Five Places to Get Your ‘Acting On’ In Brisbane
clickbait, article Virag Dombay clickbait, article Virag Dombay

Five Places to Get Your ‘Acting On’ In Brisbane

When I tell people that I work as an actor, they often go ‘I’ve always wanted to try acting’ or ‘that sounds so fun, I wish I could do it too’. If you are one of those people who have always wanted to get into acting, then guess what? There is a plethora of acting schools in Brisbane that offer weekly/monthly/term based acting classes for adults at both beginning, emerging and established levels of performance. Here’s five amazing independent training spaces.

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Cattle | Kate Coates and Cale Bain
comedy, theatre, review Ads J comedy, theatre, review Ads J

Cattle | Kate Coates and Cale Bain

As per many improv shows, Kate and Cale set up their scenarios with prompts from an audience member. What sets them apart is that some of the best laughs of the set came from in depth discussions with an audience member that followed the prompt. The duo’s natural responses to people’s (over) sharing that came from a place genuine surprise, curiosity and the right amount of gentle teasing was a joy to watch. When they received a response too sincere and moving even for them, they could only respond with, “We can’t mock that!”

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Handle With Care |  Virag Dombay, Gabby Fitzgerald, Zac Lawrence & Lachlan Driscoll
theatre, review Nadia Jade theatre, review Nadia Jade

Handle With Care | Virag Dombay, Gabby Fitzgerald, Zac Lawrence & Lachlan Driscoll

The play moves around the relationships of the two men in our protagonist Abbie’s life, but at its core the bigger story is that of female friendship, and the damage done when that falls apart. It’s only been in the last few years that the value of female friendship is beginning to be recognised and written about, the true unconditional nature of the love that is shared, that pushes one or the other to step far outside their comfort zone, or to see a little burning kernel of a wildheart hidden in a studious and forlorn wallflower.

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This Wide Night by Chloe Moss | A Moveable Theatre
theatre, review Jaydem Martin theatre, review Jaydem Martin

This Wide Night by Chloe Moss | A Moveable Theatre

With the play only having two characters, and little in set design, This Wide Night relies heavily on the dialogue and body language of the performers. Luckily, the play is in good hands, as Sharde Anne and Julia Johnson are tremendous with their performances and their wide acting range, going from humour to sadness to anger and everything in between. The dialogue sounded natural and the portrayal of Marie and Lorraine are very raw and brutally honest.

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Untitled Relationship Experiment | Big Fork Theatre
comedy, theatre, review Kristy Stanfield comedy, theatre, review Kristy Stanfield

Untitled Relationship Experiment | Big Fork Theatre

One part that stuck with me in particular was Samantha’s character’s strained relationship with her mother who refused to see her daughter’s committed lesbian relationship as anything more than a close friendship, even after marriage. It brought to light the combination of humour and pain found in the common queer experience of dealing with family members who are for the most part loving and yet wilfully ignorant or unaccepting of who they are

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The Secret Super Hero Galaxy-Travelling Family Band Show & Jam | Big Fork Theatre
comedy, theatre, review Kristy Stanfield comedy, theatre, review Kristy Stanfield

The Secret Super Hero Galaxy-Travelling Family Band Show & Jam | Big Fork Theatre

I interpreted this scene as a powerful statement about what art at its core is really about; not striving for an illusive ideal of perfection but rather, supporting each other through the process of making something together, going with the flow, embracing imperfection, and having plenty of fun along the way.

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Cool Story Bro, Culprits & Interstate Mates | Brisbane Improv Festival
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Cool Story Bro, Culprits & Interstate Mates | Brisbane Improv Festival

Scenes developed at a rapid pace and build and strange, weird and wonderful directions. They go forward and back in time, explore the most obscure ideas. The improvisers jumped in whenever they got an idea and everyone was given a chance to play and lead. Jasmine’s love of peanut butter and disappointment in how small the containers are at the supermarket, unfolds as a scene of a couple’s illegal obsession with tiny anthropomorphic foods and Aarons tale of travelling in a tiny sleeper train in winter develops into a son taking his parents to school for a career day, who just happen to be stuck living in a fridge.

