JUMPY

Fortune Theatre, Dunedin

05/07/2014 - 02/08/2014

Production Details



Featuring: Rima Te Wiata (Full Frontal, Billy T James Show), Stephen Butterworth (Nothing Trivial), Lauren Gibson (Freaky TV), Hilary Halba (Calendar Girls), Nathan Mudge (Tribes), Jon Pheloung (Good for Nothing), Barbara Power (God of Carnage), Jordon Selwyn (The Kick) and Priyanka Xi (The Water Horse)

“It’s funny, deliciously rude and at times piercingly moving…” Daily Telegraph

Fortune Theatre celebrates its 40th Anniversary with the NZ Première of Jumpy by April De Angelis.

“You’re having some kind of crisis.”

“It’s called being 50. You must be having it too.”

The inimitable Rima Te Wiata returns to Dunedin to play Hilary – a mother, a wife and fifty. Hilary once protested at Greenham and now her protests tend to focus on struggling to control her increasingly promiscuous teenage daughter and keeping the passion in her marriage alive.  

To make matters worse, this fifty year old finds herself coming into conflict with the hostile mother of her daughter’s boyfriend and she must also fend off the unwelcome advances of her new adversary’s husband.

Rima Te Wiata, daughter of Beryl and Inia Te Wiata, was last seen at Fortune Theatre in Love, Loss and What I Wore. Rima, a fabulously funny actor, is perhaps most recognisable for her impersonations. She was brilliant as a chain-smoking Helen Clark on the political satire TV show, McPhail and Gadsby: 1990, The Issues. “Perfect casting for the chain smoking, wine drinking Hilary in Jumpy.” says Fortune’s Artistic Director Lara Macgregor with a wry smile.

Te Wiata is not the only actor of famous parents to be gracing the stage, Lauren Gibson, daughter of New Zealand veteran actor Jude Gibson, is making her Fortune Theatre debut as Tilly, Hilary’s promiscuous teenage daughter. Lauren is a recent graduate of The Actors’ Programme in Auckland, along with fellow actors Priyanka Xi and Jordon Selwyn.

Also, hailing from Auckland and fresh from his departure as Artistic Director at Silo Theatre which he has helmed for the past decade, comes director Shane Bosher. Of the play he says; “April De Angelis’ play is a laugh-out-loud comedy that channels the very best of Alan Ayckbourn in its exploration of the age-old generational clash that occurs between mothers and their teenage daughters. And armed with the unmatched Rima Te Wiata and hot new talent Lauren Gibson, audiences can expect a rollicking good night.”

Keeping the Auckland contingency in check are local actors Hilary Halba and Barbara Power. These two powerhouses bring humour, madness and panache to a cast of nine – the largest cast to appear on the Fortune Mainstage this year.

Be sure not to miss this original, frank and funny family drama that questions parental anxieties and life after fifty.

“This is a shrewdly observed picture of midlife crisis and the travails of marriage, as well as a striking depiction of the gap – in both time and ideology – between women such as Hilary, who camped at Greenham Common, and their daughters, whose lives revolve around Facebook, texting and nightclubs.” – The Evening Standard

First presented at the Royal Court Theatre, London on 13 October, 2011 in a production which subsequently transferred to the Duke of York’s Theatre on 16 October, 2012.

JUMPY
Production Dates:  5 July – 2 August, 2014
Running Time:  Approx. 2 hours 15 minutes (including interval)
Venue :  Fortune Theatre Mainstage, 231 Stuart Street, Dunedin
Performances:  Tuesday, 6.00pm, Wednesday – Saturday, 7.30pm, Sunday, 4.00pm
(no show Monday)
Tickets:  Gala (first 5 shows) $34, Adults $42, Senior Citizens $34,
Members $32, Tertiary Students $20, High School Students $15,
Group discount (10 +) $34
Bookings:  Fortune Theatre, 231 Stuart Street, Dunedin 
Box Office 03 477 8323 or visit www.fortunetheatre.co.nz 

KEY EVENTS / DATES 

Lunchtime Bites / Thursday, 26 June, 2014 – meet at 12.15pm in the Dunedin Public Library, ground floor. The cast will perform an excerpt from Jumpy with an opportunity to win tickets. Reading will commence at 12.30pm followed by afternoon tea. This is a FREE event.

JUMPY Opening Night / Saturday, 5 July, 2014 7.30pm, Fortune Theatre.

Members’ Briefing / Sunday, 6 July, 2014 – meet at the Fortune bar at 3.00pm and join Director Shane Bosher (departing Artistic Director of Silo Theatre) for a lively informal chat about Jumpy.

Forum / Tuesday, 8 July, 2014 – join the cast and crew for an open question and answer session following the 6.00pm show.

