OLLIE IS A MARTIAN
Basement Theatre, Lower Greys Ave, Auckland
03/06/2014 - 07/06/2014
Production Details
An Existential Love Poem told with beauty, simplicity and idiocy.
“There are many different worlds. Many different galaxies. Many different Universes. And many, many different creatures.” – Ollie Is A Martian
The latest offering from multi-award winning theatre company Theatre Beating (The Magic Chicken, Squidboy) is a heart-warming love story of a martian lost on earth at Auckland’s premier venue for adventurous artists, The Basement Theatre.
After leaving his home on the delinquent red planet, a martian called Ollie arrives on Earth. It is wonderful! But why is he here? Moon hopping through the world Ollie asks the big questions about life, love and the universe.
Ollie Is a Martian is an existential tale of an outsider searching to find his place in the human world. Through physical comedy, solar systematic design, and playful, observant humour, this simple story of an alien far away from his home will charm and delight even the most cynical of earth humans.
“I watch the way your duck birds look at each other on the still water top, and I can see the two of us – her and I – floating on such a surface. Humans are… obsessed with Love, aren’t you?” – Ollie Is A Martian
As a student, performer Ollie Cox knew that he was different. He spent his teen years in the Special Learning Needs class at school without an exact diagnosis of his what his Special Learning Need was. It was here that Ollie was introduced to drama classes and subsequently a life-long pursuit in clowning from a personal and uniquely outside perspective.
After returning from two years living in Paris and training with world renowned clown professor Philippe Gaulier (alongside Theatre Beating member and recent Barry award nominee Trygve Wakenshaw) Ollie brings his first solo show to The Basement inspired by his experience of feeling just a little different to the rest of the world.
Ollie Is A Martian is co-written, designed and directed by Ollie’s uncle, actor, musician and comedian Barnie Duncan. Barnie is widely recognised from his popular and award- winning theatrical works Him (Overall Fringe Award – Auckland Fringe Festival 2013) Constantinople (winner Most Original Production – Auckland Theatre Awards) and Calypso Nights (finalist Best Newcomer NZ – International Comedy Festival).
Ollie has already stolen many hearts with his outings at Weird Together (the collaborative project of DJs Nick D and Dick Johnson) and at The Basement’s Scratch Night (a monthly testing ground for small theatrical adventures). With a deep familial tie of clown-based storytelling between its creators, Ollie Is A Martian is ready to set even more hearts in orbit during it’s galactical full length debut.
Venue: The Basement
Season: 3rd – 7th June 2014
Time: 7pm
Tickets: $18 / $14
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In addition to the 5-night season of this work, as a nod and to give back to a community close to Ollie’s heart, Theatre Beating is offering a free performance for people with Special Learning Needs on Friday 6th June at 2.30pm.
Out of this world
Review by Andrew Parker 04th Jun 2014
Ollie is a Martian. Or to go into a little more detail, he’s a man in a nifty blue track-suit with hair like Christopher Lloyd in Back to the Future and who sounds like Jemaine Clement on helium. Also he’s from Mars, represented by a red ball with a heart on it. He’s come to Earth, a planet he doesn’t fully understand in search of… well, a few things, but mostly just to comprehend it.
Ollie is a Martian is a show brimming with goodwill. It’s neither lewd, crude or in any way edgy (aside perhaps from one scene depicting a misunderstanding with a group of babies and a tube). It’s gently charming from the off as Ollie travels through a galaxy of corrugated iron stars on an Angry Birds moonhopper to some spacey lounge music. Despite its general lo-fi-ness, this is a strangely evocative version of space travel that calls to mind The Mighty Boosh, or possibly British children’s series Button Moon (Anyone? No? Okay, Moving on…) [More]
Copyright © in the review belongs to the reviewer
Comically eccentric otherworldly discourse
Review by Nik Smythe 04th Jun 2014
The plain wooden stage floor is virtually bare, with just a few plastic stars dotted about on the surrounding black walls. Above head height is a different story, thanks to Ruby Reihana-Wilson’s adroit lighting design whereby sparkly party lights, half bright white and half multicoloured, sprawl and sparkle across the ceiling to denote the sprawling galaxy. A handful of standard bulbs hang in little star-shaped chicken wire cages: a whimsical indication that the distances to a few celestial bodies are less vast than the rest.
Said galaxy continues to shine with unabated intensity as houselights fade and Ollie the Martian (Oliver Cox) enters on a blue spacehopper and sporting a blue 70s track suit with a red polo-skivvy, a yellow scooter helmet, aviation goggles and oversized hiking boots. He appears to half float, half stalk through space, eventually stopping before a shiny red ball with a loveheart drawn on it, which he declares to be Mars.
Introducing himself, our exotic visitor explains that he thinks he’s here for a reason, only he doesn’t know what it is. From there he proceeds to enlighten us in the ways of his culture, and to share his experiences with Earth and its fascinating inhabitants.
Cox’s comically eccentric performance is entirely as one might imagine an extraterrestrial creature trained in classical Earth oratory and dramatic techniques and subject to intensive direction. Just about every syllable is projected with awestruck profundity, not to mention idiosyncrasy, from quirky nouns like “mouth-hole” and “floatsman”, to seemingly daft time-measurements: “3 months, 37 days, 97 hours and 67 seconds”.
Given the presumed language and cultural barriers, the remarkable clarity and appeal of the alien’s resulting performance is testament to co-writer and director Barnie Duncan (who, also being Ollie’s uncle, is logically a Martian too). What’s more, Duncan evidently had time and energy left over to compose the arrestingly intense sound design comprising throbbing electro-noises with funky home-grown psychedelic space-music.
Ollie’s otherworldly discourse continually shifts between his reminiscences of his own planet, where females are the stronger species and they don’t wage war, and his various encounters on ours. Authentic science is frequently alluded to in the script, as with the comparative distance between Earth and Mars at different stages in their respective orbits, but is by no means the central purpose of the work.
A more intriguing apparent side-effect of Ollie’s research is his discovery of levels of emotional depths he’d never dreamed possible, both negative and positive. Meanwhile, scenes such as the preschool visit and the interview with Thomas the dog-owner play like broad sketches that perhaps take the humour to unnecessarily base and/or obvious levels, but it all more or less fits the established character. It strikes me, as Ollie declares “I was often misunderstood,” that the sentence would be equally true without the “was”.
Precisely what Ollie’s self-proclaimed unidentified purpose might be is not ultimately made clear by the fairly sudden conclusion. Nevertheless he has successfully endeared himself to we privileged few Earthlings, and maybe even given us something to cogitate before continuing on his intrepid journey of discovery.
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