-
Alison Croggon wrote a new post 3 years, 4 months ago
Childrens performance critic Gully Thompson says that Parrwang Lifts the Sky is a thrilling example of performance for young people
Children’s theatre is often at its best when it takes risks. As a child, I r […]
-
Alison Croggon commented on the post, ‘I was never afraid of bleeding for myself or for an audience’ 4 years, 2 months ago
Hi Majid. What a great idea! It would be great. If we ever get back to the stage. 🙂 x
-
Alison Croggon commented on the post, Arts funding: a survey of destruction 4 years, 5 months ago
Thanks Stephen
-
Alison Croggon commented on the post, Arts funding: a survey of destruction 4 years, 6 months ago
Thanks, Ian. Yes, the Australia Council continues to be in an impossible position, continually on the back foot trying to cope with the continual crisis. Interesting times! I hope we can rescue something good from this, but it is going to be so difficult. On the other hand, there is now very little to lose.
-
Alison Croggon commented on the post, Arts funding: a survey of destruction 4 years, 6 months ago
Thanks Matthew. I think that’s what we’ve been doing. I’m hope we can begin to do something else! x
-
Alison Croggon commented on the post, Art in a time of emergency 4 years, 7 months ago
Thanks so much, David! I hope you’re keeping well in these bleak times.
-
Alison Croggon commented on the post, Art in a time of emergency 4 years, 7 months ago
Thanks Matthew
-
Alison Croggon wrote a new post 4 years, 7 months ago
Caroline Guiela Nguyen’s Saigon is remarkably beautiful theatre that reminds us what a main stage play can be, says Alison Croggon
Update: Sadly, the final two performances are cancelled at the touring c […]
-
Alison Croggon wrote a new post 4 years, 8 months ago
‘MÁM is a
celebration of ordinary moments, which are as mysterious and ambiguous as the
supernatural spirits that haunt and weave through them’: Alison Croggon on Teaċ
Damsa’s exhilarating dance theatreAs […]
-
Alison Croggon commented on the post, Sorrow beyond dreams 4 years, 8 months ago
Thanks Chris. I’m glad you enjoyed it! Yes, it does stay with you. I haven’t seen anything quite like it before.
-
Alison Croggon wrote a new post 4 years, 8 months ago
‘Difficult truths wrought into
profound, unsettling harmonies’: Alison Croggon explores the sorrow and light
in Kamila Andini’s remarkable dance theatre work The Seen and Unseen at AsiaTOPAAsiaTOPA 2020 – or, […]
-
Alison Croggon wrote a new post 4 years, 8 months ago
‘It’s interesting how lines that once simply slipped by register with spikes now’: Alison Croggon on the return of Ridiculusmus’ two-person The Importance of Being Earnest
I’m getting older, which can be bo […]
-
Alison Croggon commented on the post, Opera and the invisibility of women 4 years, 9 months ago
Hi Ceridwen, many thanks for your comment. “Gender equity” is consciously used here, and therefore not at all misleading: at Witness we wish to include all women (including trans women, who are particularly marginalised) in the language we use. As modern science confirms, sex is by no means as binary as patriarchal tradition wishes us to believe,…[Read more]
-
Alison Croggon commented on the post, Earshot: the poetry of the everyday 4 years, 11 months ago
Thanks Peter. Nudging a door open here and there is pretty much the best that anyone can do!
-
Alison Croggon wrote a new post 4 years, 11 months ago
The Melbourne Theatre Company’s Photograph 51 dramatises the inexorable diminishment of a brilliant woman, says Alison Croggon
Sexism, like every -ism and –phobia, is, in the end, simply exhausting. These str […] -
Alison Croggon commented on the post, The obscurity of shallows 5 years ago
Maybe? I mean, one brings one’s subjectivity to all art (or what’s the point?) but clearly others felt the same, so it wasn’t only me. (Not that that invalidates your own response at all.) Knowing the story made no difference for me, and the more I researched it the more I felt it was a missed opportunity, Also the text was for me utterly banal…[Read more]
-
Alison Croggon commented on the post, The obscurity of shallows 5 years ago
Hi Tom! Interestingly there were moments – particularly the part that for me really worked, which focused on the band- that really strongly reminded me of Jacobs’ work. But maybe that was why I found it so lacking? I missed the mix of cool intellectuality and raw passion that happens in Fraught Outfit’s (and others) productions. They always fee…[Read more]
-
Alison Croggon commented on the post, The obscurity of shallows 5 years ago
Hi Mick, I take your point, and I too thought of the resources that went into that show and how they might have been otherwise used; but I can think of a lot of commissioned festival shows that have not been failures. Off the top of my head, Stephanie Lake’s Colossus, which was co-commissioned by the Fringe and programmed by MIAF (you can read m…[Read more]
-
Alison Croggon commented on the post, The obscurity of shallows 5 years ago
Thanks Jo. It was a puzzler, for sure! Though I know of others who liked it.
-
Alison Croggon wrote a new post 5 years ago
‘It feels as urgent as his work ever has, but the complexities have deepened profoundly. Unmissable.” Alison Croggon on Hofesh Schechter’s Grand Finale at the Melbourne Festival
Always beneath the skin, the […] - Load More
Great review—I saw the show on the strength of this, so thank you. I also was at a bit of a loss afterwards as to how to describe it. The child performers did an amazing job—together with the thoughtful integration of performance and design, it managed to be both tender and mythic. The more I think about it, the more I realise it’s going to stay with me.
Thanks Chris. I’m glad you enjoyed it! Yes, it does stay with you. I haven’t seen anything quite like it before.