40th Anniversary Gala Evening / Saturday, 19 July 2014 – This star studded evening gives our patrons the opportunity to celebrate and enjoy a glass of bubbly, live jazz and to mingle with VIP 40th Anniversary guests in the Fortune Theatre bar prior to the show. ($50 per ticket)

Audio Describe Performance / Sunday, 20 July 2014 – an audio described performance offered in collaboration with Experience Access for visually impaired patrons and friends. Bookings essential.


CAST
Hilary:  Rima Te Wiata
Roland:  Stephen Butterworth
Tilly:  Lauren Gibson
Frances:  Hilary Halba
Josh:  Nathan Mudge
Mark:  Jon Pheloung
Bea:  Barbara Power
Cam:  Jordon Selwyn
Lyndsey:  Priyanka Xi 

CREW 
Writer:  April De Angelis 
Director:  Shane Bosher 
Production Manager:  Lindsay Gordon 
Set Designer:  Dan Williams 
Set Build:  Peter King, Richard Clark 
Lighting Designer:  Marty Roberts
Costume Designer:  Maryanne Wright-Smyth
Sound Designer:  Matthew Morgan
Stage Manager:  Monique Webster
Properties Master:  George Wallace
Operator:  Alexandra Le Cocq
Design Intern:  Audrey Morgan



Crashingly funny and disturbing

Review by Barbara Frame 07th Jul 2014

Greenham Common veteran Hilary is now in her fifties and clinging to feminism, literacy, education and the power of reason. Teenage daughter Tilly – determinedly vapid, hedonistic and rude – couldn’t be more different.  

Playwright April de Angelis has brilliantly contrasted 1980s feminist idealism with today’s television and Facebook-influenced superficiality, and Jumpy is an abrasive comedy with icy bleakness at its core.

Director Shane Bosher emphasises the play’s discord with a smart pace, loud, jarring music and edgy lighting. Maryanne Wright-Smyth’s costumes precisely indicate each character’s place in society and character type, Tilly’s extreme outfits clashing with Hilary’s more sensible attire.

Hilary, who anchors the play, is its only truly sympathetic character – mature, confident, unable to compete with her daughter’s cellphone for attention and utterly terrified by the prospects of no job, a stagnant marriage, estrangement from Tilly and the probability of environmental ruin. Her complexity is superbly revealed by Rima Te Wiata. Tilly is played with the complete unlikeability and unrelenting contempt that the part demands, as well as the highest heels you’ve ever seen, by Lauren Gibson.

Other especially noteworthy performances come from Stephen Butterworth as Roland, an actor seemingly unaware that all the world is not a stage; Priyanka Xi as Lyndsey, a tiny teenage mother with a child’s comprehension of the world; and Hilary Halba as Hilary’s friend Frances, whose desperate demonstration of the liberating power of burlesque leaves her on-stage audience deeply unimpressed and the off-stage one aghast.   

‘Jumpy’ turns out to be the name of a toy, but it’s also an indication of this play’s crashingly funny and deeply disturbing effect, and could well describe the mood of many theatre-goes as they left the theatre on Saturday night.

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Laughing hard as hard questions are asked

Review by Terry MacTavish 06th Jul 2014

I may not be a parent but I work with adolescents and I know all too well that hideous moment when the child who has trusted and respected you suddenly looks at you with the cold, hard eyes of a contemptuous stranger.  In Jumpy, April De Angelis confronts this universal domestic crisis boldly, not hiding the crucial part sex plays in both the rift and the expression of it.  It is a splendid choice for the winter of the Fortune’s 40th year. 

De Angelis is a cracker playwright who can be both profound and funny, and the Fortune production does her full justice, beginning by importing the much-lauded ex-director of Silo Theatre, Shane Bosher.  He has his large cast of nine seasoned actors zooming round the stage with the smoothness of well-directed traffic, efficiently carrying out the many complicated set changes as well as playing their parts with apparently confident ease.  

Bosher’s frequent collaborator, designer Dan Williams, has created an ingenious set that keeps the energy flowing.  The neutral coloured walls, steps and kit set furniture are swung round to indicate changes for some eighteen scenes: quite a challenge for the actors/stage shifters!  Martyn Roberts brings it to life with his attractive lighting design while Matthew Morgan’s sound has the audience jigging. 

The costumes (Maryanne Wright-Smyth) make a visual statement about the generation gap, with the teenage girls in unbelievably short, tight dresses and ludicrously high heels, while the adults’ gear ranges from deeply uncool tees to aggressive power dressing – and of course the hilariously inappropriate burlesque outfits. 

The characters are middle class English, but they feel like New Zealanders and it’s easy to identify with them.  Could there ever, anywhere, have been teenagers who didn’t scream at their parents, “You’ve ruined my life”?  Or adults who didn’t wonder what happened to the ideals of their youth? 

