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Danielle Antaki, Mikayla Merks and Katie McAllister |
Maiden Voyage Theatre Company
Blue Room Theatre until June 20
Unlike my friend and colleague Nina
Levy, whose review of Sally Davies and Anna Lindstedt’s Ugly Virgins is up on
Seesaw Magazine (read here), I’ve never strapped wheels to my feet and
attempted to roll around on them.
As a child, however, every Sunday
afternoon I was transfixed by the Roller Game, where the transported (from the
US), rebadged Australian (formerly LA) Thunderbirds, led by the immortal
Ralphie Valladares and tough-as-nails women likeTerri Lynch and Ann Calvello
nearly always beat off the challenge of their opponents, most notably the
brutish, black-uniformed Texas Outlaws, building a substantial TV and live
audience around ’60s Australia.
But the craze died, the audiences fell
away, and some corporate shenanigans back in the US dealt it a death blow.
It’s spirit lives on, though, in amateur,
almost entirely women’s, Roller Derby teams and leagues in Australia and around
the world; played on a flat track rather than the banked track of the
professional (often staged) Roller Game, it’s edged towards Olympic recognition
while maintaining its punk, outlaw stance.
The Perth Roller Derby has three teams,
The Mistresses of Mayhem, The Bloody Sundaes and The Apocalipstiks, whose
colourful names are matched by the nom de
geurres of their players.
It’s this little world, with its jammers
and blockers, fierce tribalism, finesse and brutality, that Davies and
Lindstedt have used to represent their story of rejection and acceptance, loneliness
and companionship, camaraderie, betrayal, remorse and forgiveness.
It’s an apt, metaphoric, environment,
and makes for a tightly framed, funny, sad and ultimately emotionally
satisfying story.
Three experienced skaters, Mad Splatter
(Katie McAllister) Nutcracker (Courtney Cavallaro) and Cinnamon Roller
(Danielle Antaki) find themselves ostracized from the fictional Purple Minions,
but are determined to get back into the game. They set up an ad hoc training venue, and are joined by
an artistic roller-skater keen to try the derby who, tentatively, calls herself
Large Gunderson (Amber Kitney), and a complete novice, Huntswoman (Mikayla
Merks).
Each has their own reason for being
there, each has setbacks and heartbreaks to deal with. Each has to overcome
their own façade, just as much as those of the others, to connect.
These are universal human issues, and
Davies and Lindstedt (who also co-direct) deal with them with a light touch,
exploring them without allowing them to derail the narrative.
Their creative team, production designer
Eilish Campbell, lighting designer Rhiannon Petersen and the sound
designers/composers Alex and Yell (and how good to hear the soundtrack’s
signature piece, Kate Bush’s skate-worthy Running Up That Hill played in full
and loud) work effectively in the minimalist space.
They’ve also recruited the support of
the dramaturg Alexa Taylor and directing mentor Emily Mclean, whose work contributes
further polish to the text and it’s staging, as well as the skating trainer
Wheels McCoy, who keeps things pretty much upright throughout.
The show is cast extremely well. The real
life age range of skaters is well represented in the cast, and their
performances are genuine, well pitched and persuasive.
And they can skate – if not exactly
well, at least well enough!