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THE FROG PRINCE at Fortune Theatre
reviewed by Sharon Matthews 30 Jun 2010
Totally recommended
The Frog Prince is a truly wonderful piece of children's theatre, perfectly pitched to please a younger audience, and with enough delightfully clever comic action to keep any adult minders amused and appreciative. And, ummm, just in case you were wondering, no-one paid me to say that. [more]

PLAY WITH YOUR FOOD 2010: CAFé THEATRE at Beach Babylon Café, Oriental Bay
reviewed by John Smythe 30 Jun 2010
Four plays in search of a rigorous director and creative actors
I generally enjoy Barry Lakeman’s short play writing. He likes to play with genres and each piece is usually well crafted with distinctive characters, say-able dialogue and good dramatic structure, and infused with some kind of humour. [more]

NZ International Comedy Festival
TE RADAR’S EATING THE DOG at Downstage Theatre
reviewed by John Smythe (2) 29 Jun 2010
A paradoxical achievement
Performance-wise Te Radar is more relaxed and assured yet still as lively, enthusiastic and discursive as ever, delighting us afresh with his rediscovery of these stories and with injecting topical asides that prove we Kiwis were ever thus. [more]

SHIP SONGS at Telecom Playhouse Theatre, WEL Energy Trust Academy of Performing Arts
reviewed by Ben Stanley (Waikato Times) 29 Jun 2010
Passionately told at efficient pace
FUEL FESTIVAL 2010 I was interested in attending only because of the presence of Kiwi musical genius and long-time personal hero Don McGlashan in the one-man performance’s backing band. Yet last night, I was in for more than just a brush with Kiwi rock royalty, getting as well a showcase of the skills of a very talented young Kiwi actor, Ian Hughes (former Sticky in Shortland Street). [more]

THE BUTLER at Clarence Street Theatre
reviewed by Matt Richens (Waikato Times) 29 Jun 2010
Magnificent!
FUEL FESTIVAL 2010 The Butler is a show about nothing, a story that goes nowhere, with a cast who say very little. It’s not a bad thing. It’s brilliant. Written by Waikato Times columnist Joe Bennett and performed by Loons Circus Theatre Company, The Butler is the story of a zany dinner party that’s as wacky and odd as it is funny and spectacular. [more]

See also reviews by:
 Melissa Miles
 Vanessa Byrnes

SALON at Patrick’s Hairdressing, Ward St
reviewed by Rob Kidd (Waikato Times) 29 Jun 2010
Impossible to watch and not care
FUEL FESTIVAL 2010 You get an intriguing snapshot into these lives and because of the quality of the acting, the intensity of the scenario and the intimacy of the setting you can’t help but feel emotionally involved. [more]

Auckland Fringe 09
HEROIC FAUN NUMBER ONE at Basement Theatre-return season
reviewed by Paul Simei-Barton (New Zealand Herald) 28 Jun 2010
One-man faun tale goes the extra mile
In recent years getting a gig as an extra on a mega-budget Hollywood epic has become an almost obligatory rite of passage for aspiring Kiwi actors - something akin to the way an earlier generation were marked by improv workshops or the inevitable Shortland Street episode. [more]

LE SUD at Gallagher Concert Chamber, Wel Academy of Performing Arts, Waikato University
reviewed by Ben Stanley (Waikato Times) 28 Jun 2010
Kiwis with a taste of French
FUEL FESTIVAL 2010 Imagine a world where New Zealand was actually two nations – a prosperous, buoyant South Island and a repressed, struggling North. [more]

Photo: Stephen A'Court
MAURITIUS at Circa One
reviewed by John Smythe 27 Jun 2010
Human foibles explored in thriller format
Who was it reckoned ‘philately will get you nowhere’? If Mauritius is anything to go by, it can answer all your dreams or get you into a whole lot of trouble. Not that Theresa Rebeck’s gripping comical thriller – astutely cast and adeptly played with Ross Jolly directing – is really about the study, collecting and trading of stamps. [more]

KINDLY LEAVE THE STAGE at Globe Theatre
reviewed by Terry MacTavish 27 Jun 2010
Pleasant enough
The play opens in the middle of a dinner party which has been embarrassingly interrupted by a major row between the host and hostess. While the wife, Sarah, continues to offer food, the husband, Rupert, drags out a rather unlikely hamper to start packing. [more]
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