TEEN TRAUMA EXPOSED AND EXPLORED

REVIEWED BY DIANE DE BEER

Stuart Brown as Evan Hansen

DEAR EVAN HANSEN

MUSIC AND LYRICS BY: Benj Pasek and Justin Paul

BOOK: Steven Levenson

CAST: Stuart Brown, Léa Blerk, Charlie Bouguenon, Keely Crocker. Kent Jeycocke, Shelley Lothian, Ntshikeng Matooane, Arno Meyer, Sharon Spiegel Wagner, Michael Stray, Justin Swartz, Lucy Tops

SET AND LIGHTING: Niall Griffin

MUSICAL SUPERVISOR: Charl Johan Lingenvelder

CHOREOGRAPHER: Louisa Talbot

SOUND DESIGNER: David Classen

RESIDENT DIRECTOR: Shelley Lothian

DIRECTOR: Greg Karvellas

Producers: Showtime Management and How Now Productions

VENUE: Montecasino Teatro

DATES: Until 13 April

PICTURES: Daniel Manners

Charlie Bouguenon (Charlie Murphy), Stuart Brown (Evan Hansen),Sharon Spiegel Wagner (Cynthia Murphy) and Keely Crocker (Zoe murphy).

WHAT struck me instantly while watching this musical was that being young a few decades ago was much easier.

No social media, less scrutiny, much less peer pressure because it had to be done person to person rather than through technical means or phones  – it was just a much simpler and less stressful life.

What young adults have to contend with at that vulnerable age when you start transitioning into adulthood is quite monstrous. One would think that the huge physical upheaval would be enough to deal with, but now there’s so much more.

It’s a musical with an intimate if weighty story as it deals with depression and hiding from the world at a time when you should reach out rather than go into hibernation, yet it has huge heart.

It’s not often that musicals deal with  mental health issues especially targeting teen and young adult audiences, who are particularly vulnerable. These aren’t issues readily discussed and this offers an amazing opportunity to ignite sensitive conversations.

Griffin, who is known for his ingenious designs, has hit the brief spectacularly. It’s all high-tech and could be quite alienating and overwhelming but also allows for the cast to flow in and out of the grand and gleaming structure (above) quite seamlessly.

It also allows the high tech environment we live in to dominate and underlines the world we cannot escape – even if that is exactly what Evan Hansen is trying to do.

That is the genius of the musical. It all feels quite overwhelming, almost as though you have to fight your way to the heart of the story, yet this is where the magic lies. At that centre is a timid and rather terrified young boy who can hardly get out from under the covers.

His way of communicating is to write letters to himself, hence the Dear Evan Hansen title. Many people, young and old, could identify at some stage in their lives with his struggle of dealing with life. His is the universal struggle to be seen.

His mother, a single parent, is so stretched to keep them afloat that she hardly notices her son or witnesses any of his anguish. He feels he has no one to turn to until an incident allows him to find a different persona and a family to hook onto.

This particular production has been gifted the perfect package in Stuart Brown, who engages with the audience and embraces his persona in the title role of Evan Hansen. The way he commands the stage and fills the auditorium with an emotional sensitivity that’s quite astonishing in such a huge space is extraordinary.

There’s nothing showy or superfluous in his approach to the role, he simply is Evan Hansen, which draws even those few souls  –  including myself  –  who don’t instinctively engage into the angst-ridden universe of a teenager whose whole being is fearful of the outside world.

Justin Swartz (Jared Kleinman), Keely Crocker (Zoe Murphy) and Stuart Brown (Evan Hansen) in conversation.

That and the music written by an experienced team of songwriters, Benj Pasek and Justin Paul, who are best known for their Oscar, Grammy and Tony-winning work on La La Land, The Greatest Showman and now this, each of which spawned albums that landed in the Top 10 on the Billboard 200. That’s hard to beat and you could pick up from the audience that many of them knew the music and the lyrics, which would really add to a fuller experience.

There really isn’t much to fault in this production guided by the genius musical instincts of Karvellas supported by Lingenvelder’s music know-how, with a marvellously clever ensemble cast, all with voices that carry the music, it is a story well told.

It’s not just teens but also families that would benefit from the show. Communication, real person-to-person contact and, in this instance parents and children, is the other issue that is explored. These are not traditional topics for musicals and that is what makes this one so intriguing.

It also one of the finest shows to target the teen audience. At their most susceptible to be groomed as future theatre fans, this one ticks all the boxes. There’s a hero who explores and explodes, a story that ventures into almost forbidden territory and a production that unfolds beautifully with many different characters who find what they are looking for, a variety of issues to mine, and for those who want a softer landing, a story of romance.

But more than anything, there’s the glorious music and the explosive performances by an exciting ensemble who push the energy with joyful enthusiasm. You simply have to let go and engage.

A BRILLIANTLY BRAVE KARIN HOUGAARD, A POETIC PERFORMER AT HER BEST – AND SHE WILL BE BACK

Kaalvoet by Karin Hougaard

Musicians Leon Ecroignard (contra bass, bass and handpans) and Luke van der Merwe (guitars, mandolin and oud)

February 2 at Pretoria’s Fairtree Atterbury Theatre

Karin has always been a performer rather than a singer. She throws herself into the performance with her whole body and soul and manages to sweep her audience along from start to finish.

She is a dramatic entertainer, larger than life in both stories and song – in the best sense of the word.

Personally, I feel as though she has grown into her performances with a confidence and wisdom that result in an extraordinary experience. She embraces the content and substance of the show, turning every song as well as the binding text into something personal and quite unique.

Sometimes the intervals between songs are an introduction to the song, sometimes it’s like a quiet meditation or a poem. It’s all-encompassing and deals with love, sadness, longing, alienation (which is probably due to her extended stay in the US), craving, being a woman and sensuality, something that she expresses with every movement.

This is a performer who explores her heart with exuberance and complete honesty. For her it’s all about authenticity.

Her selection of music is spectacular. Her English songs include You Don’t Own Me, the popular Dolly Parton’s Always Love You in a unique adaptation, the haunting  Uninvited by Alanis Morissette, a combo of Baghdad Café’s Calling You and Salmon Berries’ Barefoot (pointing to her choice of title and the way she performs, KAALVOET), a personal favourite, both dealing with her particular status as an outsider.

Those familiar with her self-written music, including  Muse, Sterrereën, Daar’s Ek , Stilbly en Daar’s Ek as well as the well known Heimwee and Summertime combined with Thula, will know it’s equally emotionally rich in song and presence. She and the iconic Dutch artist Herman Van Veen have a strong connection, she will be recording a duet of her song By My with him on his upcoming album, as well as perform as a guest artist on his 80th birthday celebration concert.

