In a rather broad brush stroke of a statement, one of the problems I have with books written by women is the reluctance to expand into universal themes, or send their novel to the far corners of the universe in its scope. I say this is a broad brush stroke of a statement, because it’s […]
Author Archives: lisathatcher
Equus – Peter Shaffer 40 years on. (theatre review – Sydney Fringe Festival)
posted by lisathatcher
In 1973 at the National Theatre in London, Peter Shaffer’s Equus opened, ready to shock audiences for the first time. It’s first season ran for two years, winning a Drama Desk Award for outstanding foreign play, a Tony for best play, a Tony for best actress, and the New York Drama Critics circle award for […]
Now You See Me – Louis Leterrier and the magic of magic. (film review)
posted by lisathatcher
Do sleight of hand and cinema actually mix? This is the central question for Louis Leterrier, who has made a film that he describes as ‘an ode to magic.’ Using existing magic tricks and making them ‘super big’ or introducing new magic tricks, Leterrier does manage to capture the glamour of large scale modern magic […]
Dangerous Corner – Peter Lavelle brings JB Priestly into the future. (Theatre Review)
posted by lisathatcher
The key to J.B. Priestly’s Dangerous Corner lies not in its narrative or its very interesting and convoluted plot, but in the opening and closing scenes of the play. Time here is crucial to the plots development; Priestly made a series of ‘time plays’ and Dangerous Corner is one of them. However, time is also […]
Top Girls – Alice Livingstone and Caryl Churchill and the real dilemma facing modern women. (Theatre review)
posted by lisathatcher
The question of women “having it all” was never terribly relevant to 1960’s feminism, which was asking the far more radical question of how do women use their new voice to DE-centralize power and DE-stabilize hero-objectivism? Given how shocking this idea is, it is no surprise women were “tossed the bone” of equality in the […]
The Twelfth Dawn – Time, Pain and insomnia from the 505 Theatre founders. (Theatre Review)
posted by lisathatcher
One of the most devastating moments in the Iliad is Priam’s distress at the death of his son, Hector. Between the moment of death and the eventual burial Priam lives in a kind of tormented hell that was so deep and troubled, it aroused the sympathies of the gods. The abuse of Hector’s body was […]
Behind the Candelabra – Steven Soderbergh and the ‘appropriate gay’. (film review)
posted by lisathatcher
The fear behind colonization and appropriation is the most destructive force on the planet today – and probably has always been. The desire to claim something for oneself, and negate any other interpretation is a force so pervasive we usually do not know that we have adopted it as our own. I’m going to assume […]
Haus – Dimitri Armatas and the tragedy of cultural identity. (Theatre Review)
posted by lisathatcher
It is often thought that if you put a human being through the most trying circumstances you get to see what they are made of. The assumption is, the more pressure you apply, the more strength you will get in response. This is an observation made by witnesses, not protagonists, because only as the observer […]