Sylvia: Presented By Hunters Hill Theatre

Sylvia Rating

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3

The performances of all four actors in the cast are a real strength of Hunters Hill Theatre’s really enjoyable production of A.R. Gurney’s ‘Sylvia’, with each of them finding their moments of comedy and genuine humanity. The premise of the show is an odd one, but the opening night audience was won over by the warmth and skill of the cast, and a production that invites you to look in the apartment window to the funny and very human way people navigate changing and aging.

Justin Corcoran and Brooke Davidson play Greg and Kate, whose marriage is the central site of both comedy and conflict throughout the show. Both of them bring a gentleness to their characters; Greg remains a sympathetic figure despite the oddities in his choices throughout the show, and Davidson makes Brooke both warm and wry as well as exasperated.

Margareta Moir has perhaps the biggest challenge of the show, playing the titular (canine) character, but she does extremely well at the physical comedy and energetic contribution to the ensemble that her role requires. Richard Littlehales plays three characters across the show and embodies each with their own physicality that both drew some of the show’s biggest laughs and allows the core trio to shine. Leslie, the therapist who appears in the second act, is a real highlight, and Littlehales brings both life and humour to the arc of Tom, Greg’s dog park friend.

Wayne Chee’s set design is smart and sleek; a mulit-part sofa tells the arc of the story on its own, and the way the set interacts with the particular theatre at Club Ryde allows the audience to feel as if we’re in the apartment with the characters. The musical choices in some scene transitions were a lovely addition.

This is Moja Band’s first production with Hunters Hill Theatre, and it’s skilfully done; the play moves at a gentle clip, and there is an intimacy to the apartment world where most of the play takes place. The humanity in how embarrassing we all become when we’re in a period of flux is a thread that Band’s direction clearly finds; each character is funny and sympathetic.

In line with this, the costuming and prop work is really well done, everything feels real and recognisable, which is part of what allows the comic device of Sylvia being played by a grown human woman to work so well. The very normal world we see is interrupted by an enthusiastic whirlwind of a character, and the journey through what that means for a marriage and home is really fun, sweet and off-kilter.

To book tickets to Sylvia, please visit https://www.huntershilltheatre.com.au/whats-on.html

Photographer: Amin Heidari

This review also appears on It’s On The House. Check out more reviews at Whats The Show to see what else is on in your town.