She also paid tribute to his songwriting with the Van Veen song Anders Anders and their dual composition Bij Mij.

While the cover adaptations are exquisite and felt to  me almost Janis Joplin (lite) inspired, the Afrikaans/Dutch songs have a more poetic and dramatic approach.

Her binding texts are as much part of the message as the choice of her songs. There’s nothing that’s not carefully choreographed and chosen to complete the full circle including her two marvellous musicians, Leon Ecroignard and Luke .

From beginning to end, you’re engaged and committed. If you do the work, the rewards are extraordinary.

One of the glorious results of being part of the arts for such a long time is being able to follow an artist’s career from the early days to their maturity. It’s such a privilege to see them grow and blossom and then reach a stage where they open their wings as wide as possible and fly.

That’s exactly what’s been happening to Karin these past few years. And it’s truly something to admire and for audiences a true gift. This is what she can do and how she nourishes her soul and ours.

She has returned to the US for a time, but her plans are to return to South Africa permanently in the foreseeable future. She says that she has been singing less and less, scaling down, she calls it. “

Her performances have been in  Holland more often than here locally and she chooses very carefully where to perform. She is intent on doing only selected special shows which will mean something to her as performer and thus be passed on to her audiences.

And she prefers to sing in theatres where the lights go low, the world disappears and she believes she can make magic.

Indeed, that’s exactly what happened this past Sunday. It feels as though you are witnessing something holy and in the moment, and that is something miraculous.

Knowing that she is returning to our shores also means that we will hopefully see more of this exceptional performer. Don’t miss the next one. You won’t be sorry.

PAUL SLAB’S NEW LOCAL PLAY, BITTER WINTER, CELEBRATES SCRIPT, DIRECTING AND ACTING

PICTURES: Regardt Visser

BITTER WINTER

PLAYWRIGHT: Paul Slabolepszy

CAST: André Odendaal, Oarabile Ditsele, Chantal Stanfield

DIRECTOR: Lesedi Job

VENUE: Pieter Toerien’s The Studio at Montecasino

DATES: Until March 16

Everything to my mind seemed aligned for this one. I found the casting as well as the director intriguing, a new local play is always something to be excited about and Paul Slab has a way of climbing into a story.

At the same time, it also makes me nervous. I don’t want to raise my expectations by thinking ahead, but one can hardly prevent it.

Ensemble cast (Chantal Stanfield, André Odendaal and Oarabile Ditsele) and playwright Paul Slabolepszy

Either way, I was quick to exhale once the actors found their way on stage. One feels it immediately. It’s two actors in a room waiting (rather like a doctor’s waiting room) to be auditioned.

 Anyone who knows anything about theatre knows that this is both an exhilarating and a scary experience. Not many of us have to sell ourselves in such a public way each time when applying for a new job. And like most things in life, there’s not really anything that can be done to alleviate the nerves crashing into one another at high speed in these circumstances.

Not only that. If there’s something Paul knows everything about, it’s this. Both as a writer and an actor, it’s a scenario that he has lived most of his life – and one feels all of that when watching the play.

The two hopeful actors (the one at the end of his career, the other excited about the life ahead) who don’t know one another are sitting in a room checking each other out. Times are tough – not only for actors – and this is not a friendly space. There’s no one around trying to soften the gig they’re waiting for.

Every once in a while, a rather officious woman enters and, while she’s charming to the one actor, she bristles when the other asks anything. The tension is palpable.

Already a scary space for all involved, it is also heightened in the South African context. And this is what the playwright handles so well. He plays the moment and not the context, which he leaves to the audience to experience.

It’s subtle yet clichéd but with this clever script and a team who works with everything they’re given, it sweeps you along.

The title could work in two of our languages, English and Afrikaans, and that’s another trick up Slab’s sleeve. He has both languages (as well as three more indigenous languages inluding Sesotho, isiZulu and Tsotsi) flowing throughout and, in this instance appropriately and with some delicious irony in hand as he points to the state of the arts in general.

The choice of actors and director, novel and genius, adds to the grit and weightiness of what we’re dealing with. It’s not an easy world to navigate in current times and if your particular career choice constantly also takes you to the edge of life’s challenges, it can be excruciating.

And yet, that is where these people involved choose to play. That is exactly what this play explores. It’s part of who they are and what they have to do.

Bitter Winter is a fantastic vehicle for someone who has been in the game for some time and knows the territory, the people and their insecurities, and the fears involved. But then he also knows how to capture the magnetism of live theatre, how it cherishes the soul, captures our imagination and makes you think.

It works because everyone pulls together. The acting, the directing and the text all play their part.

I can hear Paul say Local is Lekker in his exuberant manner. And he’s right. When it works this wonderfully, it’s a joy to behold.

Bitter Winter is donating a portion of ticket sales to the Theatre Benevolent Fund and every cent counts.

FIRST-TIME AUTHOR JULIETTE MNQETA CONFESSES THAT SHE LOVES WRITING AND TELLING STORIES

Juliette Mnqeta has dreamt about her debut novel and now that it is finally here, she’s hoping that this, a crime novel, will be the first of many more adventures. If The Dead Could Talk (published by Kwela)is impressive and DIANE DE BEER was keen to meet the writer who seems so comfortable in her author skin:

Playing the sleuth: first-time author Juliette Mnqeta (Picture: Sean Eyes)

“A WHITE PIECE OF PAPER IS A SAFE SPACE.”

Anyone who can say those  words must be confident because I haven’t heard many writers confess that.

First-time author Juliette Mnqeta also writes in her preface: ‘‘I believe I can … write.’’

When you start asking her questions, she’s quick to confide that she’s shy and doesn’t have too much self-belief.

Not too far into the story, I was thinking of Deon Meyer, so impressed was I by the storytelling. “Well, I am the youngest of nine children. I guess that’s why I have so much to say,” is her response. “I have always loved telling a story, which I think I got from my mother. She was a very emotive woman and could always retell events with a little bit of  her own  spice.’’

Juliette spent most of her childhood and teenage years in Wynberg and began writing once in her teens. She started with short stories and even tried her hand at writing poetry, but it never occurred to her to study anything that would help her with writing.  “I just love to write.”

She had no particular interest in crime novels and it only started when she realised most of the girls in her class would go for romance, so she opted for crime. “The first crime novel she ever read was in high school, a book by Ruth Rendell and that was for a school project.

Her interest was piqued when watching a few Agatha Christe adaptations on television. “I started reading her novels and haven’t stopped since,” she explains. “What draws me in is the puzzle of solving the crime.

