Bare

Downstage Theatre, Wellington

23/09/2008 - 04/10/2008

Herald Theatre, Aotea Centre, The Edge, Auckland

08/10/2008 - 18/10/2008

Production Details



Two actors, fifteen characters, one play.

Love, sex, family, friendship, youth and bad movies at multiplexes – listen to our people talk!

Toa Fraser’s classic New Zealand comedy Bare is an hilarious matrix of urban poetry and streetwise lip. Two actors rap and riff on body image, films, takeaway food, graffiti and English literature.

Following its hit debut in 1998, Bare went on to tour the country and then on to international markets in Australia and the UK, including Edinburgh, Sydney and Adelaide. It launched the careers of Toa Fraser, Madeleine Sami and Ian Hughes and has earnt a place as an icon of NZ theatre. For Bare, playwright Toa Fraser won the Best New Play and Best New Playwright at  the 1998 Chapman Tripp Awards and the Sunday Star Times Bruce Mason Award in 1999.

Toa Frasers poetic vision of NZ was a debut hit in 1998, BARE went on to tour the country and then on to international markets in Australia and the UK. It launched the careers of Toa Fraser, Madeleine Sami and Ian Hughes and earns its place as an icon of NZ theatre.

This NZ classic has been reconfigured by leading theatre director Oliver Driver and features two talents which emerged from Silo Theatre’s ‘The Ensemble Project’; Morgana O’Reilly (NZ Listener & Metro Magazine Emerging Actress 2007), who has gone on feature in ‘The Jacqui Brown Diaries’ and a core cast member in the upcoming comedy series ‘A Thousand Apologies’ and Curtis Vowell, cast in two shows of ATC’s ‘The Crucible’, opposite Lisa Chappell in ‘Design for Living’ and upcoming political satire ‘The Pretender’.

Originally staged for Silo Theatre’s tenth birthday in April 2007 to critical acclaim and capacity attendance, Fraser spent much time re-drafting a 2007 remix, to ensure that cultural references were up-to-date so that the work could truly capture the current voice of the urban community it represents.

"Fresh and inviting, an instant classic that is as much of a homage to Auckland as Woody Allen’s Manhattan."    Gilbert Wong for Metro

"An energetic and fervent production."    Louise Tu’u, TheatreView 

From gym hottie to chainsmoking divorcee, from streetkid to Fijian patriarch.  BARE gives a snapshot of Auckland culture complete with its prejudices, dilemmas and delights. Love, sex, family, friendship, youth and bad multiplex movies are laid bare in this hilarious and touching 80 minute work.

In its restaging, Oliver Driver has used the construct of the rehearsal room as a metaphor for life. The stage is littered with the detritus of the theatre’s green room, the company water cooler, the office notice board. Delivered as a tag team "competition" of collected storytelling, O’Reilly and Vowell use the various unique elements contained within the environment to transport us to Burger King lunchrooms, Mount Roskill kitchens and Hoyts Cinemas candy-bars. It’s a radical transformation from the original production, and one which enables audiences who have seen the original work to reconsider it.

Alongside this Auckland season, BARE will also be seen this year in Hamilton, Wellington and Nelson.

BARE

Downstage
23 Sep- 4 Oct
(14 performances only)

Book at Downstage Theatre on
04 801 6946 or here.

Performance Times
Mon – Wed 6.30pm
Thu – Sat 7.30pm

Matinees
Sat 27 Sep & 4 Oct @ 3pm

Post Show Talk Back &
Members Night

Wed 24 September

Ticket Prices
Full Price: $42
Concession: $33 (incl. seniors 65+, Super Gold Card Holders, Community Services Card Holders, Students, Groups 10+)
Members: $32
Student Rush (if available): $20

Herald Theatre, THE EDGE

October 8-18th 2008

Monday and Tuesday at 7pm; Wednesday through Saturday at 8pm
Bookings: THE EDGE Ticketing on 0800 BUY TICKETS or www.the-edge.co.nz 


Featuring MORGANA O'REILLY & CURTIS VOWELL
Designed by JEREMY FERN



Reworked Bare still sizzles with warmth

Review by Laurie Atkinson [Reproduced with permission of Fairfax Media] 01st Oct 2008

Silo Theatre celebrates the 10th anniversary of Bare, Toa Fraser’s mosaic of contemporary life in Newmarket, Auckland and by extension of contemporary New Zealand, with a new production that sizzles with invention and makes one temporarily forget that we have seen too many monologue plays recently.

