Die BLAUE STUNDE The Blue Hour

Te Auaha, Tapere Nui, 65 Dixon Street, Te Aro, Wellington

13/03/2018 - 17/03/2018

NZ Fringe Festival 2018 [reviewing supported by WCC]

Production Details



Originally from Darwin Australia, Amelia Jane Hunter now lives and loves in the land of bone structure, broad shoulders and smouldering eye contact: Berlin.

Performing in very poor German and excellent English, touring the expansive girth of Europe, UK and Australia finding and funding perverted love, true crime and culinary frights, Amelia is an unstoppable adventurer.

Her 9th solo show, DIE BLAUE STUNDE charters the span of freedom, the hour of dreaming and the subterranean, sultry paradise of her adopted home in Berlin. An unstoppable adventurer and elusive chameleon, Amelia will stop at nothing in her quest to discover what she never learnt at finishing school.

Riveting, ribald and completely uncensored, a trained actress and top class show off; Amelia’s brand of individual comedy and solo shows have earned her top accolades and comedy awards in Australia and the UK.

A powerful storyteller with a penchant for the theatrical, never short of a story or afraid to pepper the air blue, Amelia Jane Hunter is the carnival ride that should have been closed down the day Michael Jacksons’ hair caught fire.

Producer and host of Berlin’s monthly Storytelling in Berlin and regular contributor and performer around town, Amelia is on a constant quest towards radical inclusion, kindness and the perfect sausage condiment.

**Amelia Jane Hunter is one of those rare performers that can actually guarantee a good night out! She is one of the best!** URZILA CARLSON

‘On stage she is a force of nature: aggressive, confident, in your face and opinionated. She prowls the stage like a caged animal as she tells her tales of a world that restricts such a free spirit. It’s wonderful to witness her storytelling in person: describing the scene in deep detail and using poetic language so that all are rapt, only for her to floor us with a hysterical and biting comment as a punchline. It’s akin to snarky footnotes scrawled in the margins of a classy novella’ – Squirrel Comedy Australia 2017

‘Raw, outrageous, completely unapologetic and enthralling to watch‘ – UK Comedy Guide

‘She is a brilliant tour de force of laughter filled mischievous comedy.’ – Time Out UK

‘An incredible talent, bold and daring’ – 3 Weeks, Edinburgh

Te Auaha – Theatre 1, 65 Dixon Street, Te Aro, Wellington
Tues 13 – Sat 17 March 2018
8pm
Concession $16 | Fringe Addict $14 | Full $20


WITH Amelia Jane Hunter


Theatre , Solo , Comedy ,


An intelligent performance

Review by Margaret Austin 14th Mar 2018

The swish new Te Auaha Theatre in Dixon Street, complete with wide staircase and Michael Tuffery carpet, is the venue for Australian Amelia Jane Hunter’s first night of Die Blaue Stunde/The Blue Hour.

Our performer impresses me as classy: she’s tall and elegant in a pale green lurex pant suit, sparkling jewellery and high heels. Her opening burst of dance couples class with sass – a promising combination.

She explains the show’s title: the blue hour is that mysterious one between the last of daylight and start of night. Then she tells us where she’s been performing, and we enjoy the contrast between venues “redolent with urine” and the kind of person she is, or seems to be. This contrast is to be a feature of her performance; we’re going to hear “autobiographical atrocities”.  

So much for the set-up. Hunter is attempting that most challenging of things – turning her life story into a stage performance. It’s a tricky line to walk: avoiding self-indulgent confessional content and not preaching to the audience.

Generally, Hunter manages this well. She establishes her Catholic beginnings, confesses to an overlay of Buddhism, and amusingly rails against a bunch of backpackers – Jurgen and Gunther and Dieter – who first put her off Germans.

Ah, but then she gets to Berlin. And, not attracted by the architecture or the history, she finds herself “strangely aroused”. It’s at this point, more than at any other, that real contact with her audience is possible. How many of us, released from our colonial cultural shackles, found ourselves similarly strangely aroused?   

Berlin is clearly the high point of Hunter’s OE, and the high point of her story. From then on, with the possible exception of a New York interlude, her story becomes less inspired, and her performance somewhat fragmented. There’s time in England – “I dislike myself in London” – and an account of a wedding in the north of that country from which she is expelled for the crime of merely being herself.

Her mention of anger takes the show in a different direction. What, after all, can a highly intelligent woman who hasn’t got herself married off with children by her forties, say for herself?

Well, a life of adventure – whether it be the dungeons of Berlin, or retaliating with justification to the ridiculous English, or enjoying peanut butter excursions in good company in New York – seem a very fine alternative to me.

No matter what the adventures, and how absorbing the telling, at 70 minutes, Die Blaue Stunde runs a tad too long. The audience is happy enough, though, and our largely silent reaction to this show need not be taken as anything but an intelligent response to an intelligent performance. 

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