13.1.09

The Time is not yet Ripe

My policy does not propose in any way to vaccinate the community against the complaint called joy.”

Winner 'Best Ensemble' GREEN ROOM AWARDS - 2006

The Time Is Not Yet RipeSet on the eve of a federal election in Federation era Melbourne, The Time is not yet Ripe tells the story of Doris Quiverton, daughter of the Prime Minister, and her fiancée, Sydney Barrett, socialist candidate for the seat of Wombat.

When Doris and Sydney end up running for the same seat for opposing parties, they are forced to choose between love and political ideals, personal happiness or the greater good of Australian society.

Written in 1912 by ‘The Father of Australian Theatre’, The Time is not yet Ripe sparkles with verve and wit. Featuring an outstanding cast and performed in the new Studio One at the Northcote Town Hall, this crisp version of Esson’s rarely produced classic will surprise contemporary audiences with its relevance, its deflation of the pompous, and its references to ‘practical politics’ and sedition laws.

Don’t miss this rare opportunity to see Louis Esson’s delightful and acerbic political satire brought to life. Practical politics, sedition laws, the vague ideology of the left and the stultification of the right all get a hammering by one of our most famous early playwrights. Featuring Glynis Angell, Georgina Capper, Grant Cartwright, Jonathan Dyer, Kurt Geyer, Ming-Zhu Hii, Carly Schrever, Tim Stitz and Jeremiah Tickell.

Directed by Jane Woollard (Wakefield Mystery Plays, The Hammer of Devotion, Wilful Blue, Pirate Eyes, Aelfgyva, The Vanishing Box, True Adventures of a Soul Lost at Sea) and designed by Amanda Johnson (The Hammer of Devotion, Moon for the Misbegotten, Nana, Aelfgyva, True Adventures of a Soul Lost at Sea), with lighting by Bronwyn Pringle (Alias Grace, Lens, I Start Again.)


Here Theatre presents
The Time is not yet Ripe
by Louis Esson

Directed by Jane Woollard
Designed by Amanda Johnson
Lighting Design by Bronwyn Pringle

Production shots

6.1.09

Letters from Animals

Letters from Animals The Store Room ran from Nov9-25 2008

Cast: Glynis Angell (2006 GRA Award Female Performer, Independent Theatre), Georgina Capper, Nomination, 2002 GRA Award Female Performer, Independent Theatre and HaiHa Le (Nomination, 2006 GRA Award Female Performer, Independent Theatre)

Written by: Kit Lazaroo
Director: Jane Woollard
Designer: Amanda Johnson
Lighting Designer: Bronwyn Pringle
Photography: Josephine Harkin

Reviews:
Theatre notes Alison Croggon

Image of Letters From Animals

Letters from Animals is a parable set one hundred years in the future, in the aftermath of an environmental catastrophe. The river is rising, breaking its banks, seeping into the concrete engineered world of The Development. Animals have been exterminated, and all memory of them is forbidden in this clean new world. The few animals that remain have formed a resistance movement and haunt the populace, waiting on the fringes to be called back into being, sending messages, plotting and dreaming of the day when humans will remember them, allowing them their lawful assembly.


Glynis Angell and Georgina Capper














HaiHa Le

















Georgina Capper













Asylum


2005 Wal Cherry Play of the Year
2007 Victorian Premier’s Literary Award Shortlist
2008 VCE Drama Playlist Selection

Director Jane Woollard
Written by: Kit Lazaroo
Designer Amanda Johnson
Composer Peter Farnan
Lighting Designer Richard Vabre
Performers Glynis Angell, Tom Considine,
Fanny Hanusin, Tim Stitz

Synopsis: Lally Black is a psychiatrist worried she lacks the compassion for her job. Her efforts double when Yu Siying enters her office, deftly searching for a way in to Lally’s heart. It is 1993 and the four year protection visa bestowed upon Chinese students by the Australian government is soon to expire. Siying is a Chinese woman who has caught HIV in Australia. Afraid of China’s judgment, Siying has one last chance to claim asylum, and believes Lally is the key to her appeal. Siying’s intrusion opens the way for apparitions to infiltrate Lally’s porous inner world: the sinister Mr Dando of Immigration, and Siying’s beleaguered family in China, complete with spies. Lally’s reclusive brother Smudge is mesmerized and galvanized by Siying, opening more rifts in Lally’s world. Lally becomes enmeshed by an imagined China unfolding between herself and Siying, laying bare the threads that run between complacency and brutality.


True adventures of a Soul Lost at Sea

Invite artwork by Rick AmorFanny Hanusin convinces as Olley.Publicity shot by PonchHawkes

In a remote coastal town in 1850, young motherless Olley Fletcher is discovered washed up on the shore. She and her fisherman father York went missing in a storm some weeks before and she claims to have no memory of this event. She is taken in by the kindly policeman Dougal Morris who does not press her for details - his wife Dido however is itching after facts, and when the corpse of York Fletcher is caught in a net she insists that an autopsy be ordered. Olley now recalls that her father was killed by a giant squid, who took her underwater for the remainder of her absence. When Dido heaps scorn on this account, Olley gives birth to a child which is half human and half squid.

'...combines factual accuracy with a sense of magic and imaginative daring.' Helen Thomson, The Age, 8 Dec 2004

Reviews: The Age











Dido Morris (Julia Zemiro) and Dr Rufus Plank (David Adamson)











Dido Morris (Julia Zemiro) and baby squid














Olley (Fanny Hanusin) and cast




















Constable Dougal Morris(Liam Amor) and Olley (Fanny Hanusin)