“There’s a sense of justice and lightbulb moment when everything comes together, I enjoy that.”

And that’s exactly what she gives us with this her first venture into this world, resulting in her debut novel.

She’s still a young writer but her processes reflect her love of writing. “With my Facebook stories, I simply open the page and start typing to see where it leads,” she says.

It all falls in the realm of practice, practice, and more practice, long believed to be thé thing to do.

With If the Dead could Talk, she started with the full reveal. “I remember starting with the planning of the ending.”

She had her villain(s) first, their motives outlined and only then did she start working on her protagonists. She knew if she had her culprits, she could disguise that person amongst a few red herrings and suspects. “I then worked backwards, which was fun because I slowly discovered my protagonists’ personalities and fell in love with them.”

At the tender age of 19, she was told by her then employer that to be a writer, she would have to be exceptional, and he didn’t think she quite fit that criterion. But she always knew he said that without having read her work. When her mother died in 2018, she decided to start writing this current novel.

“My mother had always bragged to her friends that I could write, even though she had also never read my work. But when she was suddenly gone, I opened my laptop, and started mapping out my story.

“I already had my villain. I had my crime, and I had the reaction in mind that I wanted the audience to have when they figured out who this villain was.”

While writing had always come easily, this was different, even humbling, she says. She had the ideas, would turn them into words but, when read from a  reader’s point of view, suggestions would come her way as well as a few plot blunders. “I would have to come up with changes that would make it work,” she explains.

But she knew, listening to these early readers and taking suggestions from her editor were key to what got the book published.

I think she listened carefully. Right from the start I was excited by the book. I felt very early on that this was an exceptional voice and that feeling never dimmed from beginning to end.

If the ending was something of a bumpy ride, I’m not sure it wasn’t me as a reader who really enjoys the exhilaration of the build-up and often finds the roll-out something of an anti-climax or perhaps a mini let-down.

But here’s holding thumbs that she keeps writing and plays around with the crime genre for a little bit longer.

 I’m excited to see what her unique voice and perspective will come up with as she gains confidence and a following.

I suspect she’s something special.

“When I conceived of If The Dead Could Talk, the idea was that it would be a one shot only and I would give it my all. I can now see that I can try my hand at the crime genre again.

“When I read a cozy mystery, there is something exciting for me as a reader to try and work along with the detective or protagonist. I put together every clue and see how close I am to solving the crime. I want to offer other readers that feeling.”

Who as a first-time published author would not suffer – even if just a light touch of – imposter’s syndrome? But Juliette is learning to beat those battles.
 “I actually have a book published now! People will get to meet Azania. That’s exciting. It’s exhilarating knowing that I’ve introduced her to the world,” she concludes.  

“I love the fact that I can imagine. When I write, I genuinely feel that it’s fine to be me. It’s fine to be Juliette. On a piece of paper, I just run wild with characters, scenarios, dialogue and everything else I  can think of.

“Let me dream a little and say I can picture myself thinking up a bestseller one day. That’s the empowering element of an imagination. I can imagine just about anything.”

That would be my wish for this talented author. I for one would love to read her often in the future.




TWO OSCAR-WORTHY MOVIES WITH GREAT PERFORMANCES AND PRODUCTION CHOICES

TWO new films, currently on circuit at Ster Kinekor theatres, deserve all the accolades for performance and production whatever the outcome of the award show still revered as the one everyone wishes for. DIANE DE BEER reviews:

Picures: Pablo Larrain

MARIA

Director: Pablo Larrain

Cast: Angelina Jolie, Haluk Bilginer (Onassis), Alba Rohrwacher (the housekeeper), Pierfrancesco Favino (valet)

If you’re an opera fan, this one should be hard to resist.

Arguably, the success of the film rests on Angelina Jolie’s shoulders. And she delivers magnificently.

I’m old enough to remember when Maria Callas and her public love/hate relationship with Ari Onassis dominated the gossip columns. When he married Jackie Kennedy, the snub to his former lover could be felt worldwide – even without the presence of social media.

Many women have been scorned but not as publicly as she. And this is where Jolie pays homage to the remarkable superstar whose health and voice are starting to fail. She hasn’t been on stage for more than four years, but in her head, that’s where lives.

It’s where she comes alive and that is where the film gloriously captures the great Callas presence and voice.

Even though the two women aren’t lookalikes, the subtlety of Jolie’s transformation, the way she holds herself and moves and when she “sings” all vividly embody the spirit of the damaged diva – both physical and mental.

The casting is inspirational and the way the director has imaginatively captured the elegance and dignity of Callas combines to tell a story with great heart and empathy. Told as if from another era, which indeed it was, it is the tragedy and tribulations of Maria’s life that are delicately rendered so that it feels as though a real woman emerges.

And the film cleverly tells the story from Maria’s point of view. She wasn’t someone who relished sharing her secrets, but with Onassis and the women he courted, she didn’t have to. The world was fascinated.

The title doesn’t need more than just a name – Maria. Perhaps youngsters know less of her, but the older generation will know enough to care about this woman who seemed to have it all – but not the love of her life. And that was everything to her.

It’s obvious that she was the right choice for the Greek shipping magnate, but perhaps she too easily outshone him with her talent and artistic temperament. Jackie, a persona in her own right, but more as a symbol of a nation than an artist, to his mind, would allow him to shine brighter.

It was the mismatch of the century with the shy American first lady not a match for the rough-edged Ari, and he, no competition for the memory of the suave Jack Kennedy.

The one who suffered was Maria, who reflects on her life while trying to relive the glory of her younger voice.

It is indeed a Greek tragedy, but, fortunately, because of all the ingredients so smartly complementing  each other, it is beautifully told, with Jolie’s performance and the Callas voice stealing the show.

Oscar nominations: Cinematography; and I would have included the director and Angeline Jolie in the nominations

Pictures: courtesy A24

THE BRUTALIST

Director: Brady Corbet

Cast: Adrien Brody, Felicity Jones, Raffey Cassidy, Alessandro Nivola

It’s probably the length of the film that has kept some from seeing this exquisite film – both in storytelling and the way it unfolds.

It is and feels epic from beginning to end. The Brutalist is a story about an architect who flees to America from a devastating postwar Europe. He hopes to invigorate his life, his career and finally reunite with his wife and niece whom he leaves behind until he has established himself.

The more things change, the more they stay the same. In today’s climate, it is the struggling life of the immigrant that grabs hold most viciously as a visionary artist is forced to grovel his way to simply survive.

