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Canberra Today 2°/6° | Wednesday, May 1, 2024 | Digital Edition | Crossword & Sudoku

Review / Poppins: ‘practically perfect in every way’.

YOU won’t need a spoonful of sugar to make this merry musical go down, it’s “practically perfect in every way”.

mary 2Director Stephen Colyer has achieved a highly-polished, imaginative production which, with its black and white storybook setting, and stylish, colourful costumes, has all the bells and whistles, and keeps the magic coming until the very last notes.

Colyer has drawn exceptional performances from his cast, so that the audience soon becomes captivated by the familiar story of the mysterious super-nanny and her chimney-sweep friend, who insinuate themselves into the Banks family with life-changing results.

Alinta Chidzey gives a Broadway quality performance as Mary Poppins. Her character has just the right level of astringency. She sings her songs superbly, and confidently leads the company through the big complicated dance numbers, even tossing off some neat conjuring tricks along the way. Just as impressive is Shaun Rennie as Bert. Rennie matches Chidzey’s flair with excellent singing and dancing, while heightening the air of magic and mystery which pervades the production.

Chidzey and Rennie are excellently supported by the strong local cast who rise to the occasion with well-judged character performances. Among them, Colin Milner, who finds an unexpected complexity in his curmudgeonly banker, George Banks, which makes his eventual redemption quite moving. Christine Wallace is also excellent as his ditzy wife, Winnifred, while Callum Doherty and Georgia Forster as their wayward children, Jane and Michael, perform their large roles with extraordinary aplomb.

Unrecognisable in two scene-stealing cameo roles, Bronwyn Sullivan uses her remarkable stage presence and lustrous voice to great effect as the bird woman and the fearsome Miss Andrew. Anita Davenport contributes fine comic performance as the housekeeper, Miss Brill, matched beautifully by Lachlan Agett as the remarkably flexible butler, Robertson Ay.

The tightly-drilled production numbers, choreographed by Jacquelyn Richards, are sensational, especially the brilliantly performed “Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious “, the wonderful park scene with its dancing statues, and the marvellous “Step in Time” with its stage full of tap-dancing chimney sweeps, all performed with admirable style and panache, and buoyed on by Ian McLean’s classy orchestra.

Not even some missed sound cues and occasional clunky set change on opening night could dent the professional gloss of this brilliantly conceived and executed production, with which Anne Somes and Free Rain Theatre have again raised the bar for local theatre.

 

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Update

Canberra actor John Cuffe dies aged 91

One of the last remaining luminaries from the explosion of professional theatre in Canberra during the 1970s has died after complications from lung cancer. He was 91.

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