ROUTINE MAGIC / MAGIC ROUTINE

BATS Theatre, The Random Stage, 1 Kent Tce, Wellington

05/11/2020 - 14/11/2020

Production Details



Routine Magic:
Aloysius has developed extraordinary powers from his rituals and will not allow court-ordered psychologist Sarah to come inside his house. Over five mornings, Sarah and Aloysius grapple with their attachments and detachments to routine, searching for a more balanced way of living.

Magic Routine:
It’s YouTube sensation Ant’s 21st birthday. A spirit, arrives with a magical letter which can only be opened if Ant has harmony of mind, body, and spirit. Kami promises to return each year until Ant turns 25 to see if he has developed the required abilities to achieve the task.

Routine Magic (shortlisted for the Adam NZ Play Award in 2019) and Magic Routine were written by Frances Steinberg who also directs the plays. Frances has had a long career as a psychologist, martial artist, acupuncturist, interactive learning designer, international presenter, and author.

The plays are brought to life by Barnaby Olson and Rebecca Parker. (See below)

BATS Theatre, The Random Stage
5 – 14 November 2020
6pm
Full Price $22
Group 6+ $20
Concession Price $18
BOOK TICKETS 

Accessibility
The Random Stage is fully wheelchair accessible; please contact the BATS Box Office by 4.30pm on the show day if you have accessibility requirements so that the appropriate arrangements can be made. Read more about accessibility at BATS.

Barnaby, a local Wellington creative, has toured nationally with productions such as Anzac Eve, and An Awfully Big Adventure, and starred on screen in BURBS, Missing Sunday, and Tragicomic. He wrote and performed in the acclaimed new work A Traveller’s Guide to Turkish Dogs, and his most recent directing credit was Story Studio Live, a new NZ work for Capital E, which won the 2019 Excellence Award for Theatre for Social Change.

Rebecca has featured in theatrical shows for Stagecraft, Kidstuff, Kapitall Kids, Showbiz, Backyard Theatre and Fresh Dada, as well as various productions in the Wellington Fringe Festival, at the Court Theatre in Christchurch, at BATS and at Circa Theatre. She has also appeared in over 20 short films, some of which are currently doing international film festival circuits.



Theatre ,


Mostly routine with moments of magic

Review by Melissa Bee 06th Nov 2020

Routine Magic/Magic Routine is a double feature that examines how routines can either entrap or free us. The sparse set, lighting, and music allow Frances Steinberg’s words and Rebecca Parker and Barnaby Olson’s acting to take focus. Unfortunately, elements in each play diminish the intended impact.

In Routine Magic, Olson expertly vacillates between controlled and chaotic as Aloysius, a man whose obsessive-compulsive disorder manifests itself in his literally shutting himself out of the world, safe in his routines. Olson’s bursts of rapid-fire monologue, coupled with moments of restraint and release, make for a dynamic and compelling performance.

Rebecca Parker, as psychiatrist Sarah Cohen, reveals deep levels of empathy in her acting even though she is never face-to-face with Aloysius. Her American accent, however, is distracting – belonging more to Adelaide in Guys and Dolls than to modern day women from New York. The monologues are beautiful but not written as people naturally speak, and the magic realism forces the plot forward where a gradual lowering of defenses would deliver an equally powerful result.

Magic Routine begins promisingly. Parker is backlit from atop the stage as Olson is passed out on a coffee table below. I am anticipating a guardian angel/life after death scenario. The magic ends there, sadly, as we meander down multiple storylines that have no conclusion: an absent father who may or may not exist; an unexplained relationship between new-age guardian Kami (Parker) and said absent father; social media influencer Anthony ‘Ant’ Hill (Olson) as a possible accessory to murder?

Kami, though meant to guide Ant to enlightenment, treats him with contempt and snarkily undercuts his life choices at every turn, making me doubt her character has actually reached inner peace. Ant never once livestreams or talks to his 19 million followers about his experience, despite the fact that “being visited by a ghost who knows my dad” would be the ultimate clickbait.

Though Olson and Parker do a fine job within the constraints of the text, the fact that Steinberg dedicates the bulk of the piece lambasting social media without showing Ant actually using it or exploring his motivations leaves me feeling lectured at and empty.

Magic Routine/Routine Magic could be better served by removing the gimmicks of magic and instead revealing the magic that happens when characters connect on a deeper level. For now, the pieces are mostly routine with moments of magic.

Comments

Sue Denim November 10th, 2020

Mel, really enjoyed this review of the show you would have made. Would be keen to hear your thoughts on the show you actually got.

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