Tag Archives: fest

Fest 1 – ballet, comedy, physical theatre

I can feel myself relaxing. Being in the moment, 100%, completely. Joy piled upon joy. I’ve heard many conversations about work-life balance in the last little while. This – this week of wonder – is my work-life balance.

Saturday’s shows

Hats: pure delight. Hats takes you on a magical journey like no other show at Fest. Elegant. Detailed. The kind of performance that pulls you in and carries away. I don’t understand why there are people at Fest who aren’t lining up to see it.

Three Little Pigs: Intense. Excellently played. Funny. Pointed. You want to go back because you’re sure there are bits you missed.

Brent Palmer Live: Last minute change from the advertised show Bench. Good, hearty laughs and South African commentary.

Giselle: Beautiful. Choreography showcasing the considerable talent and skill of Kim Vieira as Giselle excellently, while still allowing space for the rest of the cast to shine. A visual feast. Also more emotional, more story-telling than some of the ballets in the last few years. Another delight.

Anticipation of Fest

The National Arts Festival – Fest – programme for 2012 is out. Yay! I love this time of year. Hours spent pouring over the programme, picking shows and figuring out how we’ll fit them all into just a week (all the time I can take off work). The big shows we’ll book in advance – the ballet (Giselle), the Gala Concert, some of the big music shows and a couple of lectures that are likely to sell out – but most we’ll leave until we’re there. Because there is nothing like popping into the booking office in the mornings to buy a whole handful of tickets for the day.

This year’s programme looks great. Lots of lovely music. More classical this year and it looks awesome. Standard Bank Young Artist for Dance is someone I’ve followed for years and whose work I love, Bailey Snyman. The ballet is Giselle, which I’ve never seen before. Richard Cock is doing a whole bunch of fun stuff, as well as the usual joy that is the Gala Concert with the KZN Philharmonic. There is a wide range of theatre and even more fun-sounding music like Arno Carstens, Sibongile Khumalo, Bala Brothers, Mango Groove.

And then there is the Fringe. More yay. A whole bunch of my favourite performers are back, some with new shows, some with pieces I adore and will very happily watch over and over gain. Of course, some people are missing – no Scott Sparrow, no Tim Redpath. But so many are. James Cairns is doing various pieces, including the stunning Sie Weiss Alles. Richard Antrobus and co are bringing back Hats. Kaput is back. Raiders is going Mayan. Boet ‘n Swaar return after a 5-year absence. Chris Chameleon. Comedy from Durban Comedy Invasion to Rob van Vuuren, Stuart Taylor, Siv Ngesi and Mark Palmer. So much yay!

Of course, some of the less than impressive lot are back. The stupid hypnotist who is quite possibly the most annoying person in the world. London Road. Miskien. But plenty of good stuff to drown them out. Programmes/Booking Kits are available from Standard Bank branches and selected Exclusive Books and Computicket branches from May but it’s already up on the website. Booking opens 7 May. Oh, and ArtBucks members get early booking. Don’t wait. It’s going to be amazing!

Fest in retrospect

This blog has been sadly neglected lately. This is a piece I started writing on a plane on the third of July and only got back to now. So, my impressions of this year’s National Arts Festival… late, but still…

The sunset sky is fading as we leave Grahamstown. After a while, the darkness begins to close in. To the east, the sky is still alight. The lighter blue stretches down towards the horizon, fading to sunset colours. Shreds of grey cloud are scattered across the world’s edge against a background of sky the colours of a ripe peach. In the few moments before it fades, it is beautiful.

The sky grows darker. Above, the clear dark blue is jewelled with stars. It’s not clear enough to see the Milky Way here, as it has been at the beach house these past few days, but still there are too many stars to count. Around the horizon, lighter blue recalls the recent sunset.

We come over a rise and the city of Port Elizabeth stretches before up, a front of glaring electric lights creeping closer and closer as we move. The cloud above reflects the light, the jagged storm front waits like some ghastly, orange glowing beast crouching over the city. Waiting, dark and stormy.

The last few days have been amazing. A wonderful blur of family, friends and something approaching what an overdose of culture would look like if I believed for a moment that it was possible to overdose on the theatrical arts. I am sad to be leaving so soon. The festival will continue for another week – a full 11 days of AMAZ!ING (just like it says on the box).

It is difficult to capture a single top moment or best show. Over a hurried lunch one day, we started a game of trying to come up with a single-word review of each show. Some are easy. ‘Evocative’ is such an obvious explanation of Anatomy of Weather, a physical theatre/contemporary dance piece that has won an Ovation Award since I saw the show. Of course, it does not capture the whole show but it is the strongest description, for me, of the emotional experience of the show. After a while, the game ran dry. Some shows are difficult to describe in one word. Some need a thesaurus and a dictionary. “What is the word for when the performer has the whole audience in the palm of his hands throughout the show?” Dirt, an amazing one-act play that has the audience so sad over the plight of an imaginary dog that some people seem almost in tears. And we’d have to invent a whole new word to describe Raiders!

I feel as if I have to capture the shows, capture the experiences now before they float away, become intangible. Become mixed with the ordinariness of real life. Sie Weiss Alles on Thursday was great. I’ve seen both actors before and love their work. This is a little different. Different even from the write-up in the programme. I found the lightness an excellent spotlight on the realities of the situation.

Lightness. Perhaps I can choose a favourite show. 3Acts of Love. Richard Antrobus is fast becoming my favourite South African performer (although it remains a hotly contested position). His physical theatre has a way of shutting down the brain in order to reach out to the senses directly and sweep you away in a visual fantasy that is at the same time moving, simple and intensely captivating. But without trying to alarm or ambush the brain. It is gentle and beautiful; pleasure and beauty as a medium of communication. You let go, forget the world and enjoy it. And then you’re walking out and the messages of the movement, the words, the juxtaposition, shows up in your conscious brain with no effort at all. The senses absorb and absorb and deliver the memory of the experience without waiting for the analytic mind to catch up.

And laughter. So many shows forget that comedy and tragedy are two sides of the same coin (or masks, as the case may be). I saw some stand up this year, of course. My younger sister is a huge comedy fan and has a knack for picking the best of a good bunch. We saw Rob van Vuuren (of course). I enjoy his ‘real theatre’ more than TMAS. His stand-up is funny and this year felt a lot more mature than the last show of his that I saw. More personal.

I was pleasantly surprised, too, by the Durban Comedy Invasion. Amusingly, at least to me, they seemed pleasantly surprised by an audience who could understand jokes requiring slightly more knowledge of the world, politics and grammar. Perhaps it was a gimmick but it worked for this crowd.

I also really enjoyed Ryan Dittman’s one-man show Stranger things have happened. I’m particularly fond of the kind of one-man show that has one performer but 10 or so characters. I like the technical skill and the funny people.

So much has happened in the past two weeks that I’m almost struggling to remember what else. Almost. The ballet was lovely – my first Swan Lake. I was particularly pleased to see some of the male dancers showing real style and elegance. Cape Town City Ballet has been working hard to develop young male dancers in the past few years and it’s great to see it working.

Flicker was another great physical piece. A beautiful exploration of relationship and time. Mouche was still beautiful, although more aggressive than the previous time we saw it.

My last day was a richness of music, with the Grahamstown Sextet and the always-fantastic Gala Concert conducted by Richard Cock. A wonder end to a weekend.

All in all, a great festival. This year was a short weekend for me but I’m planning to work very hard to make sure that the next one is a full, long immersion in the things that make my brain tingle and leave me smiling for weeks. Thanks to all the performers and organisers for making it amazing and my wonderful friends and, particularly, family for the joy of sharing something as special as Fest.