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All the latest coverage on the Adelaide Festival of Arts and the Adelaide Fringe...

Adelaide Festival of Arts 2006
Festival Reviews:
· Devolution
· Flight
· Here Lies Love
· Forsythe Company '3 Atmospheric'
· Honk If You Are Jesus
· Macbeth
· Nora (A Doll's House)
· Pat Metheny Trio
· Three Atmospheric Studies

Adelaide Fringe Festival 2006
Fringe Features:
· Maria Bamford

Fringe Reviews:
The Latest...
· 20 Years Of The Pants
· A Conversation
· Adelaide Chamber Singers
· All The Things I Would Never Tell You
· Anorak Of Fire
· An Unfortunate Woman
· A Place
· Aunt Aggie's Gut Rot
· Bryan Lynagh
· Big Al & Mark 'Give Us A Hug'
· Circus Oz
· Daniel Kitson
· Danny Bhoy
· Dave Williams
· Diablo 2
· Gareth Berliner 'Is Gutless'
· Highway Rock & Roll Disaster
· I Heart Racism
· Lano & Woodley 'Goodbye'
· Laughing At Gravity
· Lost Babylon
· Mickey D 'The Return Of'
· Miss Blossom Callahann
· Miz Ima Starr
· Myth Understandings
· Piano Contrasts
· Rich Hall
· Simon Munnery
· Splitting The Bill
· Star Trek
· Stephanie McCallum
· The Umbilical Brothers
· Trad
· Tripod
· Wanted: A Memory Of Baterz
· White Men With Weapons

Reviewed so far...
· '2 Connect'
· 4:48 Psychosis
· 52 Pick Up
· A Conversation
· Acquiescence
· Akmal Live
· Angry Young Man
· Anthony Jucha
· An Unfortunate Woman
· Best Of Adelaide Comedy
· Black Crown Lullabies
· Bob Log III
· BrianLynagh 'After Hours'
· The Bubonic Play
· Burlesque Hour
· Candy Butchers
· Charlie Pickering
· Circuit Breaker
· Circus Elysium 'The Last Days Of Mankind'
· Circus Ole
· Craig Egan
· Cream Of Irish
· Dancing At Lughnasa
· Danny Bhoy
· Dave Bloustien 'ST*RF*CK*R'
· De Niro: Behind The Mask
· The Dolls
· Eddie Perfect
· Even
· Felix Listens To The World
· Greg Fleet
· Heart Of Daftness
· I Heart Racism
· Judith Lucy 'I Failed'
· Justin Hamilton
· Katrina Miani 'Reality TV Freak'
· Kransky Sisters
· La Clique
· The Last Days Of Mankind
· Leah Purcell 'The Good Body'
· The Lost Babylon
· Mia Dyson
· Michael Chamberlin
· Miss Blossom Callahann
· M[o]th
· Myth Understanding
· Omon Ra
· Penny Ashton 'Hot Pink Bits'
· Pricks
· Ross Noble
· Sista She 'Inna Thigh'
· Splitting The Bill
· Star Trek
· Tales From The Erotic Cat
· Telefunken
· The Bogus Woman
· The Lost Babylon
· The Moirai
· The Sixth Sense
· The Somewhat Secret Secret Society Show
· The Space Cowboy
· The Travellers
· Tom Gleeson
· Tomas Ford's 'Cabaret Of Death'
· Under Milk Wood
· Waiting For Guinness
· Visual Arts and Venues Guide Launch
· Wilson Dixon
· Zack Adams 'A Complete History'



Black Crown Lullabies
Tea House Gallery
Thurs 2 March


Duncan Graham's trilogy of short plays (shown in two sessions) is a warm weave of themes of love, death and property encased in biblical allusion. The first part, 'One Long Night In The Land Of Nod', is the most substantial and concerns the relationship between two brothers, one a stagnating isolated farm dweller named Aaron (Patrick Graham) and the other an urbanite named Kain (William Allert). Their bond is reminiscent of that between each of the two generations of Trasks in Steinbeck's 'East Of Eden', which, of course, was an amplified expression of the relationship between Cain and Abel in the biblical story, and the same sense of mystical universalness inhabiting these can be discerned in '...Nod'.

The very cosy nature of the gallery theatre is somewhat deceitful because, as the piece develops the relatively narrow duct that is the stage seems to become a scope through which the audience can perceive an almost metaphysical dimension of reality. The acutely fluctuating flow of the brothers' beautiful and terrifying relationship is excellently realised and especially engaging.

The remaining two parts, 'Eve's Memory' and 'The Lullaby', are looser and less forceful, but for audiences already warmed by the first part this is of little concern and, indeed, they serve very well to relieve some of the tension manufactured in the first. 'Eve's...' is an amiable piece, involving Eve (Sarah Hunt) and her lover (Graham) attempting to articulate the history of their relationship from what seem vacuous but creative memory-faculties. '...Lullaby' is also very affable, with a lone muse, played by the consistently excellent Patrick Graham, providing a reflection on isolation and death.



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