Happy Home Road

James Hay Theatre, Christchurch

06/08/2009 - 08/08/2009

Christchurch Arts Festival 2009

Production Details



WORLD PREMIERE

"Have you ever considered the remote possibility that life is a Circus?"

Turner has a dream. Gazing out from the wasteland of Happy Home Road he sees the ethereal Lady in Red. He resolves to build a shed.

Circus, dance, music and drama collide. The result is a Pinteresque-world that combines the exuberance of madness with the exhaustion of reality. Visually breathtaking, it melds desolate romanticism with zany comic zest. Happy Home Road is circus for a new century.

The Loons Circus Theatre Company production of The Butler premiered as a CircoArts student production at Christ’s College, followed by two remounted seasons at The Loons in Lyttelton and a sell-out season at the Nelson Arts Festival. In October 2009 The Butler will play a return season at the Nelson Arts Festival, then plays the Tauranga Arts Festival, The Edge in Auckland, followed by The Pleasance in London, opening on November 13. 

When 
6 & 7 August, 7.30pm
8 August, 1.00pm & 7.30pm

Where:  James Hay Theatre

Prices 
A Reserve: $40
Concession/Friend: $35
A Child: $15
B Reserve: $30
B Child: $10

Bookings
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Where is the magic of risk and spectacle?

Review by Dr Mark James Hamilton 06th Aug 2009

The safety curtain lifts on a copse of tall white trees with spindly stubby limbs. On a plinth, a goldfish circles in a bowl. A woman in scarlet descends from the sky. Leaves fall likewise. She exits slowly, trailing an endless red train. And all the while, jangling strings and melodious gongs meander an ever-descending scale… We are in a legato world, and though there are changes of pace, under all, this freefalling dynamic suffuses the whole.

In this midst of the Dali-esque environs, stands a portly protagonist. Cajoled by a dapper but cynical wise guy, he recollects his adolescent first-love, and a traumatic moment of childhood abandonment. The enactment of this scene by stilt-walkers is the show’s most bewitching moment of drama in action. But for the most, all is pinned on the portentous dialogue, which is a cryptic montage of hoary idioms and famous lyrics.

Clear themes do emerge. The memory of a Mexican Kissing Fish, we are told, is but seven seconds. Ponder that. To be ever on a first date: paradise or a nightmare? At times, however, the words tumble into the confusion and emotional dystopia that Harold Pinter made so his own. The big difference here, however, is the addition of a lithe and keen acrobatic chorus. On occasion, they seem to still be playing through the devising games used to create new work. But their hijinks – like becoming a shoal of vacuous, snogging fish – certainly gets the audience cackling merrily.

For the most, however, watching this chorus is to watch human Lambourginis idle. I just want to ask, "When are they gonna do some tricks?" Moments of promise surface throughout: impeccable acrobalance; the precarious delight of a solo trapeze artist, sans net; and a guy dangling in improbable, cantilevered postures from a ten metre, vertical pole.

Yet, circus is about the visceral rapport of bodies – and the company’s drab costumes hide theirs. In the same way, much of the time their corporeal talent is buried background. The elliptical narrative upfront throughout obscures the eloquence of their flesh. When the box of big top toys is finally opens up, for a joyous handful of moments all the classic goodies are there: red noses, unicycling, hulahoops, tumbling, and a man in the sky spinning and spinning, utterly dizzyingly. Lion tamers and chimps in shoes went out with the ark; I know that. But this work strays too far, for me, from the remarkable magic of risk and spectacle that makes circus so eternal.
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Comments

Daniel Allan September 2nd, 2009

Removed from the risk and magic of circus? Perhaps in this post-cirque world we are too harsh in our judgements. From our fourth row seat the dynamic deeds of said chorus were pretty darn spectacular. Idling Lambourginis? As a performer myself, I judged the work of the chorus to be exhausting, quite the opposite of idle.

The most hardened circus judges should be reminded too, that we were witnessing theatre in the James Hay that night. Acting, music, lighting, dialogue, mystery all added to the experience- one that I would say was an inspired fusion.

Rather than training actors to do tricks, Mike Friend has taken the trick-turners and put them into theatre. This is a hugely crowd-pleasing approach and I wish him and his dynamic company well as they take The Butler abroad.

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