Woyzeck sees the eponymous character's pysche broken down and destroyed by the machinery of the military; 19 year old Warnambool expat Tom Ballard's stand-up show Is What He Is focuses on Ballard's coming out as gay in a country town; and Noel Tovey's remarkable monologue Little Black Bastard is a story of indigenous survival in the face of sometimes shocking abuse and deprivation in the 1940s and 50s. All three productions, then, are in one way or another about the struggle to maintain one's sense of self in the face of sometimes overwhelming odds... not that that's necessarily relevant to each work individually, but taken collectively, it's an amusing coincidence, don't you think? Anyway, enough with the random associations and on with the reviews...

Written by Georg Büchner and left unfinished at the time of his death in 1837, Woyzeck has been hailed, remarkably, as both a precursor of theatrical naturalism and a forerunner of German expressionism. This new production at the Malthouse Theatre is directed by Michael Kantor, features live music by Nick Cave and Warren Ellis performed by an in-house band, and is based on an Icelandic adaptation by Gisli Örn Gardasson which premiered in London in 2005. (As an aside, you can catch Gisli's production of Kafka's Metamorphosis, with more music from Cave and Ellis, at this year's Ten Days on the Island festival in Tasmania from March 28 - April 1.)
The play tells the story of a hapless army barber, the eponymous Woyzeck (Sydney-based actor Socratis Otto, who I interviewed a few weeks ago), who is slowly going mad thanks in large part to the experiments of the Doctor (played in manic camp mode by Mitchell Butel) and the sadistic cruelty of the Captain (Merfyn Owen). Eventually Woyzeck snaps, killing Marie (Bojana Novakovic) the mother of his child.
Kantor's production of this theatrical classic is both expressionistic - such as the hallucinatory set designed by Peter Corrigan that somewhat overwhelms the drama enacted on stage - and realistic, i.e. Otto's take on the increasingly hapless and bewildered Woyzeck, a lost man slowly breaking under pressure. But perhaps as a result of trying to embrace both aspects of the play, for me this production fell short of the mark.
Despite a strong cast, opening night performances were generally unimpressive save for Tim Roger's swaggering Entertainer, who stole the show; and for the most part I felt as if the play's heart was somehow missing. The only real drama came from the music, played live on stage under the orchestration of Peter Fanan (ex-Boom Crash Opera) and adding some much-needed emotion to the production.
There was no sense of external threat to anchor the story: the characters were supposedly at war, but there was little sense of this in the play, which may have been an attempt to evoke a sense of timelessness by Kantor, but which to my mind left the story somewhat rootless.
Overall, Kantor's Woyzeck felt underbaked, although it may find its feet as the production settles into its run. As a spectacle it was entertaining, but as a story of working class tragedy, jealousy and dehumanisation, it missed its mark.
Woyzeck at The Malthouse until February 28. Bookings online or 9685 5111.
Part of this year's St Kilda Laughs program (which is in turn part of the St Kilda Festival) this was the debut solo show from young stand-up artist Tom Ballard.
This initial run of Is What He Is was an opportunity for Ballard to road-test his material prior to this year's Melbourne International Comedy Festival (you'll find him, ironically, in The Forum Theatre's Ladies Lounge from April 2 - 26).
The focus of the show is Ballard's coming out at the age of 18 in his home town of Warnambool, but he touches on a range of issues that anyone will relate to regardless of sexuality, such as joking about awkward adolescent sexual encounters (though I'm told the material about being offered a happy ending after a massage in Thailand with his father being massaged in the next room may not make it through to the final version of the show).
The basic premise is good, and Ballard's material, and his delivery of it, was great. The last 20 minutes of the show were however somewhat thin, a flaw which should be addressed with the help of a director (a step Ballard tells me he's taking prior to the festival in April). I'm definitely interested in checking Ballard out again at ComFest, and suggest you do too. A good, solid stand-up routine with a fresh perspective is always welcome.
Tom Ballard Is What He Is (season completed)

I originally saw Noel Tovey's remarkable, moving and confronting one-man show Little Black Bastard at the Midsumma Festival in 2004, so was delighted to hear it was having a return season at the festival this year.
After a childhood marked by homelessness, alcoholism, violence and abuse, which peaked with being sent to Pentridge Gaol for 'the abominable crime of buggery' when he was 17, Noel Tovey escaped Australia to live out a rags-to-riches story in which he become a dancer, actor, singer, choreographer and director in England and America working alongside some of the great film and theatre artists of his day.
In Little Black Bastard, Noel recalls his return to Australia and his reconciliation with the country that had never managed to provide him with a home. Like Tovey's memoir of the same name, the show opens with Tovey using a tram trip through Melbourne and the memories the journey awakens as the introduction to a sometimes painful journey through the early years of his life. Taken from his mother's care at five, Tovey and his sister were adopted out to a Queensland family where their stepfather repeatedly sexually abused them for the next seven years. Later, Tovey became a streetkid in Melbourne, gradually drifting towards the fringes of Melbourne's arts community, where he became friends with the late great Mary Hardy.
So powerful are the memories which the monologue stirs up that Tovey can only perform it for three or four days at a time. So why does he keep doing it?
"I do it because for two reasons. One I don't want any other Indigenous child and for that matter any white child to ever go through what I went through. The second reason I do it if anyone thinks that their life is totally hopeless once they hear mine they think well if that old fella could get out of the shit so can I."
- from a 2005 interview with ABC local radio's Karen Dorante.
The story's effect on the audience is equally intense. Also available as a book published by Hodder Australia, Little Black Bastard is unmissable. A masterful performance from an acclaimed storyteller.
Little Black Bastard at Gasworks Theatre (season concluded).
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