At this unusual show, the crowd is part of the performance (2024)

  • ★★★★
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By Andrew McClelland and Cameron Woodhead

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MUSIC
Shouse: Communitas ★★★★
Rising festival, St Paul’s Cathedral, June 15

As modern life makes us more isolated, the joy of singing with others – whether in pub choirs, sea-shanty gatherings or “musicals”-themed club nights – shines through as a beacon of communal joy.

In these environments, it doesn’t matter if your warble makes cats blush, and Shouse’s Communitas proves that when we all sing together, beautiful things happen.

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Anyone passing by St Paul’s Cathedral would have been amazed by the immense lines outside on Saturday night. Had the Anglicans secured an exciting celebrity preacher? In a way, yes, because Communitas was a glorious expression of love, music and togetherness that make up the best parts of religion.

Shouse are a weirdo-house electronic duo consisting of Jack Madin and Ed Service who rose to fame in 2021 with their song, Love Tonight: a song, sung by a thrown-together choir of friends, which sounded almost church-like in its evocation of love despite the thumping drum machines.

Once David Guetta remixed it, it climbed dance charts internationally and even scored a No.1 in Belgium.

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On Saturday, Shouse didn’t play their hit, and although most bands would be despised for ignoring the entirety of their known catalogue, the crowd adored it.

St Paul’s is majestically lit as we enter, and the sound of all conceivable horns, strings and percussion rises to the distant vaulted ceilings from 60 or so musicians all playing long, droning notes together.

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Once the crowd of hundreds has packed in, our white-clad maestros signal and all is quiet. Then the church organ begins alone and the masses of punters are all directed in the singing of single exhalating notes.

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In an almost paganistic ritual, we circle the centre of the church, tapping each other’s backs in time. Eventually, our leaders in the centre urge us to sing, “Ah, communitas”, and I get it; there is a spellbinding sense of convergence here.

Singing simple lyrics such as “I will run to you again” and “I can feel it rising”, we repeat simple dance moves and lyrics as we make our way through the cathedral. Our two maestros, the core members of Shouse, conduct the musicians and crowds exceptionally well, raising and lowering the volume and energy of the music and movement so that some lyrics rise above others in sublime moments of ebb and crescendo.

Although I came alone, I truly felt part of it all. It was like no other event I’ve been to (although there was a Polyphonic Spree vibe to the sense of massed joy). If only the cathedral could bottle this feeling, they’d have full congregations for another century.
Reviewed by Andrew McClelland

THEATRE
The Woman in Black ★★★
By Stephen Mallatratt and Susan Hill, Athenaeum, until July 6

Ghost stories are a natural fit for the theatre. Spectres and superstitions are deeply woven into its history. You might remember the tradition of “ghost lights” placed onstage during pandemic closures to keep spirits at bay. Melbourne even has its own theatre ghost, Federici – an opera singer who died during a production of Faust in 1888 and is said to have haunted the Princess Theatre ever since.

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Commercial supernatural horror doesn’t always live up to its stage potential, though, and last year’s 2.22 with Ruby Rose, Gemma Ward and Daniel MacPherson disappointed critics. MacPherson, at least, gets a second bite at the cherry with the most successful ghost story ever to appear in the West End.

Susan Hill’s 1983 novel, The Woman in Black, was adapted into what became the second-longest running play in London, after Agatha Christie’s The Mousetrap.

Although set in the 1920s, the pleasure of the tale lies in the eerie way it summons and shadows Gothic fiction from the Victorian era, the high-water mark of the ghost story.

Young lawyer Arthur Kipps (MacPherson) has been sent to a remote part of the Yorkshire coast. He is to order the affairs of a reclusive woman, recently deceased, who lived alone in a house so desolate and forlorn the local villagers avoid it at all costs.

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It really couldn’t be more foreboding: the house was built on a spit of land protruding from damp and drear fens, but high tide submerges the road to it, cutting off all escape, and sudden sea-frets – impenetrable fogs that roll in from the ocean, unexpectedly – disorientate and mislead anyone caught in them.

As Kipps works, he sees a mysterious woman in black – a ghost, surely. Only as he uncovers her tragic backstory does he realise, too late, that the woman in black is a dreadful portent, presaging a doom none can escape.

