Tag Archives: Mary Rachel Brown

The Dapto Chaser

4 Jul

This is brilliantly funny.

It tells the tale of a family of grifters, in love with the mad possibilities of the dog track. Playwright Mary Rachel Brown has a terrific ear for dialogue, and the script sparkles with hilarious one-liners.

Under the direction of Anna Houston, the cast present magical comic performances.

Peter Carroll is perfect as Errol, the ailing patriarch of the Sinclair family, physically suffering but still linguistically exuberant and psychologically domineering. There’s utter hilarity in his certitude, not necessarily in its falsity, but in its breathtaking smallness.

As his eldest son, Cess, Justin Rosniak radiates an extraordinary energy, creating all the more laughter – and all the more pathos.

Errol’s younger son, Jimmy, is less sure of his father’s “creative” ways, and has taken a real job; he operates the electric hare at the track. And there’s something of the bunny in his character, more gentle than his brother and woefully innocent. André de Vanny’s portrayal of Jimmy is both mirth-making and heart-breaking.

And Marco Chiappi as the track manager is superb in his shallow, glib self-importance.

Is The Dapto Chaser satire? Certainly not Juvenalian: the targets are too small. The Ensemble marketing has gone for the term black comedy, which considering one life-altering plot point it most certainly is.

But in some ways, what’s happening is that we’re being invited to share the laughter of regret. It’s an invitation made even more beguiling by the fact that, since 2011 when this historical comedy was originally produced, the Dapto Dogs track has finally closed down. The Dapto Chaser invites regret for the disappearance of this sadly parochial world, and regret that anyone ever had to experience it.

But there’s also an invitation to joy, a celebration of a wild, reckless vitality; a vitality perhaps not on the side of wisdom, but indubitably on the side of Life.

Paul Gilchrist

The Dapto Chaser by Mary Rachel Brown  

at Ensemble Theatre until 25 July

ensemble.com.au

Image by Prudence Upton

Chicken in a Biscuit

10 Oct

Tyger Tyger burning bright,

In the forests of the night:

What immortal hand or eye,

Dare frame thy fearful symmetry?

Did he smile his work to see?

Did he who made the Lamb make thee?

So wrote William Blake, as he struggled to make sense of the eternal Other.

Blake is not the only writer to wrestle with our relationship with our animal relatives. Christopher Smart in Jubilate Agno asks us to consider his cat Jeffrey – and urges us to see him as a wondrous example of Creation. Jack London’s Call of The Wild invites us to note the huge gap between domestication and an animal’s natural state. Lord Dunsley’s My Talks with Dean Spanley (adapted to film in a version with Sam Neill) has a gentler take on this peculiar relationship.

Chicken in a Biscuit by Mary Rachel Brown and Jamie Oxenbould is the inheritor of a grand tradition.

These writers focus particularly on our relationship with pets, and the style is wacky fun.

It’s a loose collection of monologues. Half portray pet owners. Half portray pets. In a bold decision, all are performed by human actors.

In the portraits of pet owners, a common note is an interest in unusual expressions of sexuality and a gentle mocking of dagginess. Not that the piece presents as a satirical attack on pet owners – with 75% of Australian households owning a pet, it’s more a comment on humanity and what we find amusing about that very strange species.

The portraits of animals riff on familiar tropes – cats as proudly imperious and dogs as dumbly loyal. In our Age of Offence, I’m sure someone will find the anthropomorphism a little tasteless (maybe me)– but the writers are doing no differently than have generations of cartoonists.

Directed by Brown, performances by Mandy Bishop and Oxenbould are delightful committed silliness.

Paul Gilchrist

Chicken in a Biscuit by Mary Rachel Brown and Jamie Oxenbould

Presented by Fixed Foot Productions

At The Old Fitz until 18 October

oldfitztheatre.com.au

Image by Becky Matthews