Power and its frightening effects are not something that’s just of our times. Even though he is soon spotted by a wealthy industrialist, Harrison lee Van Buuren (a name that carries weight in society), he is completely at the mercy of the powerful and their needs.

Nothing is secure, even when you’re designing for the best. They can tear you apart in seconds, make you bend the knee while praising your abilities and constantly hold you in their grip – even when celebrating your masterpiece.

Brody won his first Oscar as Best Actor in Roman Polanski’s The Pianist and has made a few other memorable films, but this performance will stay with you as he perfectly captures the angst, anxiety and reserved jubilation as he tries to battle his way through in this strangely cruel new world.

He quickly realises he is in a fight for his family’s life. First, he needs to get them there and then he has to make it work at all costs. “They don’t want us here,” he says to his wife, in a delicately balanced performance by Felicity Jones.

The battered architect knows and understands the cost, doesn’t lose his confidence in his own ability and yet, he is kept dangling, always on the edge while surviving on the whims of others. It’s the animal kingdom and only the fiercest fighters survive.

The title might point to a specific architectural style and one that the brave László Toth (with a name that could only come from somewhere else) brilliantly creates, but it is you who will feel battered and brutalised by the end of this majestic film as you witness the treatment of others that the privileged believe they’re entitled to.

It certainly is the scourge of our time and one that director/writer has firmly in his grasp.

Oscar Nominations: Adrien Brody as Best Actor, Felicity Jones as Best Supporting Actress, Guy Pearce as Best Supporting Actor, Best Cinematography, Best Directing, Best Editing, Best Original Score, Best Picture, Best Production Design, Best Original Screenplay

NOTHING IS AS TERRIFYING AND SIMULTANEOUSLY EXHILARATING THAN A BRAND NEW LOCAL PLAY

Rehearsals are underway for Bitter Winter  –  a new play penned by acclaimed South African playwright Paul Slabolepszy, which premieres at Pieter Toerien’s Studio Theatre at Montecasino from February 20th – March 16th. Director Lesedi Job and cast members Andre Odendaal (Jean-Louis Lourens), Oarabile Ditsele (Prosper Mangane) and Chantal Stanfield (Felicia Willemse) are currently in rehearsals, discovering the nuances and back-stories of this character-driven piece that deals with the human condition while sharing a story of resilience and discovery.

Pictures; Gustav Gerdener

From left; The cast Chantal Stanfield, Oarabile Ditsele and Andre Odendaal

With Paul Slab (as he is known) himself an artist, both a playwright and an actor, he has turned to his own life experiences with this exploration of an artist’s life. Bitter Winter celebrates the legends of South African theatre while shining a light on the new generation of rising stars making their mark on the global stage.

What he is hoping to share is the  sometimes rocky road that many artists are driven to travel in pursuit of their dreams.

It all begins in a venue which is like a home to actors, perhaps often an uncomfortable one, with the characters sitting in an audition room.

It’s about the life of an actor, the struggles and triumphs of those artists who remain deeply committed to their craft despite the challenges they face.It tells the story of two actors, one at the end of a career spent mainly on the classical stage, and another starting out on his journey, with  the magic and the madness of this ‘make-believe’ world on full display.

Playwright Paul Slab and director Lesedi Job

According to the producer, Weslee Lauder, the idea of a play with such an important story, especially since local actors have been bearing the brunt of an industry not taken care of by its governing parties, spoke to him

He also liked the concept of youth honouring the elderly, which speaks to a powerful truth.

In life, the young often forget that the paths they walk were paved by generations before them. And here, he believes, it is vital to remember the legacy, wisdom, and sacrifices they’ve left behind—and to show gratitude in every aspect of life.

A seed was planted, according to the playwright, when he heard Lizz Meiring giving a talk a number of years ago about all the vital work that the Theatre Benevolent Fund does, stressing the plight of aging artists in South Africa as they reach the end of their careers.
“I was asked after that talk whether I would write a play about it and I jumped right in. Then Covid hit, but I kept working on it. I wrote the piece with Andre Odendaal in mind, who then brought Weslee Lauder in to produce. And here we are!”

Slab had seen Andre, pictured above during rehearsals, in Dop  and thought he would be ideal for Jean-Louis. The other two artists went through the audition process.

Collaboration comes easily to Paul who always collaborated, especially with his close friend Bill Flynn before his untimely death. “In many instances, it’s the only way to get a show on stage, especially a new play,” he explains
While Paul has always enjoyed writing comedy, he is also known for theatre with strong moral values and believes it is especially important right now, given the current state of the world.

It is important to deal with the issues, but to talk about them in such a way for the audience to be receptive. We need to keep writing authentic stories, he says.

Lesedi Job, above with cast members and Paul, was drawn to the play because of the story. She was reminded of her own complex love affair with theatre as an artist. “But as I started working on the play, I became aware of how this is a story that inspires self-reflection and I love telling stories that leave an audience thinking.’’
Telling local stories especially appeals to her because she is passionate about being part of a next generation of storytellers who contribute to the history of South African theatre. “Bitter Winter is the fifth new South African play I am directing and I think this is not only out of choice but also because it is my purpose.”

She is especially affected by the theme of an older generation versus the younger generation. “I am reminded of my mother and her wisdom and the quiet knowledge that comes with age and experience. The other themes are that of the complexity of our identity that is informed by our history, our languages, our traditions and culture as well as our scars. And that of humanity.’’Maya Angelou says: “During bad circumstances, which is the human inheritance, you must decide not to be reduced. You have your humanity, and you must not allow anything to reduce that.”
Discussing her processes, she explains she spends a lot of time before the rehearsal process preparing, researching, interrogating and unpacking the script to get a handle on the story, the world and the characters.
“Once in the rehearsal room, I download information to the actors and plant seeds for them to think about; allowing an actor to bring themselves and their choices to the creative process.

Chantal Stanfield and Oarabile Ditsele

The process requires planning and thinking on your feet, humility and grace, as the director knows that at times you might not know what to do and to not get stuck on an idea you may have had beforehand.

For Andre Odendaal it’s a love for new South African work. “These opportunities are rare and always special. An authentic voice and a remarkable challenge.’’

 His  preparation for any character always starts by finding relatable qualities first. “Do I understand the character’s emotional world, what are the points of connection either to my own life or a that I have observed? Then one finds a physical and vocal quality. Here it is an older actor’s so that commonality was easy to find, albeit a very different mind space to my own.”

As for the audience, he hopes that they take home not only a better understanding of the plight of an artist and the commitment but also the joy of watching live theatre.

“A realisation that art feeds the soul.’’