The play works in a meta-theatrical twist. An older Kipps (John Waters) hires a professional actor (MacPherson) to help re-enact his story: with the actor playing Kipps, and Kipps himself playing all other roles.

As you’d expect from these two veterans of stage and screen, the acting is secure, and certainly better than what critics thought about the performances in 2.22.

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It’s diverting to watch Waters pretending to be a terrible actor, or leaping into cameos as taciturn Yorkshire locals, and MacPherson is solid on the road from rational observer to victim of malign forces from beyond the grave.

Director Robin Herford does have room to fine-tune timing and atmospherics as the national tour progresses, but I should note that I’ve now seen The Woman in Black three times. It isn’t an ideal position from which to review horror, which can only have its intended effect on an (at least slightly) unsuspecting audience.

The show’s jump scares mightn’t work on me any more, though for anyone yet to experience The Woman in Black, it’s the most commercially successful theatrical ghost story for good reason. Seeing it once is highly recommended.
Reviewed by Cameron Woodhead

THEATRE
Cadela Força Trilogy Chapter 1: The Bride and the Goodnight Cinderella ★★★★

Rising Festival, Malthouse Theatre, until June 15

Cadela Força Trilogy (in English, Bitch Power Trilogy) begins with the opening stanzas of Dante’s Inferno. The lines that linger in the mind aren’t the most famous; they’re the ones in which the poet describes not remembering how he arrived in a “dark wood” before his descent into hell:

How I entered there I cannot truly say,

I had become so sleepy at the moment

when I first strayed, leaving the path of truth.

It sets up a disquieting resonance as inevitably, if a bit unfairly, the audience comes to this piece forewarned by media coverage (not to mention content warnings) about a pivotal scene.

We know Brazilian director, playwright and actor Carolina Bianchi will self-administer a date rape drug known in her homeland as “Goodnight Cinderella”. We know she will fall unconscious. We know she’ll be penetrated vagin*lly by a camera while she’s out of it.

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All of which is misleading – not because these events don’t happen, but because the most extreme moments in Bianchi’s performance art are essential to a profoundly considered response to the most extreme forms of violence against women.

In the first half, Bianchi delivers an erudite performance lecture that roves from a notorious tale of femicide in Boccaccio’s Decameron to the scourge of gendered violence in Latin America. Coiled within it is the story of the show’s creative development.

Initially, Bianchi intended to resurrect Italian performance artist Pippa Bacca, who was raped and murdered near Istanbul, in 2008, while hitchhiking from Milan to Jerusalem dressed as a bride. But Bacca’s fate reverberates. A silent chorus of other slain women (including well-known performance artist Ana Mendieta) invite the artist’s attention, and as the drug takes effect, Bianchi becomes disinhibited.

There’s woozy karaoke to Brazilian pop. Bianchi confesses that she despises Bacca’s artistic choices. Her intellectual distance leans into poetic musings on the struggle to find a performance style fit to address her own rape, of which she has no recollection. (Goodnight Cinderella was involved.)

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Bianchi is as ingenious as Philomela from ancient Greek myth in finding a way to speak to abject violation. For Philomela, whose tongue was cut out by her rapist, she wove her story into a tapestry; for Bianchi, radical performance art fills the void where memory should be.

Just don’t call it therapy. Bianchi doesn’t believe rape trauma can be “healed”, nor does she think taking drugs on stage is brave, and she’s got zero tolerance for easy platitudes or false comfort or emotional dishonesty.

Bianchi’s real solace lies in making uncompromising art, and the dream play that unfurls once she’s nodded off – a walk on the Brazilian wild side featuring nightmarish re-enactment – is guided by a recorded monologue that finds beauty in making darkness conscious.

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Some stylised ensemble performance does look undercooked, especially in comparison to the intellectual and literary sophistication of Bianchi’s lecture. But it remains an impressive, forceful, and creatively intelligent performance, interrogating the problem of violent misogyny in a way you won’t forget.
Reviewed by Cameron Woodhead

If you or anyone you know needs support, you can contact the National Sexual Assault, Domestic and Family Violence Counselling Service on 1800RESPECT (1800 737 732), Lifeline 131 114, or Beyond Blue 1300 224 636.

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