Pandora’s Cross | |
---|---|
Written by | Dorothy Hewett |
Characters | The Goose, Pandora, Mac Greene, Frangipanni Waterfall, Sergeant Tinkerbell, Primavera, Rudi, Ethel Malley, Ern Malley |
Date premiered | 29 June 1978 |
Place premiered | Paris Theatre, Sydney |
Subject | Redevelopment |
Genre | Rock musical |
Setting | Kings Cross, Sydney |
Pandora's Cross is a rock musical by Dorothy Hewett with original music by Ralph Tyrrell, set in Sydney's red light district King's Cross, and incorporating various mythical characters or characters loosely based on colourful identities.
The play is an atmospheric, expressionist musical and a nostalgic celebration rather than a sustained drama. [1]
The action centres on a motley collection of the area's residents who are trying to prevent their homes being destroyed by progress. Their attempts to revive the "Old Cross" through a Village Festival come to nothing. The stripper Primavera, who "knows too much" is murdered offstage. The residents are dispersed across the "wasteland" of the western suburbs of Sydney. However the 'Cross lives on in the imaginative life of the residents. [1]
The set is divided into upstairs and downstairs sections, with an elevated platform for the Goose's honky-tonk piano. The backdrop is a panoramic, moveable King's Cross skyline that lights up at night.
Upstairs: Pan's loft
Downstairs: There is a staircase which can convert to an escalator. This leads into the Village
The stage direction begins, "the scene opens on the night skyline of the Cross. High in the flies Sydney is falling, the developers are in and the sound of demolition is deafening. Suspended in blackness like an actor in the Prague Black Theatre the ancient Goose in verdigris coat-tails sits at his honky-tonk piano. As he sings, the panorama of the Cross unrolls behind him, faster and faster, so that by an optical illusion he appears to be a whirling maestro of the sky signs. Up and down the moving staircase the characters enter and move like ghosts, like waxwork figures."
The characters are misfits, but all except Ern are relative innocents in an encroaching world of development. [1]
The play is Hewett's paean to the city of Sydney and to Kings Cross, "Sydney's notorious square mile at the top of William Street" - the edgy red light district she lived in or near for 20 years. [2] It concerns the threat to what is valuable in Australia by the destructive march of progress, and the place of the artist in creating and preserving the essential Australia. [1]
The play was directed by Jim Sharman – already famous for his productions of Hair , Jesus Christ Superstar and The Rocky Horror Show - featuring a stellar cast of some of Sydney's top theatre performers. Original music was composed by Ralph Tyrrell, with sets by Brian Thomson and costumes by Luciana Arrighi. The cast included John Gaden, Jennifer Claire, Robyn Nevin, Neil Redfern, Geraldine Turner, Steve J. Spears and Arthur Dignam. [3]
To support the new theatre, the cast agreed to forgo salary during rehearsals. The set was very ambitious and very expensive for the time - Arthur Dignam said "we pretended to be a very rich theatre when we were a very poor theatre. [4]
While the general impression was that the season was short and the box office takings were inadequate, in fact the play ran through the whole of July, the longest season for any Hewett play, and takings considerably exceeded that of the following Louis Nowra play. [5] After the Paris Theatre season concluded, the production was carried to the Sydney Opera House but closed after one week because of audience hostility. [6]
The Paris Company was formed in March 1978, supported by leading members of the Sydney theatre scene, including author and playwright Patrick White. It aimed to take up the mantle of the fading Old Tote Theatre company. However, the company folded after two productions - Pandora's Cross, and Visions by Louis Nowra. [3]
The original building was designed by Walter Burley Griffin and opened as the Australian Picture Palace in 1916. It was renamed the Paris Theatre in 1954 and was thereafter operated by the Hoyts group until 1977. It was the site of an International Women's Day Protest in March 1978, and in late May, just prior to Pandora's Cross, it hosted Sydney's first Gay and Lesbian movie festival. [7]
Artist Martin Sharp produced three posters for events at the Paris theatre between 1978 and 1980. These promoted the 1978 productions of Pandora's Cross and Visions, plus the independent With a Little Help from my Friends (John Lennon) in 1980. The Pandora's Cross poster features a voluptuous, naked female figure in yellow and red surrounded by a heart-shaped cascade of musical notes. [8]
Critical reception was divided.