For Oarabile Ditsele,  it was a chance to collaborate with people who have shaped the theatrical landscape of South African theatre, people like Andre and, of course, Paul Slab.

None of them had worked on a Slab piece before.

For Chantal Stanfield,  it is her first time working on one of the playwright’s plays professionally. She did some curriculum scene work at drama school, but to actually work with him 20 years after she graduated is such a gift.

She loves originating a new piece. “It’s a fresh and daunting challenge with no ‘original cast recording’ to fall back on. We don’t just decide to do this, it is a mad calling that is so fulfilling that we endure the scorn, the rejection, and dismissive attitudes every day.”

 Bitter Winter will be on stage at Pieter Toerien’s Studio Theatre at Montecasino from February 20th – March 16th. Bitter Winter is donating a portion of ticket sales to the Theatre Benevolent Fund and every cent counts. 

TWO MARVELOUS MOVIES, CONCLAVE AND A COMPLETE UNKNOWN, AHEAD IN AWARDS RACE

FILM REVIEWS BY DIANE DE BEER

With streaming becoming such a comfortable option, I haven’t been to the movies for a while, but pre-Oscar Awards is always a good time to catch up on as many of the nominated films as possible It always turns the event into something more substantial because you actually know more about the possible winners. I chose these two films – Conclave and A Complete Unknown (Ster Kinekor)and my selections were both extraordinary – both with chances of quite a few Oscars each:

CONCLAVE

DIRECTOR: Edward Berger

CAST: Ralph Fiennes, Stanley TuccI, Carlos Diehz, John Lithgow, Isabella Rossellini, Sergio Castellitto

How can one not be pulled into this story with such a fantastic cast? And then the secrecy about everything that surrounds the Vatican inside and out?

Cardinal Lawrence (Fiennes) leads one of the world’s most secretive and ancient events as the dean who is in charge of the selection of the new Pope.

If you’re not Roman Catholic, it is a religion that comes your way mostly through scandal, the misbehaviour of priests around the world, the lack of action by the church itself when its representatives transgress and the films and books that feature these kinds of missteps, Spotlight being the most recent one that springs to mind.

Perhaps because of the look of the members of the priesthood as so magnificently showcased in this film (already enough reason to see the spectacle), yet because of the visuals as well as the secrecy, I kept thinking of the recent television seasons of The Handmaid’s Tale.

In today’s communication-rich world, any secrecy is immediately viewed with suspicion and becomes rife with rumours and stories emerging. And for those on the outside, how to distinguish between rumour and fact with this particular faith and its powerful leaders is often what draws us to whatever it is that drives the church.

With Conclave. to glimpse the inner workings of one of the most powerful institutions in the world is quite extraordinary. Add this particular cast and the weight of the storytelling is heightened and the final product doesn’t disappoint and leaves you gasping.

The eight Oscar nominations including Best Picture, Best Actor for Ralph Fiennes, Best Writing, Best Production Design, Best Music (original score), Best Costume Design, Best Actress in supporting role (Isabella Rossellini), and Best Editing are all deserved.

It certainly lived up to all that. It has a rich story and is beautifully directed but what really kept me enthralled was the cast and their particular storytelling. If I really had to give only one acknowledgement it would be to the actors.

It was their ensemble performance that kept the intrigue going with especially strong performances by Fiennes (who is the true centre of the movie), Tucci, Diehz, Lithgow, and Rossellini.

As the puzzle unfolds, sometimes painfully slowly yet deliberately, you have to keep your wits about you because you will be kept in suspense right until the end. Again because it is the unfolding that holds the key, I was glad not to have read the book before seeing the movie.

The less you know, the more it will add to the thrill of the viewing. It is a novel story which holds all the intrigue one would expect from such a rich presentation which is all an extremely clever balancing act. Once in a while, I wasn’t too sure whether it was delivering on the expectations surrounding the film.

But pull it all together, and it ticks all the boxes. The best is that you have no idea where it is going or what to expect. And finally, it delivers magnificently in a way that is as relevant in today’s circus as it is unexpected.

It’s one that lies there for quite a while and the more you delve, the better it gets.

A COMPLETE UNKNOWN

DIRECTOR: James Mangold

CAST: Timothée Chalamet, Monica Barbaro, Edward Norton,  Elle Fanning

I was truly surprised by how much I loved this movie. Of course I know Dylan’s music, but there are as many songs I didn’t recognise.

And while I thought I knew a lot about him, there’s as much that I didn’t know. One has to keep in mind that this isn’t a documentary, it captures a piece, mostly the early part when he first appears on the scene, of his life.

I was even caught unawares by the fact that he turned up at festivals on a racy motorbike. If the women weren’t so mesmerised by die budding artist they would have known that the music was everything in his life. Did he love them? Of course. But he was a performer and everything in his life revolved around that.

It was understood, if unspoken, that the women could be part of all this – but no demands. He wasn’t unfeeling, just unaware and completely wrapped up in his own creative world. That’s where his mind and all his attention was focussed.

It begins with Chalamet’s performance. He captures the essence and then just goes with it. He is not trying too hard to fake being Dylan. He has something, resembles the wiry, wild-haired singer and has enough of a voice to do the nasal drawl and sing the music well enough.

It centres on his performance and the reason he stole the limelight from the day he first appeared is his star presence – without paying too much attention to that stuff. He’s a lovely actor, has bags full of screen presence and pulls this one off magnificently.

It was as if Mangold with the right script and cast selected the right mood for the film and pulled it off masterfully.

To my mind, Chalamet is the James Dean of his generation. His reach is huge and his future cemented. And because Dylan, as one of the most influential artists of our time, is familiar to most of us, it must have been a challenge to capture his persona. But that he does with astonishing grace and with a strong cast and an especially brilliant performance by the always excellent Edward Norton as Pete Seeger, it’s a story that shines brightly, music that dominates and, for those of us who know some but lack the detail, a blissful few hours to catch up on working-class heroes.

A FABULOUS FEAST OF THEATRICAL GENIUS

Review by DIANE DE BEER

CAKE STOPPER

ARTIST: Nataniël

BAND: Charl du Plessis (keyboards); Werner Spies (bass); Juan Oosthuizen (guitar); Peter Auret (drums)

VENUE: Atterbury Theatre with shows tonight at 7pm, tomorrow at 7pm, Saturday at 11am and 3 pm, and Sunday at 3pm; (13 to 16 February Roodepoort Teater; 5 and 6 March, Sand Theatre in Bloemfontein)

If you have followed an artist as closely as I have Nataniël, it’s not only the performance but also the progression that becomes part of the thrill of this spectacular talent.

