Australian Competitions Club

Expired => Closed Competitions => Topic started by: oldfellow on Sunday 17 March 2024, 08:47:55 pm



Title: Ticket Wombat -Win DP to see Australia Felix - Millers Pt 22/3/Closes 18/3
Post by: oldfellow on Sunday 17 March 2024, 08:47:55 pm
https://www.ticketwombat.com/events/ticket/index



1
    Double-Pass to give away!

$100.00
    Prize value


Australia Felix By Geoffrey Sykes
Event Date: 22/03/2024, 07:30 pm
Richard Wherrett Studio,

   

Australian theatre and history are re-imagined in a provocative new Australian musical revue. This is the remarkable, true story of a runaway convict, life with tribes in the bush, magistrates, a leading government explorer and a landowner.
Told in the manner of a travelling theatre company of the time, on the eve of the execution of the convict. Underneath an entertaining surface layer the work has a sharp edge probing values in the past and today.
Genres are inverted, history upended with visions of early Australia that resonate with current debates.
Written by Geoffrey Sykes (Out of Africa, Somewhere South, Tales of Kabbarli) and featuring a strong cast
that steals its way through a rollicking, fast paced Australian story.
Australia Felix was showcased in December 2023 at the Chippen Street Theatre, where it received enthusiastic audience and critical response.
Sykes, also director of the work, says that the studio space is well suited to this theatre piece. “This revue show is presented by ‘travelling players’ in the tradition of ballads and storytelling.
"It’s set on the eve of the execution of the convict George Clarke with the sandstone and brick wall of the studio a perfect ambient setting for a nineteenth century jail - where executions were public events.”
Theatrically, the work is inspired by Marat/Sade by Peter Weiss. “The ending is as moving as it is edifying,” Geoffrey says. “It deliberately uses an entertaining convention to re-open questions of history. And it’s based on a true story.”
There were a good number of runaway convicts in the early colony of NSW, and this play concerns the life of one of them. George Clarke, also known as “The Flying Barber”, lived with nine aboriginal tribes.
Like other successful runaways, he proved a great explorer, and his claims to have found a great inland river came to the attention of Thomas Mitchell,
the NSW Surveyor-General.


Location:
Richard Wherrett Studio, Roslyn Packer Theatre 22 Hickson Road,
Millers Point Sydney New South