contributors to the website deserve payment ahead of the performers in the play. If Kate decides to contribute any of her "share of the profits" to the forum's contributors, that's her choice. Let's examine that for a second. Who does she start with? Who is most deserving? Not the theatre company - the forum itself was made up of many people, most of whom had nothing to do with the theatre company itself. Besides - whose to say they didn't make a profit from the original play despite it's alleged shortcomings? Why should they rank ahead of the people who contributed to the thread? So.....does Kate pay the biggest share to those who contributed the most posts? Perhaps she should contribute most to those who showed they could spell and provide reasoned argument - a reward for good behaviour if you like. If she rewards those she's been able to identify, isn't that unfair to those who posted anonymously and can't be tracked down? I have the solution - Kate, put all your "earnings" from Apocalypse Perth into a trust account and the various contributors can apply for gratis payments if they are able to truly be identified. Okay, I'm not trying to start a flame war here - just providing a rebuttal of those of you who think the theatre company is being wronged in some way. There's a simpler way of viewing this. GRADS is doing "A Laughing Matter" at present. Should a share of the profit go to the descendants of David Garrick and Samuel Johnson? I think not

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