Wednesday, 17 March 2010
Home » Reviews » MIAF »
Kitten | Jenny Kemp
Written by Melita Pereira   
Saturday, 11 October 2008 00:02
Kitten | Jenny KempThe Lady In The Water, 1947. Courtesy of The Juniper Gallery. Photo - Toni Frissell

Jenny Kemp’s
Kitten delineates the tumultuous journey of a woman pushed past the brink of despair following the traumatic loss of her lover Jonah, who is missing at sea.

The play begins in the maelstrom of Kitten’s trauma. An ominous sound reverberates in the background as four actors stand motionless on a blue-lit stage. Just like that, the audience is plunged under the sea, swept along with Kitten, into the depths of despair. In her quest to find Jonah, Kitten resorts to buying scuba gear and jet skis so she can scan the ocean and researches hyper-intelligent dolphins to delve beneath it before she realises that in her sadness and anguish she has lost more than Jonah: She has also lost her own voice.

Kitten is a sophisticated and comprehensive theatrical production. It employs many story-telling techniques which compel and compound. Jenny Kemp’s writing oscillates between eloquence and coarseness as the audience becomes privy to Kitten’s stream of consciousness, her dialogues with Manfred, played by Christopher Connelly, Jonah and herself. The character of Kitten is embodied by three actors; Natasha Herbert, Kate Kendall and Margaret Mills. As the play unfolds, Herbert, Kendall and Mills remain onstage simultaneously, embellishing various facets of Kitten’s psyche with synchronicity and detail.

The actors evoke the vehicle of voice to delineate both discordance and revelation. The subtleties of inflection and intonation which they use throughout Kitten - at times menacing, exasperated and helpless - manifests for the audience the disruption and fracturing of Kitten’s journey. This is compounded by the use of various sounds such as markers scraped on whiteboards and birds reeling through headphones, which envelope the stage, wrapping around Kemp’s characters and their dialogue.

The story of Kitten as she begins a “rollercoaster journey from the depths of despair to soaring hope” is bolstered by Kemp’s meticulous direction which succeeds in agitating the distortion in Kitten’s mind. The narrative turbulence of Kitten is galvanised by Anna Tregloan’s innovative set. At times toying with the spatial perceptions of the audience, and at others mirroring the emotional landscape of Kitten’s mind, Tregloan’s set design is fused with the narrative vivacity of Kitten’s journey, bringing to stark life her search for Jonah, her own voice and for hope. Helen Herbertson’s choreography and attention to “movement language” embolden Kitten’s story, enabling Herbert, Kendall and Mills to physically manifest the hidden thoughts, emotions and fears which are locked up within the recesses of the body.

Jenny Kemp’s Kitten is a unique piece of theatre. As Kitten’s journey evolves and her “reality reasserts itself”, music becomes the channel for communicating her transformation. Kendall provides a distinguished performance singing a variety of songs with depth and expertise. Kitten is a production which benefits greatly from the quality of its actors and the intricacies of Kemp’s writing, which realistically creates a subterranean world of despair, but challenges its characters to chart a course out of it as well. 


Melbourne International Arts Festival and Malthouse Theatre present
Kitten
Jenny Kemp

Venue: The CUB Malthouse, Beckett Theatre
Dates: Wed 8 – Sat 11 Oct 7.30pm / Tue 14 Oct at 6.30pm / Wed 15 – Sat 18 Oct at 7.30pm / Sat 18 Oct at 2pm / Tue 21 Oct at 6.30pm / Thu 23 Oct at 1pm / Wed 22 – Sat 25 Oct at 7.30pm / Sat 25 Oct at 2pm (Performance on Tue 14 Oct followed by post show Q&A)
Audio Description: Wed 15 Oct at 7.30pm
Duration: 1hr 30min no interval
Prices: Season: Full $49 / Groups (10+) / Seniors $42 / Conc $37
Bookings: Ticketmaster 1300 136 166 / www.melbournefestival.com.au
The CUB Malthouse (03) 9685 5111 / www.malthouse.com.au

Comments (0)

Subscribe to this comment's feed

Write comment

You must be logged in to post a comment. Please register if you do not have an account yet.

busy
 
rushTIXAustralian Stage JobsMembers Area
 

Most Read

Most Read Reviews

The Silver Rose | The Australian Ballet
Dance darling Graeme Murphy is back with The Australian Ballet’s lavish new production The Silver Rose. Bookmark Email this Comments (0) Subscribe t...
The Barber of Seville | Melbourne Opera
The last place I expected to hear a joke about the government's insulation scheme was in a performance of The Barber of Seville. But that was only one of many pleasant surprises in Melbourne Opera's...
Shanghai Beauty | Jin Xing Dance Theatre
The mythology that surrounds an artist has the potential to infiltrate or even eclipse the work that they produce. Bookmark Email this Comments (0) S...
The Flags | Insomniac Theatre
Scott and co have delivered a quality of performance which does it proud indeed. Bookmark Email this Comments (0) Subscribe to this comment's feed...
Launch Pad | Expressions Dance Company
Intimacy is the key word here, as not only is the subject matter very personal, but sitting so close the dancers mean we hear their every breath and see the movement and grace of each muscle....

Most Read News

Australia's Mary Poppins Announced
Verity Hunt-Ballard from Adelaide has won the most hotly contested role in Australian theatre. She will play the world’s best loved nanny in the world’s Supercalifragilistic musical, MARY POPPINS, opening at Her Majesty’s Theatre, Melbourne in July.
The Production Company announces its 12th season
Jeanne Pratt AC, Chairman of The Production Company announced the 2010 Season at Raheen this week.
2010 Adelaide Fringe Award Winners
Adelaide Fringe artists came and conquered this month with a plethora of acts that enchanted, entertained, challenged and sometimes just weirded out Fringe-hungry audiences.
2010 Short+Sweet Gala Award Winners Announced
It's All the Rage picked up the top awards at the Short+Sweet Gala Awards Final at NIDA on Saturday night. Prizes valued at over $40,000 were distributed to the best of the fest.
2009 Green Room Award Winners
The 2009 Green Room Awards were presented last night in a formal ceremony at the Victorian Arts Centre, hosted by Eddie Perfect.