Those meagre descripions are in no way doing justice to the chaotic hilarity that unfurled before us.

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Improvised Dr Who | D4WH
theatre, comedy, review Harmonie Downes theatre, comedy, review Harmonie Downes

Improvised Dr Who | D4WH

We enter the theatre and seats are filled. The lights switch off, the Spotify play list cuts, the mics not on, we laugh, the audience laughs. We hear “We're having a tech issue, so talk among yourselves”. So, what do a couple of women do seated behind me? Sing the Dr Who theme song, so of course, I join in as do others with a rendition no fan would think was worthy – out of tune, with a couple of dog howls - but what the heck, we were ready to jump in the Tardis to travel to an alternative dimension full of aliens, Daleks, Cybermen and save the world cliches.

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The Bull, The Moon & the Coronet of Stars by Van Badham | Directed By Heidi Manché
theatre, review Nadia Jade theatre, review Nadia Jade

The Bull, The Moon & the Coronet of Stars by Van Badham | Directed By Heidi Manché

I am a mere handful of years younger than our playwright and I recognised the tropes enough to know them for what they were – the blue summer dress, the man-hungry vixen, the affair that misfires when a younger woman throws herself at an attractive married man, his classic retreat to the wife, the larrikin who successfully woos the broken-hearted self-imposed-abstinent woman (he “knows about women”). These are the stories that filled a hundred novels when I was a voraciously-read teen and I think I liked them better then than I do now.

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Same Penis Forever | Rebel Lyons
comedy, theatre, review Lauren Hale comedy, theatre, review Lauren Hale

Same Penis Forever | Rebel Lyons

Having married and divorced at the age of 24, Rebel Lyons draws upon her own experience to paint a full picture of the discomfort of butting up against a life that has been laid out for you. What a power move. Same Penis Forever was raw, wild, and unapologetic, with a heavy dose of elevator music.

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Aftermath | Australasian Dance Collective
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Aftermath | Australasian Dance Collective

A contemporary dance performance to an absolutely riveting electronic set. Honestly, watching that kind of music performed whilst having to sit still in a theatre chair is a practice in self-flagellation. High-octane indeed, the exertion of these young people was extraordinary, and endless.

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Hot Mess Comedy | Ting Lim & Sandeep Totlani
comedy, review Kristy Stanfield comedy, review Kristy Stanfield

Hot Mess Comedy | Ting Lim & Sandeep Totlani

The second half is competitive improv and this is where the real fun begins, as the comics are thrown in the deep end by a series of absurd topics written by a few unforgiving audience members. During this part, I could really appreciate the craft, as I witnessed some of the comedians thinking up side-splittingly funny gags on the spot, while some completely bombed under the pressure.

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High Fi - Jazz Lounge - Feat. Bobby Singh & Na Moja
music, review Jaydem Martin music, review Jaydem Martin

High Fi - Jazz Lounge - Feat. Bobby Singh & Na Moja

The intimate venue of The Sideshow in West End played host to High Fi, a Jazz Lounge like setting featuring four talented musicians: Bobby Singh beating away on the tabla, Matt Ottignon’s breathtaking display of the sax and clarinet, Benjamin Walsh adding in the drums and percussion and Shenzo Gregorio dazzling us with the beauty of the viola, guitar, and custom stringed instruments.

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The Laramie Project | Ad Astra
theatre, review Virag Dombay theatre, review Virag Dombay

The Laramie Project | Ad Astra

For those who aren’t familiar with the script, the Laramie Project is a piece of verbatim theatre which is based on approximately 200 hours of interviews with residents of Laramie, Wyoming, following the kidnapping and murder of gay university student, Matthew Sheppard 1998. It’s quite frankly appalling how relevant the content, characters and messages in the play are in our contemporary society.

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