The story is that of Hilary, once an ardent feminist and pacifist who protested against nuclear arms at Greenham Common.  Now she is hitting fifty and in meltdown: her marriage is tired and her job is on the line.  She is bewildered by the hostility of her fifteen-year-old daughter and appalled by the new brand of feminism which requires girls to dress like hookers. “You were never meant to have a Barbie! A recipe for self-hatred!” 

Rima Te Wiata is warm and winning as Hilary, delivering a beautifully controlled performance in a role that could easily be played for laughs.  In fact the subtlety of her acting and consequent believability of her character make the comedy all the funnier but allow us to feel the pathos of the hurt mother as well. 

As her daughter Tilly, talented Lauren Gibson has the expression and mannerisms of a sulky teenager off pat, over-reacting to everything her mother tentatively tries to say:  “Don’t go psycho at me!”  Beneath the obnoxiousness we sense her fragility, and she wins our sympathy at all the right moments.  I love the injured dignity with which she stomps upstairs on only one preposterous shoe. 

Her pregnant friend Lyndsey, charmingly played by Priyanka Xi, all loopy smile and tangled legs, might seem too naïve to be true, but – I can vouch for it – she is not.  Lyndsay too elicits our sympathy, later quaintly observing of her baby “he’s really nice” while the adults treat her with scant respect. Together these two give a scarily accurate picture of today’s young women, their vulnerability well concealed under a layer of sophistication as thick as their mascara. 

Hilary Halba is in sparkling top form as Hilary’s hard-boiled best friend Frances, her comic timing so perfect she can get a laugh merely from saying “and”.  Halba wins a spontaneous round of applause when Frances, in her attempt to stave off middle age, treats us to the amazing burlesque number, justifying it nobly: “I won’t be a fucking puppet! I’m ironically deconstructing it!” 

As Bea, the protective mother of the youthful boyfriend, Barbara Power is a very different sort of tough woman.  Power has great stage presence, and her line delivery is as spiky as her vicious looking stiletto heels, as she asserts early pregnancy is actually harder on the boy. 

The men seem pale by comparison with these strong, complex women.  Hilary’s husband Mark leaves most of the decisions to her, but his often ignored comments show him to be reflective, and Jon Pheloung makes him a likeable bloke with a wry sense of humour. 

Bea’s philandering husband Roland (“I’m an actor! I don’t know how to turn off the charm!”) is the one character who for me does not ring true.  Though Stephen Butterworth acts with commendable energy, his exaggerated performance seems out of kilter with the realism of the other characters.  De Angelis appears to have made this role one-dimensional, and I imagine most actors would be insulted to be stereotyped as this vain and shallow.  Perhaps she had someone in mind. 

The two young men are more credible though they haven’t as much to do: Tilly’s cute first boyfriend Josh (Nathan Mudge, wonderful last year in Tribes) typically does his best to be invisible, while her next love-interest, Cam, doesn’t arrive till late in proceedings.  When he does however, he makes quite an impression.  I can guarantee that at least one of Cam’s appearances, flamboyantly carried off by dashing Jordan Selwyn, will never be forgotten. Don’t blink. 

It is Cam who quite casually gives Hilary an insight into her daughter’s true feelings. This leads to a heart-warming moment, sweetly played by Te Wiata and Gibson, but before we are permitted to slide into sentimentality the comedy takes over and we are roaring with laughter again.  De Angelis is brilliant at this tightrope writing and, as Bosher ensures that the pace picks up in the second half, it does not become predictable. 

One of the funniest scenes is when Hilary and hubby are trying to keep up their resolve of reading Dickens aloud in bed, while bedsprings creak next door. To overhear the love-making of family members of any age is the most cringe-making thing imaginable.  

There’s nothing new about this – think of Hamlet agonising over his mother:
“Oh shame! Where is thy blush? Rebellious hell, 
  If thou canst mutine in a matron’s bones, 
  To flaming youth let virtue be as wax 
  And melt in her own fire!”

But those of us who don’t happen to be princes above the law, able to slaughter anyone offensive, simply have to come to terms with it.  In the foyer later someone relates how when, as a guest, he complained to his host of night sounds from the daughter’s bedroom, the father merely conceded, “Yes, she’s a lusty girl.” 

The recognisability of Jumpy (sorry, you’ll have to watch to the end to discover why that’s the title) is one of its great strengths.  My guest has a pre-teen daughter and I notice that when she isn’t giggling, she is looking horrified.  Seeing this might actually be helpful. The riveting scene when both sets of parents gather to discuss the implications of a possible pregnancy is very reminiscent of the classic scene, which in its time made a real impact, in Roger Hall’s Middle-Age Spread.  Somehow this similarity makes Jumpy an even better choice to mark the Fortune’s 40th Anniversary as a professional theatre.

Keep asking the hard questions, Fortune: how have the values we passionately embraced when young served us through life?  What is this parent/child bond? How the hell do you love and let go? 

And if possible, make us also laugh this hard while you do it … 

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