Time and again, I have been curious at my astonishment at what I am experiencing during one of his shows, but I know it is the constant evolution of what he presents that keeps me enthralled.

He is one of the few who has managed to keep the element of surprise always present and he does this especially with his scripts. He has a mind that keeps on giving stories so fantastical and yet so based in reality that everyone can identify. But what elevates the presentation is his genius with words.

Bilingual and equally adept in English and Afrikaans, he has managed through the years to broaden his audience base in the way he has become comfortable in both. The stories immediately draw you in and the choice of language doesn’t play a part. It is the way his mind wanders, how he tells a story and the unique way he presents and arranges every single sentence.

Originality is one of those elements you either have or don’t. You cannot make it happen if it’s not there. And through the years, his has become stronger as his comfort levels have grown.

What you have now is a performer in total command of his art as he mesmerises his audience with his phenomenally unique storytelling. He is comfortable sharing the personal stories of his life and the way the world has always viewed and treated anyone who isn’t exactly moulded in the image of everyone else. He revels in the differences and through the years has become emboldened and embraces exactly the artist he is and wants to be. And we love him for that.

In everything he does, he always opts for the best and this is especially true of his band of class musicians. Headed by the masterful pianist Charl du Plessis, both Spies (bass) and Auret (drums) add to the individuality with their own musical flair. Add to that trio of perfection Juan Oosthuizen whose mastery with the guitar is legendary. Their performance is bliss.

It’s rare to have the accompaniment of such unusual talent, but Nataniël has always been secure in his own performance and knowledge that exquisite music enhances his singing, the real reason he loves performing.

The balance of stories and songs is important because the songs give you a reprieve from the density and sheer delight of the stories as well as a chance to breathe as you appreciate the excellence of what you are witnessing. And with time and maturity, Nataniël’s voice is richer, the music more nuanced and the singer has perfected his authentic sound.

I have always been captivated by what this artist brings to the stage because it is so unique, put together with boundless imagination and because of the inspired stories – a new play with every show he presents – each season is an explosion of the extraordinary. He has been a blessing to local audiences because of who he is and the riches he presents on stage.

The rarity of his creativity is a joy to behold. May he keep being the wonderfully colourful creation who once, twice, or if we’re lucky, three times a year holds us in the palm of his hand as he takes us wandering with wonderment into a world that is as charming as it is complicated.

Bookings: seatme.co.za

TROU- EN SPEELMAATS CINTAINE SCHUTTE EN CAREL NEL MAAK ‘n BEGIN BY DIE MARK TEATER

KLEUR FOTOS: Gys Loubser

SWART EN WIT FOTOS: Stephanie Gericke

Cintaine Schutte en Carel Nel speel nie aldag op die verhoog saam nie, maar die tyd is reg. Die twee gesels met DIANE DE BEER oor hulle jongste stuk ‘n Begin, wat Donderdag 30 Januarie by die Mark Teater in Johannesburg begin, oor hulle prosesse:

Cintaine Schutte en Carel Nel in rehearsals (links) saam met Tinarie van Wyk Loots (regisseur) en verhoogbestuurder Lize-Marie Wait (regs)

HOEWEL hulle werkprosesse baie verskil, is daar darem baie voordele ook aan saamwerk.

“Hoe nader ons kom aan die speelvak by die Mark Teater (Johannesburg), is dit net ‘n luuksheid dat ek dadelik ‘n wordrun kan doen saam met Carel in die sitkamer of ons kan praat oor die karakters,” vertel Cintaine.

“Maar natuurlik is daar altyd tussen hom en my ‘n Cintaine en Carel. Daar’s ‘n tyd wanneer ons praat oor werk en daars ‘n tyd wanneer ons nie praat oor werk nie, want ons moet ook lewe tussenin, en ek moet dit ook respekteer.”

Sy is iemand wat te veel wil praat oor werk, en dikwels belaai met notaboekies en bladsye vol geskryf. “Dan sien ek vir Carel  op die bank lê en as ek vra ‘wat doen jy’, dan sê hy, hy dink aan die scenes en hoe dit uitspeel in sy kop.

 “Ek moet dit op die bladsy hê.  Ek dink ook dis belangrik om nie altyd uit te vra oor sy werkproses nie, want dan verras jy jouself op die vloer. As ek uit ‘n gemaklike plek uit speel, kan ek enige iets regkry. Vir my is voorbereiding baie groot.”

Carel besef dat almal anders  werk. “Ek het nog nooit met ‘n akteur gewerk wat presies dieselfde werksprosesse as ek het nie. Dis normaal, en jy moet dit maar net respekteer. Elke persoon werk anders. Solank die eindresultaat positief is, gee ek nie rerig om hoe die ander  se prosesse werk nie.”

Vir hom is die belangrikste om by die waarheid van die stuk uit te kom en die eerlikheid daarin vind. En egos moenie deel van die proses wees nie.

“Dis die eerste maal in ‘n lang tyd dat die twee van ons saamwerk maar as vervaardiger toe ek eers besluit het dat Tinarie van Wyk Loots (onder links) die regisseur is, het ek haar die keuse laat maak van wie my Daniel sou wees. Sy het nie eerse tweekeer gedink nie, en dadelik Carel voorgestel want sy het gesê dit kort ‘n akteur met gravitas en sy het al met Carel gewerk met Baby I Love You.”

Cintaine  was dadelik opgewonde oor die saamwerk. “Hy is natuurlik ‘n goeie akteur, en daar sou ‘n shorthand tussen ons wees maar ek was ook bietjie huiwerig dat man en vrou in regte lewe op die verhoog gaan staan. Maar dit is waar die verbeelding van teater inkom waar ons verdwyn in die karakters.

 “Ek het ook iemand gekies wie se spelleiding baie sterk moet wees en daarom het ek as vervaardiger vir Tinarie gekies.”

Sy weet sy sal die vertroue wat hulle in die regte lewe het verplaas na die  verhoog en nie te veel druk daarop plaas nie. En dan kyk waar die kreatiewe proses hulle neem. Maar sy wil ook seker maak dat hulle lekker  kan  speel  en  fun  kan hê met die stuk.

Hoewel  Carel vier of   vyf   jaar laas  op die verhoog was  gaan hy  die  stuk   benader soos enige ander stuk met enige ander akteur of aktrise. “Julle moet mekaar toelaat om julle eie prosesse te volg en dis wat ons doen.”

Cintaine vertel dat hulle aan die begin van verlede jaar iewers in Europa saam  op ‘n trein was toe iets  vir  haar  fluister  dat sy weer lus is om te vervaardig. Kies ‘n stuk wat jy sal wil doen, is verder gefluister.

