Neighbourhood Watch

Neighbourhood Watch

Neighbourhood Watch Rating

Click if you liked this article

1

This was my first visit to Lane Cove Theatre Company, I was met by warm greeters at the door. The intimate space then added to that cosy sense of community-mindedness. The warmth and passion of director Kathryn Thomas, delivering the acknowledgment of country and welcoming us, was a great start. I was excited for what lay ahead.

The Wednesday 11am session is, I can now confirm, a genuinely civilised way to experience theatre. It is also, the perfect hour for this attention-challenged reviewer to see Lally Katz’s Neighbourhood Watch; a hefty play dealing with some big issues centring the question of when and why we stopped knocking on each other’s doors.

The set divides the stage into two distinct domestic worlds. To one side, Ana’s home; layered with the sentimental clutter of a long life, ornaments and keepsakes crowding a shelf beside antique chairs upholstered in faded pink. To the other, the sparse, slightly chaotic territory of youth; a cream sofa with an ironing board for a companion. That ironing board is doing a lot of thematic work, as it turns out.

Directors Kathryn Thomas and Christopher O’Shea, use a creative light and sound design to split stage with real intelligence; symbolic darkness pooling around characters who are unheard or unreachable, light carving out the emotional temperature of each scene with quiet precision.

The play opens on Isobel Rabbidge as Catherine, standing alone in the dark. When the lights rise, what we see is a young person held together by very little; their melancholy is in their posture and anguish across their face. It’s a bold, wordless opening statement, and Rabbidge earns it. Christopher O’Shea’s Ken arrives to break the spell, and together they establish the housemate dynamic with warmth and comic ease, celebrating Kevin ’07, negotiating the competing distractions of World of Warcraft and compulsive ironing, gently circling each other’s wounds.

The neighbourhood assembles around them: the polished, self-contained Christina; the relentless Nancy with her Neighbourhood Watch clipboard; and Milova, whose dogged pursuit of friendship Ana meets with hostility. We see the collective loneliness, and we are frustrated by the missed connections.

 

 

Then Ana arrives in full. I found out later that Miriam Fagueret’s authentic and powerful performance is a stage debut! Her Ana is genuine, funny, heartbreaking and fierce, an eighty-year-old woman who has survived prisoner of war camps across three countries and is absolutely not about to be managed by anyone. Fagueret finds the dark comedy in Ana’s mistrust without ever softening what lies beneath it, and when the play shifts into its magical realist register; reaching back into wartime Hungary through gorgeous ensemble work, she anchors those sequences with a lived-in gravity that is quietly extraordinary.

The production’s best moments arrive when the cast moves as a collective. The ensemble, including Caitlin Clancy, Penny Day, Gabriel Jab’bar, Jack Stout and Luca Savini, create the bridge between past and present with a physical attentiveness that gives the magic realism its legitimacy. Being an opening session, there were a few stumbles; entirely forgivable, and in truth, the trust and responsiveness between Rabbidge and Fagueret in navigating those moments only deepened the sense of a tight-knit ensemble at work.

The second act darkens considerably. Catherine’s truth and Ana’s collide, and Rabbidge meets the challenge with a raw, heart-wrenching honesty. The chemistry between the two leads is the engine of the whole piece; you feel the unlikely love of this odd couple friendship, which makes its ruptures genuinely painful.

Neighbourhood Watch is a long piece, and it carries weighty themes: grief, isolation, trauma, the peculiar modern loneliness of living wall-to-wall with strangers. But it is lifted throughout by the warmth of its central relationship and by a company that clearly believes in what they’re making.

For the HSC students who will study this text, seeing it live is an extraordinary gift. For everyone else: this is exactly the kind of story that reminds you what theatre, and neighbourhoods, are actually for.

To book tickets to Neighbourhood Watch, please visit http://www.lanecovetheatrecompany.com.au.

Photographer: Paul Frontczak

Spread the word on your favourite platform!

Neighbourhood Watch

Neighbourhood Watch

Neighbourhood Watch Rating

Click if you liked this article

6

The always reliable St Jude’s Players latest production is a journey from suburban Australia in 2007 to Hungary in World War Two with Lally Katz’s Neighbourhood Watch resulting in an excellent version of the play anchored by a marvellous performance by veteran actor Julie Quick as Ana.

Beginning the day after the election of the Rudd Labor Government in 2007 the play is centred in the neighbourhood of Mary Street in suburban Australia, where housemates Catherine (Ellie Schaefer) an out-of-work actor and Ken (Dylan Megaw) a diabetic want-to-be film maker are discussing the election. Across the road, an aging and often cantankerous Ana (Julie Quick) a Hungarian Australian refugee delivers a bag of leaves to her neighbour Katrina (Taya Rose) that have fallen from Katrina’s tree into Ana’s yard. Ana asks Katrina if she will pick her up from a specialist appointment the next day, but Katrina responds that she is too busy. Jovanka (Gail Morrison) an aging Serbian woman tries unsuccessfully to visit Ana.
As the plot progresses Ana and Catherine develop a friendship and as they talk Ana tells Catherine of her life story and the play travels to war time Hungary. As Ana’s journey unfurls, Catherine’s own story develops, affected by her own unhappy memories and life lessons are learned.

The multi award winning and one of Australia’s most performed playwrights, Lally Katz, based the character of Ana on stories that her real life aging Hungarian refugee neighbour told her. In Neighbourhood Watch, Katz honours her neighbour’s desires that her stories should not be forgotten. The plot explores the themes of isolation, friendship, war and the consequences of war, grief and the seeking of refuge. Katz weaves these themes cleverly throughout her play.

 

 

Director Lesley Reed, with many years of experience in professional and community based acting and recently directing productions for Galleon Theatre, Adelaide Repertory Theatre and the Stirling Players, has the formidable task of managing nine actors into around twenty five characters throughout the play and taking them from the Australian street to doctor’s rooms, chemist shop and cinema to war-torn Hungarian streets, tram, river crossing and dark fabric factory. This assignment she does seamlessly.

To help Lesley, set designer and construction coordinator Don Oakley, has provided innovative solutions to the staging given the limitations of stage size and budget, even if some solutions require a little creativity by the audience. Sarah Bradley’s original music is brilliant and adds another level to the production.

The whole cast, Julie Quick, Ellie Schaefer, Dylan Megaw, Nathan Brown, Taya Rose, Gail Morrison, Matthew Chant, Christopher Cordeaux and Megan Robson perform excellently, smoothly transitioning through their multiple characters. The experience of performing in over one hundred productions oozes from Julie Quick’s superb performance in particular. Her outstanding acting skills ameliorates the production.

St Jude’s Players’ production of Neighbourhood Watch is an ambitious project by this well-established theatre group, and they deliver an impressive result highlighted by superb acting worthy of the audience visiting Mary Street and beyond.

Reviewed by Rob McKinnon
Rating; 7 out of 10

Neighbourhood watch runs to 19 July 2025; remaining session dates and times are as follows:

Thursday August 14, Friday August 15, 7.30 pm.

Matinees Saturday August 16, 2pm.

Venue: St Jude’s Hall, 444 Brighton Rd, Brighton, South Australia.

Tickets (from July 17): https://www.trybooking.com/DCCMU
Or call 0436 262 628/email bookings@stjudesplayers.asn.au

To book tickets to Neighbourhood Watch , please visit https://stjudesplayers.asn.au/https-stjudesplayers-asn-au-wp-content-uploads-2024-11wp-content-uploads-2024-11-neighbourhood-watch_poster_final-jpg/.

Photographer: Les Zetlein

Spread the word on your favourite platform!