Bob Ellis described the play as "a tender uproarious nocturne to a King's Cross forever dying and forever reborn", giving the "myth-starved metropolis" at long last an urban mythology. He lauded Hewett as "La Hewett, who is in no way inferior to Shakespeare in her breadth of vision, her verbal facility and her insights into character", urging audiences to "beat a path through broken bottles to its door". [9] Candida Baker saw the performance and was "knocked out by it. The play was so lively and raucous, and so much more alive than the theatre in England at that time." [10]
Some critics were still unable to come to terms with expressionist theatre, with its "unabashed theatricality", lacking the conventional signals of plot and character development. [11] The Sydney Morning Herald critic Harry Kippax referred to the play as "dramatically inert" and disliked the script, but actually enjoyed the performance and went to see it twice, saying, "Everyone In the show has a stunning scene." [12] Ken Healy described it as "a performance which is only a tiny fraction of the sum of its considerable parts". [13] Jill Neville thought the modest strip scene was "anti-feminist". [14] The Jewish Times described Hewett as, "Australia's most overrated playwright." [15]
The negative reaction extended to the audience. A puzzled Hewett explained, "they hated it...they hissed as I went past." [10]
The public impression was that the play had "destroyed the Paris venture" while being shown on its home ground with a top cast and after high expectations had been established. [5] it has never been performed again. [16]
The script was published in two acts in 1978 in Theatre Australia, [17] [18] and also in Hungary in 1979. [19]
The Ern Malley hoax, also called the Ern Malley affair, is Australia's most famous literary hoax. Its name derives from Ernest Lalor "Ern" Malley, a fictitious poet whose biography and body of work were created in one day in 1943 by conservative writers James McAuley and Harold Stewart in order to hoax the Angry Penguins, a modernist art and literary movement centred around a journal of the same name, co-edited by poet Max Harris and art patron John Reed, of Heide, Melbourne.
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Dorothy Coade Hewett was an Australian playwright, poet and author, and a romantic feminist icon. In writing and in her life, Hewett was an experimenter. As her circumstances and beliefs changed, she progressed through different literary styles: modernism, socialist realism, expressionism and avant garde. She was a member of the Australian Communist Party in the 1950s and 1960s, which informed her work during that period.
Mark Doyle, better known by his stage name Louis Nowra, is an Australian writer, playwright, screenwriter and librettist.
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Theatre of Australia refers to the history of the live performing arts in Australia: performed, written or produced by Australians.
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President Wilson in Paris is a 1973 Australian television film based on the play by Ron Blair set during the Paris Peace Conference, 1919.
Harold ("Harry") Gemmell Kippax AO, better known as H. G. Kippax was an Australian print journalist. He was known as a foreign correspondent, war correspondent and theatre and music critic for The Sydney Morning Herald for over four decades (1945–89). He was also a leader writer. Between 1958 and 1983 he produced 3,456 editorials for the Herald. Kippax also wrote for the independent fortnightly journal Nation 1958–66, under the pseudonym Brek.
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The Paris Theatre was a cinema and theatre located on the corner of Wentworth Avenue and Liverpool Street in Sydney that showed films and vaudeville, cabaret and plays. The theatre changed names several times, trading as Australia Picture Palace (1915-1935), Tatler Theatre (1935-1950), Park Theatre (1952-1954) and Paris Theatre (1954-1981) before being demolished in 1981. In May 1978 the theatre hosted a film festival that inspired the first Sydney Gay Mardi Gras. The theatre was also the home of Paris Theatre Company, a Sydney based theatre company.
Duke of Edinburgh Assassinated or The Vindication of Henry Parkes is a 1971 Australian play written by Bob Ellis and Dick Hall. It followed Ellis' successful The Legend of King O'Malley.
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The Chapel Perilous, Dorothy Hewett's third full-length play, was written in 1970. The play is Expressionist in style, where the theatrical spectacle dominates the plot. It introduces Sally Banner, a picaresque heroine moving without success through a search for love and freedom, while oppressed by authority figures and disappointed by unsatisfactory lovers. She is, in brief succession, a defiant schoolgirl, a promiscuous wartime student, a Communist, a suburban de facto, and a well-known poet. It is recognised as Hewett's best play.
The Man from Mukinupin is a musical play by Dorothy Hewett. It was commissioned in 1978 to mark Western Australia's sesquicentenary, and is her most popular and successful play. It is a romantic comedy in two acts covering the periods 1912 to 1914 and 1918 to 1920. The play involves the principles of celebration and reconciliation, providing a "rich theatrical experience with song, dance, humour, and powerful incident."
The Tatty Hollow Story, Dorothy Hewett's fifth full-length play, and last of a series of expressionist plays, was written in 1974 after Hewett's move from Perth to Sydney.
Bobbin Up was the first novel by the author Dorothy Hewett (1923-2002). It is set in 1957 in a spinning mill in Alexandria, an industrial suburb of inner Sydney, and describes the lives of fifteen working-class women who work there for breadline wages. The novel is a series of loosely connected vignettes, where the life of each woman and her family is described within one or two chapters. The book concludes with a stay-in strike by the women for reinstatement after a mass layoff. Most of the group appear together in the final chapter.