A Festival of Storytelling Delights in the Northern Beaches

The Manly Festival of Short Plays 2025

The Manly Festival of Short Plays 2025 Rating

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It takes innovative storytelling to script an approximate 10 minute play. In just a small sixth of an hour, there must be many elements that pool together succinctly to hold the audience’s attention and to simply make sense. Just like a jigsaw puzzle as the minutes slide by, each piece that is put together slowly reveals more and more until, as the last couple of minutes creep up, the picture is complete and all is revealed.

The Manly Festival of Short Plays is one such puzzle, presenting twelve original Australian short plays performed by 39 actors from Manly Theatre Group. These plays are presented over a two week performance period, split into showcasing six plays in week one and six plays in week two. I watched the six plays plays in week 1 and was impressed with the tapestry of themes relatable to the modern audience.

The first play “Cleared for Take Off” was written and directed by Shelley Ross, an avian journalist. It takes us inside the cockpit of a QANTAS plane. Callum Horan, as the First Officer, is the newbie. He’s clearly nervous about meeting the infamous Captain, played with believable super confidence by Lee Sarich. As a storm approaches when the aircraft is in the air, the First Officer is faced with life changing decisions. The First Officer is capable, we can see that, but the play focuses on his internal struggle with being able to have the bravery to question the decisions of his superior and follow his own instincts. The Captain has a strong authoritative leadership style, thanks to Lee’s commanding presence. Callum’s portrayal of the First Officer’s anxiety had me on the edge of my seat!

The second play “Shred or Keep” was written by Cassie Matheson and directed by Frank Byrne. This was a play featuring Phoebe Brian as Simone and Sophie Burton as Penny, Simone’s mum. Set in the home office of Simone’s deceased father, she is helping her mum sort out paperwork. Two boxes lay at their feet with the two words in the play’s title facing the audience. As they go through her father’s desk, Simone comes across something that shocks them both. The dialogue between mother and daughter is the key to this short play and is delivered perfectly by the actors. Sophie delivers Penny’s pointed and not so pointed comments at her daughter in sharp barbs, and we feel Simone’s reactions.

The third play before a twenty minute intermission was “Gold Star Parents” written and directed by Chantal Harrison. It focuses on a ‘new parent’ group, led by an overenthusiastic Barbara ( brilliantly played by Phillipa Coleman). The giant gold cardboard stars with the dangling safety pin was funny, and we laughed as she deemed some parents worthy of its status. This had a relatively large cast of six, a challenge for a 10 minute play for character development which they pulled off perfectly. Each character had their own family unit different from each other and their stories were examined in this short period. Well done to Charlotte Chandler, Claudia Limpert, Max Shadbolt, Chantal Harrison and Audrey Minami along with Phillipa, who shared the stage, as they bounced off each other to show the audience that there is no “one size fits all” when it comes to family units and giving advice. There are messy moments and identity morphing when someone becomes a parent, and a parent group leader too!

 

 

After intermission, we saw “Faded Flowers” written and directed by Annie Gurton. This is the story of two women, Iris, portrayed by Rowena Robinson and Rose, played by Caroline Pearce who meet through very different circumstances. This is a story of two homeless women, and the writer’s message of the social impact of homelessness in woman over fifty and the resilience of these woman was strong. Rowena played her character Iris’s positivity brightly, and Caroline’s Rose had an inner strength that shone through. I liked Iris’s cap, which was plentiful with pins. It made me think that in another life, this lady had travelled. How had it come to this, with her living in a car? Above all, the message of being kind, to each other and to have it bestowed upon you is a gift. These ladies are not faded flowers, despite the play’s title and their given names, but perhaps that is what we needed to remember.

The fifth play, “Unfolding Harry” was written and directed by Barbara Courtille. An investigative journalist, Harry Bennett, played by Gavin Woodford sets out to uncover and expose a potential scam – that of Suzi Sock. Mina Vu portrayed Suzi with zen and mesmerising calmness, so much so, that her character’s worldwide “Sock Chi” which earned her 50 million followers and no doubt a ton of money from her health retreats, seemed believable. This had a few exaggerated comedic moments in it, which the audience appreciated.

The last play, “Losing the Plot” was written by Carlin Hurdis and directed by Paul Kininmonth. The originality of the story unwound itself, changed through the short ten minutes and I loved the ride! Cindy, portrayed by Angharad Thompson-Rees, first approaches Keiran, played with an innocent charm by John Cross, (an eco-cemetery manager) to enquire about a new age green burial. She feels this may well be the right final resting place for her globe-trotting, nature loving mum. The plot thickens, excuse the pun, as we come across a father and son carrying a corpse who intend to use this area to do this very same thing… an eco burial! With brilliant acting from Tony (the semi-retired hitman), portrayed by Jeff Parsons, Issac West as Marcus (Tony’s reluctant son) and the return of Callum Horan to the stage—this time as Darrell, a corpse (he previously played the First Officer in the opening play), Losing the Plot’s script delivered a fast-paced and hilarious experience!

