Originally
commissioned by Black Swan State Theatre
Company and first produced in 2014, Aidan
Fennessy’s The
House on the Lake is a crisp combination of whodunit mystery and
psychological thriller. A taut two-hander, the play unfolds in a series of
loops, and sees David – a lawyer suffering from anterograde amnesia
– trying to remember where he is and what has happened to him. As the play
evolves and hurtles towards its thrilling conclusion, Fennessy drip-feeds us
details, deliberately misdirecting us only to throw another clue into play
before the scene is out.
Showing posts with label Aidan Fennessy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Aidan Fennessy. Show all posts
09/03/2015
Our song: MTC’s What Rhymes with Cars and Girls
When Tom
Stoppard’s radio play Darkside –
based on Pink Floyd’s seminal album The Dark Side of the Moon – premiered in
Britain in 2013, Sydney Morning Herald music writer Bernard
Zuel wondered whether it might be time we saw an Australian version of the
project, suggesting “Brendan Cowell
adapting You Am I’s Hourly Daily; Hannie Rayson taking on Paul Kelly’s Gossip;
Andrew Bovell diving into Sarah Blasko’s What The Sea Wants, The Sea Will
Have; [or] maybe, David Williamson and Kylie Minogue’s Impossible
Princess…” It’s almost as if
playwright Aidan Fennessy heard Zuel’s challenge and decided to raise him one,
as a year and a half later, What
Rhymes with Cars and Girls opens at the Melbourne
Theatre Company.
Very much inspired by – as well as emerging from – the fabric of Tim
Rogers’ 1999 solo album of the same name, What Rhymes with Cars and Girls
is the story of Johnno, a hapless pizza delivery boy, and Tash, a smart-mouthed
singer who’s running from everything. While featuring a live three-piece band
(led by Rogers himself), Cars and Girls is not so much a musical as “a
play with songs” in the mode of Poor
Boy, albeit with more charm and heart. But where Poor Boy’s
songs were somewhat outside the action on stage and became ghostly musical refrains,
Rogers ’ songs
here become integral to the play’s success and charm and, as in a musical, come
to express the characters’ thoughts and feelings in a slightly heightened form.
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