“Toe dink sy aan ‘n two-hander want dit is miskien beter as ‘n groot rolverdeling. Mens  wil soms groot gaan maar dis moeilike tye.”

Met navorsing kom sy op David Eldridge se Beginning af, bestel die play, kry dit en begin lees. Dit het haar gevang. Dit is ‘n stuk wat haar geraak en gepraat het.

“Laura is 38 en Daniel is 42 en dit raak baie punte aan van gesprekke wat ek al met my vriende gehad het, die psige van mense ons ouderdom. Dis ‘n baie naturalistiese play in die sin dat dit speel in regte tyd oor 80 minute, daar’s geen truuks of twists of plot -turns nie. Dis net ‘n slice of life.

“Hierdie stuk praat met my en ek het gedink ek moet iemand on board kry wat vertaling goed ken en wat dit kan lokaliseer.  Ek besluit toe op Nico Scheepers juis omdat ek al met hom gewerk het met Tienduisend Ton en ‘n fliek wat hy ook vertaal het.

“Die speelbaarheid het ook baie te maak met die vertaling en ek dink Nico het baie goeie werk gedoen.”  Tog met die eerste week van repetisies het sy, Carel, Tinarie en hulle verhoogbestuurder Lize-Marie Wait ook gesit en  dit hulle eie gemaak. “Ons het gesny waar ons gedink het maar nie te ver van Nico se vertaling verwerk nie, maar ons eie stempel daarop  afgedruk.”

Nou kan hulle met repetisies dit eg Suid Afrikaans hou, en die twee mense wat in die Kaap woon met eerlikheid speel.

Cintaine vertel dat daar baie verskillende temas aangeraak word en dat die skrywer baie lekker stories vertel. Die stuk het al oor die hele wêreld gespeel en die skrywer en sy agent was baie opgewonde oor die Suid Afrikaanse speelvak.

Vir haar as vervaardiger is dit ook lekker om van die sukses te hoor. “The proof is in the pudding, en juis omdat dit in soveel lande gespeel het, beteken dat dit praat met mense.”

Vir Carel is die temas wat uitstaan,  eensaamheid in die moderne wêreld. Dit handel oor mense van hulle ouderdom, laat 30s en vroeë 40s, hoe om iemand te vind in liefde en in vriendskap in die moderne wêreld van Tinder, Facebook en Instagram.

 “Hoe navigate jy om iemand te ontmoet. Dit klink dalk of dit makliker is  maar dit kompliseer eintlik dinge,”  sê Carel. “Dit maak dit anders,  en op daai ouderdom is mense getroud of geskei, hulle kom met baie baggage, so dis ook wat elke persoon saamdra. Wanneer jy iemand nuuts ontmoet is daar allerhande goeters wat jy uitvind.

“Die skryfwerk is baie naturalisties, dis twee mense wat mekaar ontmoet aan die einde van ‘n aand na ‘n partytjie, en ek dink Nico het ‘n baie goeie vertaling gedoen soos altyd. Dis net ‘n blik op die lewe, dis 90 minute waarin twee mense mekaar ontmoet vir die eerste keer, maar albei het ‘n verlede.”

Cintaine se karakter is Laura, 38 jarige vrou, en ‘n besturende direkteur by haar maatskappy. Sy is baie suksesvol, het sopas ‘n woonstel in Sandton gekoop en dit was haar housewarming  

“Sy is ‘n interessante kat en dit is so lekker om met Tinarie te werk want sy gee my so baie insig, verskillende perspektiewe om hierdie karakters in fully-fleshed mense te verander.”

Hulle hoop gehore sal hulleself of ander in die karakters herken.

“Laura is baie ver verwyderd van my af, en nou dat ek ‘n breuk gehad het na verlede jaar se Woordfees, is dit lekker dat ek weer bietjie kan deepdive in haar psige. Sy het ‘n baie goeie selfbeeld, lyk na ‘n baie sterk vrou, en sy sê haar vriende is jaloers op haar, die aande uit, die sukses. Sy is so in beheer van haar eie lewe.”

Dis hoe dit voorkom sê Cintaine, maar onder draai die duiwels rond. “Diep, diep binne is sy baie alleen en eensaam. Sy wil ook die wit trourok he, die kinders, ‘n familie. Sy wil ook iemand na haar huis toe kan nooi om te kuier. Dis maar die primere behoeftes van menswees en sy het dit nie in haar lewe nie.”

As dit by Cintaine kom wat haarself beskryf as  “‘n groot empath”, sy het empatie met Laura, maar sy  sal moet diep gaan delf om daai eerlikheid te kan speel wanneer sy uitkom by hierdie vreemdeling.

“Want ek dink nie sy deel verskriklik baie nie, sy bou mure op waar ek self so min mure het dat ek te baie deel. Maar as sy met Daniel begin deel, dan sien ons wat gebeur as daardie mure afgebreek word, en hoe die eerlikheid uitkom.”

“Daniel is ook baie anders as ek, dra baie bagasie saam met hom rond,en het baie verkeerde besluite geneem in sy lewe,” vertel Carel. “Hy is alleen en op soek na iets. Ek dink hy soek na human connection as gevolg van omstandighede en waar hy is in sy lewe hy is.

“Hy is baie anders as ek maar tot ‘n mate tog die selle. Elke mens soek maar connection, dis alles goeters wat jy verstaan. Hy’s net gewone man wat soek na die dinge wat ons almal wil he.

“Ek hoop mense geniet dit obviously, ek hoop hulle lag want ek vind van dit nogal komies en snaaks en ek hoop mense hou van die karakters want hulle is gewone mense met goeie harte wat eintlik net hulle pad deur hierdie wêreld probeer vind en ek hoop tot ‘n mate dat die gehoorlede sal voel asof hulle voyeuristies (nie op weird manier nie),  kyk hoe mense mekaar ontmoet, die op en af van nuwe verhoudings, dis wat ek hoop wat mense sal ervaar.”

Vir Cintaine as vervaardiger is dit ‘n groot eer om in een van ons land se beste teaters te kan speel en die stuk na Gautengse gehore te kan bring. Butterflies is daar, sê  sy maar daar is niks lekkerder as om op ‘n verhoog te staan met ‘n gehoor nie. “Hulle voel amper vir my soos deel van die stuk, nog ‘n karakter. Die energie is so tasbaar in daai 90 minute, mens moet maar duimvas hou dat dit werk.”

Maar die ergste lekker lê vir haar by die optel repetisies wanneer jy kan werk aan die stuk en so gemaklik as moontlik kan wees voor jy op die verhoog klim.

