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If they have a mantra, it’s f— politics, let’s dance. And in the second half of the show, that’s pretty much what people do. Be a Rebel (their most recent track, from 2020), Sub-Culture, Bizarre Love Triangle, Plastic all keep the tempo up, before the obligatory – and obligatorily reworked – Blue Monday brings the biggest cheer of the night.

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The set finishes with a fantastic rendition of Temptation, and its refrain of “tonight I think I’ll walk alone, I’ll find my soul as I go home” lands as a benediction to take into the night.

When they come back for the encore, it’s with two Joy Division songs, Atmosphere and Love Will Tear Us Apart, both of which serve as tributes to Ian Curtis. It makes for a moving, fitting, and strangely uplifting finale.

It’s a curious side note that on the other side of the world right now, the bands’ former bassist is touring as Peter Hook and The Light, playing many of the same songs. Hook’s bass lines are so integral to the sound of both bands (for the record, Chapman renders them perfectly) that for my money he has every right to stake his claim on this legacy.

The acrimony between the former bandmates is sad. But if it means the world has twice as many opportunities to hear this incredible catalogue performed live, at least there’s some upside for fans.
Reviewed by Karl Quinn

PERFORMANCE ART | ASIA TOPA
Fire Drill Scenario ★★★
Arts House, North Melbourne, until March 9

Yes, this show really is a fire drill. The whole experience takes about an hour – if you include all the preliminaries – but, make no mistake, you will be participating in an actual drill.

Geumhyung Jeong in Fire Drill Scenario at Arts House as part of Asia TOPA.Credit: Gregory Lorenzutti

There’s no twist. No surprising metatheatrical hijinks. No unexpected transformation. We get exactly what the show publicity promises: a run-through of the venue’s evacuation procedure.

South Korean choreographer and artist Geumhyung Jeong is our compliance officer. She presents us with the floor plan, identifies the exits and demonstrates the paths of egress. It goes on and on – and then we get the drill.

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So, what’s really happening? Why book tickets for a fire drill? Surely it’s satire? Well, yes, but the humour is so dry it might have passed through a molecular sieve.

The point, of course, is to encourage the audience to reflect on the idea of safety and whether the arts are just a small department in the larger cultural edifice of risk avoidance.

But it’s very deadpan. The only moment of real parody is during a demonstration of fire safety products, which includes a special fireproof basket for lowering pets from burning buildings.

Otherwise, Jeong remains machine-like and emotionally neutral throughout. She withholds
her personality while still projecting a kind of weird automaton charisma.

To underline her detachment, she has placed a number of homemade robots on display in the centre of the room, which seem to enjoy the performance almost as much as the audience.

Is there any skerrick of excitement? Not really, although occasionally, you might notice the way Jeong moves around the room or glimpse the outline of her body beneath the baggy costume.

And there’s something about that body – which is the toned body of a dancer – that wants to get out. It wants us to get out, too – and to hell with the designated path of egress.

Reviewed by Andrew Fuhrmann

DANCE
Carmen ★★★
The Australian Ballet, Regent Theatre, until March 18

Despite a tidy ensemble showing by The Australian Ballet, this austere contemporary dance interpretation of Prosper Merimee’s lurid tale of desire, jealousy and murder never rises to any great heights. Ideas and innovations abound, but they just don’t mesh.

Jill Ogai starred in the Australian Ballet’s performance of Carmen.

Jill Ogai starred in the Australian Ballet’s performance of Carmen. Credit: Joe Armao

Swedish choreographer Johan Inger created this version for a Spanish dance company in 2015, using Rodion Shchedrin’s wonderfully dark and muscular Carmen Suite, a rearrangement of music from Bizet’s opera. It was his first go at an evening-length narrative dance.

The choreographic language is distinctive, characterised by tense cliches, abundant literal gestures, lots of running on the spot and frequent low crouches with bent arms thrust out at odd angles. It produces some striking passages, but it also suggests some confusing imagery.

In particular, the dancers often resemble crabs or insects, skirmishing and colliding, jostling and grasping. They scuttle sideways, clambering onto one another as they fight and make love, then split themselves open with flexed chests and deep backbends.