Time flew watching these six plays, which is a testament to the skill of the playwrights. The themes were varied, and each performance was engaging and had the audience’s attention. My two favourite plays were “Cleared for Take Off” with its suspense anxiety driven, yet comedic, script and “Losing the Plot”. This collection of plays from the Manly Theatre Group showcases concise storytelling at its finest! Don’t miss it—you’re sure to be impressed and leave with a couple or more of your favourites too. It left me wanting to attend the second lot of six short plays.

Season run: 13 – 22 November 2025
Venue: The Sky Theatre. St Andrew’s Hall. 56 Raglan St Manly
Tickets: www.manlytheatregroup.com

To book tickets to The Manly Festival of Short Plays 2025, please visit https://events.humanitix.com/manly-festival-of-short-plays-2025.

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1 in 7 and The Audition Helpers

Two New Australian Plays (1 in 7 | The Audition Helpers)

Two New Australian Plays (1 in 7 | The Audition Helpers) Rating

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1 in 7

Waiting rooms, particularly those of the medical variety, can be emotionally fraught places. People sit waiting for information, test results, that may possibly change their lives forever. Vivien Thomas in her first one-act play for Manly Theatre Group has chosen a hospital waiting room as the setting for an ensemble piece that focuses on a confronting statistic: one in seven Australian women will be diagnosed with breast cancer at some point in their lifetime.

While an ensemble piece, much of the focus is on the character Tina, who we soon learn can be abrupt at times. In the first few minutes of the play, Tina clashes with the clinic counsellor (played by Ella Green), finding the professional’s demeanour too cool for her liking. It is clear that Tina is very stressed; she has been called back to the clinic because of a shadow on her mammogram. She’s a busy mother, evidenced by the phone calls she receives in the waiting room from her children asking ‘where’s my wetsuit?’ and ‘what’s for lunch?’ Tina, like so many other women, doesn’t have time for cancer; too much depends on her being well.

Early on in 1 in 7, tears flow. Alongside Tina in the waiting room, is a woman distraught at the thought that her sister, who has left the room to receive her results, may have cancer. The other waiting women rally around her providing comfort in her moment of need. When her sister emerges, the news is good: she does not have cancer. After the pair leaves, the other women reflect on whether it is better to put on a brave face or to cry, letting out the distress one feels obliged to contain. It’s a question that runs through the play. How do we deal with our emotions when confronted with our mortality?

Thomas has created a group of characters that anyone might expect to meet in any waiting room in Australia. Tina, played by Trish Donoghue, is a gutsy, salt of the earth Australian mum who is prone to rants about the cost of living and climate change. Liz Jewell plays Joan who has just retired. She and her husband have booked a trip of a lifetime to Europe. Will cancer upend her neatly planned future? Particularly poignant is Karen Pattinson as Mrs Collins. Her bombastic behaviour in the waiting room is a cover for a woman who is deeply distressed. She demands her test results, saying she does not have time to wait. We are again reminded of the life pressures so many women juggle each day. As Tina says: Be kind. We don’t ever really know what another person is going through.

Manly Theatre Group’s Artistic Director Kathleen Walker, Vivien Thomas and the cast have done a great job in producing a performance that is highly topical and emotionally moving. Like a memento mori, the play is a reminder of how fragile and precious our lives are. We are reminded to support each other in our darkest moments, reaching out rather than retreating into the straitjacket of stoicism. The play is also a timely reminder of how stretched so many Australian women are by caring for others. Let’s remember to care for them too.

 

 

The Audition Helpers

Carlin Hurdis’ one-act play is a very tongue in cheek comedy that captures the back stage bitchiness of an amateur theatre group. Auditions are being held for a production of The Hound of the Baskervilles. Two unnamed ‘helpers’ stand in a room coordinating the audition process. The helpers soon reveal themselves to be jaded, ‘never-been’ actors; both are on the wrong side of fifty, now relegated to behind the scene roles. Their dialogue is peppered with catty attacks masking the insecurity that so much of the acting world breeds.

The Audition Helpers might be described as meta-theatre. Certainly theatrical allusions are in plentiful supply throughout the piece. The helpers name-drop like there is no tomorrow, passive aggressively competing with each other as to who knows who in the world of (amateur) theatre. Particularly amusing is one auditionee’s choice to perform a monologue from Edward Albee’s satire The Goat—cue off-colour jokes about goats.

The cast clearly relish their roles in a particularly self-reflexive way. Both Gregory J. Thorsby and Frank Byrne capture the desperation of two over the hill actors determined not to be discarded. Their behind the scenes machinations lead to a particularly amusing (and sneaky) denouement. Alisan Smotlak is suitably over the top as the director who is clueless about what her helpers are getting up to. Danny Nercessian plays camp and goth perfectly doubling up as two very different auditionees. John Corrigan and Elaine de Jagger show great comedy chops also.

Hopefully we will see more of Carlin Hurdis’ clever work in the near future!

To book tickets to Two New Australian Plays (1 in 7 | The Audition Helpers), please visit https://events.humanitix.com/manly-theatre-group-presents-1-in-7-and-the-audition-helpers.

Photographer: Neil Thompson Rees

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