Vir Carel is dit sy eerste liefde. Dis wat hy geswot het, intussen paar liefdes bygekry, “Cintaine is een van hulle maar ook televisie en film en baie lekker om terug te wees … op die verhoog.”

Vir“hom is die lekkerte altyd die repetisie periode want “as jy begin en jy  kry die ritmes, is dit amper soos jou eie klein geheimpie en ek hou nogal daarvan om dit vir myself te hou. Dan kom die anxieties van nou moet ons dit deel met ander mense. Gaan jy gejudge word, is jy goed genoeg. maar jy kom oor dit alles en beweeg terug na die eerlikheid van die storie wat jy met mense wil deel. Jy leer om met die anxieties saam te leef.”

“As die stuk lekker speel, is dit ‘n wen situasie, en as mens by ‘n teater kan speel en ons sal graag na verskillede feeste wil reis,” sê Cintaine oor die verloop van die stuk.

Sy speel ook bietjie met die idee omdat sy die laaste paar jaar huiskonserte gedoen het dat mens  die stuk in iemand se sitkamer kan doen. Maar sy besef ook sy  moet  haar mede akteur respekteer en dit sal afhang of hy dit sal wil doen, getroud of nie.

Dit is ‘n baie anderste energie en tipe intimiteit wat jy jouself voor oopmaak, vertel sy, maar miskien is dit tog iets wat die stuk voor vra. “Die tyd sal leer,” sê sy.

Vir Carel sal dit  afhang van sy beskikbaarheid,  sê hy tong-stewig-in-kies. “Maar sy sal maar my beskikbaarheid moet check, want ek is soms nogal besig.”

En ons wat teater kyk, hou duimvas dat dit goed gaan met die twee – deesdae gesoute -akteurs, en dat hule die land deur speel met ‘n Begin.

*Die twee toegewyde akteurs het vrae beantwoord terwyl hulle luilekker in Griekeland getoer het verlede jaar voor die Woordfees speelvak. Die het intussen suksesvol plaasgevind met baie goeie terugvoer. Dit open 30 Januarie by Johannesburg se ikoniese Mark Teater en die speelvak is tot 16 Februarie.

Om te bespreek:

https://www.webticket.co.za/v2/event.aspx?itemid=1558065074

WORDS OF WONDERMENT FOR THE QUEEN OF PANTO

BY DIANE DE BEER

BEAUTY AND THE BEAST

DIRECTOR/SCRIPTWRITER: Janice Honeyman

ASSISTANT DIRECTOR: Timothy le Roux

SOUND DESIGNER: Akhona Bozo

PRODUCTION MANAGER: Sandy Dyer

LIGHTING DESIGNER: Johan Ferreira

COSTUME DESIGNER: Mariska Meyer

CHOREOGRAPHER: Khaya Ndlovu

PRODUCTION DESIGNER: Andrew Timm

SET DESIGNER AND BUILDER: Enos Ramoroko

MUSICAL DIRECTOR: Dale Ray

THE CAST AND THE BAND: Too many to list

VENUE: Joburg Theatre

DATES: Until December 22

Dear Janice,

Driving back from this year’s pantomime (the children of the kids who first used to accompany me are now my annual companions) I thought it was time that I should write a more personal letter of thanks and admiration rather than the usual review.

Not being at a newspaper any longer and posting on my personal blog, I have the right, I think. Also, between the two of us, you have probably/arguably written and  produced more pantomimes than anyone else, definitely in this country and probably out there in the big world too; and I have probably watched and reviewed more than many can claim.

The genre as such isn’t my favourite and you have many other theatrical accomplishments in case anyone should think this is the only thing you do. But because of you, I make a distinction between a panto and a Janice panto, and as I mentioned in the review of Aspoestertjie (currently running in Pretoria), you have raised the bar for anyone who wants to participate in this field.

There isn’t any chance that I would have managed year by year if not for your genius and innovation. Being who you are, I know you would have been bored to death as anyone would have been, if you didn’t set a particular challenge for yourself. And perhaps that was what saved us both.

I was sitting in a packed Joburg Theatre on a Sunday with a show starting at noon and the aircon struggling with the current heat. Watching the audience, there were many kids but many couples or friends without youngsters too. It’s an institution and one you established and nurtured and grew to what it is. Small wonder they don’t want to let you go!

The text, which is always current and probably the thing most cherished by the adults, is as always on the mark with bullies a strong theme. That’s no surprise, but I love the way you wangle to be political without offending anyone.

You always have your finger on the  pulse and have managed to work your way with casts which now fully represent the country without too much fanfare, you just did it. And this mirror of our society at a season that has such mass appeal is probably one of your strongest achievements. Few would have managed in such an easy fashion while showing the best of the country without bashing anyone on the head.

I know this is unfair, but allow me the indulgence. Cast and musicians were fantastic, but there were five that deserve special mention: Bongi Archi (aboveas the Good Fairy (Mama’ama’bali); Virtuous Kandemiri as Beauty-Belle; Judy Ditchfield having an absolute ball as Hectate-Hex, the wicked witch; and Lesedi Rich as Doodlesakkie The Donkey; and lest we forget, Chrissie-Anna Mampoer as the guest newsreader.

Through the decades you have been gifted technological advances, but the wonderment of that is to see how you have applied that in such a wonderful way. This time it’s the way you blend the players from their digital images to the live performers.

Also the sets, the in jokes which some might miss but it doesn’t matter. It keeps viewers on their toes. The six-year-old was curious about some of the adult laughter and that’s also a good thing. There’s a lesson there every once in a while.

I truly loved your Hitchcock moment this time. You managed to display almost all your different skills as well as showing that you’ve still got it – and will always keep forging ahead.

You are an example of a true artist. Someone who could probably have stopped through the years, but you simply cannot resist. For that I’m grateful. Your casting of the young and the old, the experienced and the newbies, each one of them bringing something unique to the stage and the story, also contributes to the success.

Even your choice of Timothy le Roux as assistant director and company manager looks ahead, as you made sure you don’t go without leaving some institutional memory and knowledge behind. If anyone was there to watch and learn it was this artist who started in the arts as a ballet dancer and followed that by crafting and creating his own way on the production side in this very tough profession.

To everyone’s delight, it’s the usual spectacular pantomime, but the reason we could say that time and again from one decade to the next, is you, Janice Honeyman.

And for me to say this about pantomime is all your doing.

Thanks for the magic and the memories!

I don’t have to preach to the converted and for those of you who need to introduce youngsters to the enchantment of live theatre, this is it.

FROM A FAN