The production is laden with such oddities. A child – performed on opening night by Lilla Harvey – watches the action, sometimes intervenes and is inevitably shattered by the conclusion. And there are gangster-like figures in black, representing death or fate, who swarm the stage or roll across it.

The Australian Ballet’s performance of Carmen drew on the work of choreographer Johan Inger.

The Australian Ballet’s performance of Carmen drew on the work of choreographer Johan Inger.Credit: Joe Armao

Carmen, danced by Jill Ogai, is engaging but more closed and held back than one might expect. She is wild but not extravagantly wild. And this is perhaps consistent with the kind of story Inger struggles to tell: a terrible but ordinary story of intimate partner violence.

And yet, as in recent Australian Ballet productions of Oscar and Nijinsky, the female characters in Carmen do tend to disappear into the margins. Indeed, in the second act, set in a kind of limbo populated by tumbling dead souls, they are literally snatched from the stage.

The male leads on opening night – Callum Linnane, Marcus Morelli and Brett Chynoweth – are similarly restrained. The machismo is gestural rather than substantive. They’re not so visceral and intense as they might be. The anguish is plausible but not the brutality.

Of course, the choreography, alien and disjointed as it is, doesn’t give them much to work with. There are, however, a few spine-tingling moments. The pas de deux between Ogai and Linnane just before Don José kills his rival in love is terrific.

Perhaps the most disappointing element of this production is the sound design, with poor-quality canned music jammed between selections from Shchedrin. The pre-recorded stuff is utterly callow and the live orchestra feels underpowered and rather too smooth.

The scenic design, featuring large monolithic set pieces that glide silently like tombstones on castors, provides a coherent visual that transforms effectively into a haunted netherworld. It’s one of the few really effective elements of this staging.

And yet, it’s a weirdly hollow sort of production. Whatever worthy intentions Inger brought to this project, it was still unsettling to applaud the staged murder of a woman by her ex-partner – on the night before International Women’s Day, no less.
Reviewed by Andrew Fuhrman

THEATRE
The Robot Dog ★★★
Melbourne Theatre Company, Southbank Theatre, until March 21

Many people grow up with siblings – Janelle (Kristie Nguy) grew up with a robotic therapy animal simply known as Dog. When she and her partner Harry (Ari Maza Long) move into her childhood home after the tragic death of her mum Wing Lam (Jing-Xuan Chan) – the cause of which is gradually revealed as the play progresses – Dog is there to comfort her and reveal what her mother’s life was like towards the end, provoking complicated feelings of grief, regret and anger in Janelle.

Kristie Nguy in a scene from The Robot Dog.

Kristie Nguy in a scene from The Robot Dog.Credit: Tiffany Garvie

Hong Kong-born multidisciplinary artist Roshelle Yee Pui Fong and Luritja writer and technologist Matthew Ngamurarri Heffernan’s collaboration – showing as part of Asia TOPA – is an ambitious play tackling big questions of cultural alienation, grief and the white supremacy of Australia’s criminal justice system.

It’s 2042, and if you can’t tell by the literal robot dog on set – an impressive mechanical metal creature who lights up, whirrs and speaks – you can tell from Janelle’s futuristic garb, the way Harry takes calls by wearing newfangled glasses and the constant encroaching of technology on their life.

The house is decked out with Alexa-reminiscent artificial intelligence named Huus, albeit far more sinister. Tensions begin to emerge – between Huus’ desire to optimise Janelle and Dog’s wish to be compassionate with her grief; between Janelle’s sentimentality for Wing Lam’s items that can’t be valued and AI’s hardwired compulsion to assess the “assets” by price.

Ari Maza Long and Kristie Nguy in a scene from The Robot Dog.

Ari Maza Long and Kristie Nguy in a scene from The Robot Dog.Credit: Tiffany Garvie

Compounding Janelle’s grief is her inability to connect with her Cantonese heritage and, in turn, the memory of her mother – reflected by Harry’s inability to converse with his mum in Luritja and his dislocation from his own culture. They’re presented with “language augments”, a chip that you can attach to yourself that instantly gives you the ability to speak your mother tongue – both try it on to varying results.