Instead of the bare stage of the original production we have a grungy flat in which the characters, played with warmth and subtlety, if not a defining sharpness between their characters, by Morgana O’Reilly and Curtis Vowell, remain isolated and yet connected when the monologues and the occasional duologues intertwine.

The script has been updated but the pinpoint accuracy of the characterization in the script and performances is still the key as we laugh at the comedy of the sentimental motor mouth Tina and are touched by the ruminations of the Fijian grandfather seeking salvation at the end of his life.

Oliver Driver and his actors celebrate Bare’s 10th birthday with a party for all to enjoy even if the famous sex scene between Venus the Gym Babe and the shy movie buff Dave is now played more realistically (fully clothed I hasten to add) instead of metres apart as in the first production.

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Reworked Bare still sizzles with warmth

Review by Laurie Atkinson [Reproduced with permission of Fairfax Media] 25th Sep 2008

Silo Theatre celebrates the 10th anniversary of Bare, Toa Fraser’s mosaic of contemporary life in Newmarket, Auckland and by extension of contemporary New Zealand, with a new production that sizzles with invention and makes one temporarily forget that we have seen too many monologue plays recently.

Instead of the bare stage of the original production we have a grungy flat in which the characters, played with warmth and subtlety, if not a defining sharpness between their characters, by Morgana O’Reilly and Curtis Vowell, remain isolated and yet connected when the monologues and the occasional duologues intertwine.

The script has been updated but the pinpoint accuracy of the characterization in the script and performances is still the key as we laugh at the comedy of the sentimental motor mouth Tina and are touched by the ruminations of the Fijian grandfather seeking salvation at the end of his life.

Oliver Driver and his actors celebrate Bare’s 10th birthday with a party for all to enjoy even if the famous sex scene between Venus the Gym Babe and the shy movie buff Dave is now played more realistically (fully clothed I hasten to add) instead of metres apart as in the first production.
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Bare no more

Review by Mary Anne Bourke 24th Sep 2008

Purists be warned: Bare is bare no more.

The classic piece of Kiwi ‘poor theatre’ – that from 1998 wowed audiences here and around the world by showing (yet again) how two actors/no props could conjure multiple characters’ stories so powerfully you could virtually smell the burger bars, kitchens and backyards of South Auckland – has got dressed.

The worn-out couch, fridge, table, chairs and sundry groceries of your average scungy flat serve as facets of every-space, allowing scenes to morph into each other as the actors move around acknowledging each other rarely and only subtly – as spectators, sometimes – if at all.

Oliver’s Driver’s direction works hard to ‘re-deconstruct’ and so set free what could have been unhelpfully anchored by the material set. His inventive, anti-intuitive blocking stresses the non-connection that is surely a central theme in Fraser’s play and enhances the rare, climatic scenes of communion. That is, when certain characters do finally engage in dialogue while being palpably in the same room, the set miraculously falls away and suddenly, we have a frisson of what we want in the theatre: drama.

Bare remains a vehicle that both requires and enables its performers to shine. Morgana O’Reilly and Curtis Vowell are no exceptions here. They both give riveting voice to their edgy ‘new Kiwi’ characters.

O’Reilly is endlessly watchable, every nanosecond projecting some hilariously recognisable quirk with complete assurance – in fact, I reckon I could watch her bumptious PI homie-girl, sozzled pakeha housewife, blithe post-colonial academic and smug fast-food manageress all night.

Apart from being lumbered with a hackneyed American radio jock character at the kick-off (I mean, how many times since American Graffiti have we heard this guy? Like, enough already) Vowell pulls out all the stops with his guys. His vehement movie-buff tagger is a crack-up and his disturbed dead-beat neighbour with a nervous tic a real worry.

Both actors revel in presenting the aggressive insouciance of disaffected youth that is one of our grosser domestic products, but it’s down to Vowell to portray, by telling contrast, the gravitas of the worried Fijian grandfather whose world view seems to come, not just from a couple of generations away, but aeons. He nails it. Lighting is used to devastating effect for this totemic character – an inspired gender switch from the Fijian grandmother who went on to have her day in ‘No.2’.

A real delight also, is that the text is lavishly updated with topical trivia from our ever more trashy twenty-first century lives: Bebo, Black Sheep etc. Ha ha.

Once again the combination of great performances and dazzling writing makes for a thoroughly entertaining, gentle satire of ‘our people today’ that clearly stands the test of time. Go.

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