Created by
Arielle Gray, Chris Isaacs and Tim Watts
Directed by
Arielle Gray
Body
sculpture by Tarryn Gill
Devised and
performed by Gita Bezard, Jo Morris and Clare Testoni
Stage
management by Emily Stokoe and Zachary Sheridan
Riverview
Hotel
Until 8
December
When Marcel
Duchamp declared that it is the viewer who completes a work of art, he may have
had something like the The Last Great Hunt’s tasty exercise in bed-hopping,
Stay With Us, presently occupying three rooms in the Riverview Hotel in Mount
Street, in mind.
While each
of the short tableaux that make up the work might have worked in front of a
disengaged audience, it’s our participation – immersion more properly – in them
that gives them their hook, and their dramatic power.
There’s
little need be said about the plot of each piece, other than they relate
back to the show’s title (as, of course, does the idea of us spending an
evening with the Hunters in a hotel).
In the
first, a woman named Alana (Jo Morris, the only actor to appear in any of the
stories) is grieving the death of her twin sister Zoe when strange things begin
happening in her hotel room.
In another
room, medical staff gather around the body of an elderly woman (a sculpture by
the artist Tarryn Gill) while the objects that make her and her life up are
revealed.
In the
final piece, children in their jimjams clutch teddy bears and listen to a
goodnight story (illustrated by Tim Watts and Clare Testoni) that takes them to
the stars and beyond.
It’s the how,
not the what, though, that delivers these little stories.
There’s no
denying the artistry of the work: JoMo’s (Sorry Jo, that’s irresistible)
performance, seen up close without make-up or theatrical costuming, is as wrenching
and electric as we have come to expect from this fine actor; Gill’s old lady is
an abstraction, but captures beautifully (and quite touchingly for those who
have seen their parents in death) the sunken calm of the deceased; and, best of
all, Watts and Testoni’s projected images, starting small and squiggly, build
into a powerful and vast panorama of the galaxies and the forces within them.
What’s most
impressive is how we are wrangled into our part in proceedings. We travel in
groups of eight from the Riverview’s lobby to the three rooms, guided by a bellhop
(in our case Gita Bezard; other groups were led by Chris Isaacs and Watts) who
costumes and arranges us, and wordlessly instructs us in our participation.
I can only
imagine this duck’s legs are kicking ferociously beneath the placid surface as
the stage manager Emily Stokoe and her assistant Zachary Sheridan restore the
wreckage of each scene ready for the next audience’s incursion.
The
director Arielle Gray, along with Watts and Isaacs, created the whole
catastrophe and keeps a sure hand on a very tricky tiller throughout.
It’s
marvellous to see the Hunters in action (of them only Jeffrey Jay Fowler and
Adriane Daff, who were no doubt furiously busy elsewhere, are absent), and
their disparate talents, seen together, gives them a collective charisma
different from, if not greater than, the sum of its parts.
They’ve
added judiciously to their talent pool with Gill, Morris, Testoni and even the
effervescently ubiquitous Scott McArdle – who will be the concierge at my next
hotel – front of house.
I believe their upcoming Perth Festival debut, Le Nor, will be the first time all
six have performed in one show - this will be another stride forward for this world-class ensemble.
We’re lucky to call them our own.
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We’re lucky to call them our own.
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