There’s a disconnect between the big ideas of the play and their execution, however. The script can feel stilted at times, and the pat ending resolves threads too neatly. Janelle’s relationship with her deceased mother is arguably the fulcrum of the play, but the relationship between her and Harry feels curiously thin, as does the characterisation of Janelle herself.

Brockman’s lighting design bathes the stage in warm etherealness when the spectre of Wing Lam appears and stark white lighting when the AI are talking to one another. Nathan Burmeister’s set lovingly conjures a Chinese altar – site of Janelle’s eventual reconnection with her heritage – and the loss of a person, symbolised by ubiquitous $2 checked bags containing all of Wing Lam’s possessions.

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The Robot Dog is most poignant when it’s mining humour and meaning from its material, whether it’s in the exploitation Harry faces at work as he becomes the poster boy for his company’s futile efforts at reconciliation (via tokenistic gestures like “Aboriginal flag muffins”), or in the different ways in which Cantonese and Luritja cultures intersect and sit apart from one another.
Reviewed by Sonia Nair

PERFORMANCE ART
ButohBar: OUT of ORDER II ★★★★
Abbotsford Convent, until March 9

You arrive at ButohBar: OUT of ORDER II to find a concrete forecourt transformed by dreamlike performance art. Walls sidle up to you and glare with disapproval. Masked figures with pendulous sex organs writhe and become entwined. Piles of rubbish skitter in the wind, as wimpled, seemingly heavily pregnant women waft up and down stairs – an echo, perhaps, of the dark history of the Abbotsford Convent as a workhouse for destitute mothers-to-be.

Butoh master Atsushi Takenouchi summons the audience in ButohBar: OUT of ORDER II.

Butoh master Atsushi Takenouchi summons the audience in ButohBar: OUT of ORDER II.Credit: Michael Pham

By the time you’ve ordered sake from the bar, Butoh master Atsushi Takenouchi has entered with a drum and begun to sing to a demonic effigy. The ritual summons us inside a space which will transgress and upend all norms of performance.

You won’t get too comfortable at this nightclub at the end of the universe. Seating is arranged higgledy-piggledy, performance erupts from all corners, and master of ceremonies Yumi Umiumare will even play a whimsical game of musical chairs to keep you on your toes.

A scene from ButohBar: OUT of ORDER II. Nobody gets too comfortable at this nightclub at the end of the universe.

A scene from ButohBar: OUT of ORDER II. Nobody gets too comfortable at this nightclub at the end of the universe.Credit: Michael Pham

Umiumare has worked in Melbourne for decades, and this collaboration with Japanese and local talent – a follow-up to a sold-out first instalment in 2023 – is an anarchic fusion of cabaret, monologue, burlesque, puppetry, choreography and surreal and subversive performance art.

Warped visions emerge from the darkness. A wild black avian creature appears with a fibre-optic tongue. A puppet-mother gives birth to a child she dotes upon, dances with and devours, before the kid gives up and re-enters the womb. Female fighters beat each other to death with enormous breasts, as the audience eggs them on. Maude Davey delivers a monologue on art and time. A disgruntled burlesque artist has a striptease sabotaged by Umiumare, who wantonly throws cabbage onstage and eats a raw egg.

The grotesque beauty of butoh emerges in a pas de deux between Umiumare and Takenouchi. Their dance theatre is a marriage of death and life, the movement language convulsive and built from an involuntary, trancelike vocabulary attuned to bodily taboo. It feels almost risen from the grave – constructed as it is from spasm and throe and grimace, from bulging eye and lolling tongue.

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If these figures are already dead, the comical arrival of a “Doctor Butoh” is much too late, and when she gives us the “ChatGPT” lowdown on the history and ambit of butoh as an avant-garde form, it’s really a sly kick at the human impulse to categorise. Butoh has always been a slippery style of experimental performance that resists definition, and it seduces even the good Doctor into its irrational embrace.

As the glitchy, dark synth dominated soundtrack from Hiroko Komiya swells to a climax, death rises to claim its due. Umiumare leads the audience in some primal screaming, and we’re released into the night reordered, and revivified, by the ecstatic encounter.
Reviewed by Cameron Woodhead

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