MoodPorn

BATS Theatre, The Heyday Dome, 1 Kent Tce, Wellington

23/04/2019 - 04/05/2019

Production Details



New NZ Writer smashes onto the scene with scintillating original work.  

Matthew Loveranes and his new play MoodPorn is a young writer to watch, and he’s getting some serious attention.  

Shorlisted by Playmarket’s Playwrights b4 25 and selected for 2018’s Asian Ink competition, Matthew Loveranes’ MoodPorn has been a script that many have been itching to read. With its intriguing, opaque title and language that beautifully balances poetry with finely observed realism, there’s been an air of mystery around MoodPorn for quite some time. So what is it about? And what’s got the attention of acclaimed performers Heather O’Carroll and Ali Foa’i?

Atlas (Ali Foa’i) and Jane (Heather O’Carroll) are long lost friends from uni. It’s been years since they last saw each other and each are percolating some long-harboured secrets and passions. Seeing each other again seems to trigger an outflowing of emotion, some of it unwanted, and what comes out isn’t always pretty. MoodPorn is a chamber piece about guilt, unsaid feelings and learning to live with your baggage.

“I wanted to write a tender, juicy steak of a play that had different and complex flavours the more you chewed on it,” says writer Matthew Loveranes. With a Master of Arts in Scriptwriting from the International Institute of Modern Letters, MoodPorn marks Loveranes’ first script since graduation. “I went back to a tried and tested recipe: I wrote a chamber piece where secrets have been marinating between two flawed, interesting, vulnerable people. And I’m pretty satisfied with what I’ve made.”

Heather O’Carroll plays Jane and as former Programme Manager of BATS Theatre and a regular of Wellington mainstages, it’s fair to say she’s pretty familiar with what works and doesn’t in theatre. “As soon as I started reading I knew it was something I had to do, after years of being away from the theatre as an actor, it takes something special to bring you back. It has a charm, an intimacy and a truth to it, that I’m always looking for in plays, and MoodPorn has it in spades.”

Playing opposite her is Ali Foa’i as the mysterious Atlas. A playwright himself, Foa’i, was “drawn into the play by the hauntingly beautiful words.” He was also attracted to the role of Atlas because his experience was “essentially an immigrant story to New Zealand which as a Polynesian male I could relate to.”  

So what can we expect to feel after we walk out of MoodPorn? Loveranes puts it best: “I want them to see the value of physically going to a theatre and watching a play and seeing a life (or two) unfold before them. I’d love to cause tectonic shifts in how they feel – about the characters, the work, and maybe even the people in their lives. I want them to feel an orgasm of emotions: MoodPorn.”

MoodPorn
BATS Theatre the Heyday Dome
23 April to 4 May 2019
Tickets are $16/$22
BOOK at BATS


CAST:
Jane – Heather O'Carroll 
Atlas - Ali Foa'I

CREATIVES
Director - James Cain
Playwright - Matthew Loveranes
Set Designer – Lucas Neal
Lighting Designer – Tony Black

CREW
Lighting Operator – Isadora Lao
Stage Manager – Natasha Thyne
Production Manager – Cassandra Tse
Image Design – Ben Emerson
Photography – Roc Photography
Intimacy Choreography – James Kiesel 


Theatre ,


Verbally and physically eloquent; utterly absorbing interactions

Review by John Smythe 24th Apr 2019

We have a new and exciting playwright on the proverbial block and this James Cain-directed Red Scare Theatre Company ‘chamber piece’, performed by Heather O’Carroll and Ali Foa’i, does Matthew Loveranes proud.  

Mood porn. What even is that? It is certainly true that a wealth of moods are experienced by Jane (O’Carroll) and Atlas (Foa’i) as they reconnect a dozen-or-so years after those heady years when they and their mutual friend Eliot were ‘the three amigos’ at university.

Perhaps Loveranes – who has a Master of Arts in Scriptwriting from the International Institute of Modern Letters – simply set himself the challenge of writing a play that explores a full range of moods and calling it MoodPorn is a word-play on ‘food porn’, defined by Urban Dictionary as, “Close-up images of juicy, delicious food in advertisements.”

“I wanted to write a tender, juicy steak of a play that had different and complex flavours the more you chewed on it,” Loveranes says in the media release. “I went back to a tried and tested recipe: I wrote a chamber piece where secrets have been marinating between two flawed, interesting, vulnerable people. And I’m pretty satisfied with what I’ve made.” And so he should be.

Lucas Neal’s modern apartment set, graced with sleek pine shelving, white furnishings, David Trubridge light fittings, artworks by Reuben Patterson and Heather Straker (props & costume coordinator, Natasha Thyne), and judiciously lit by Tony Black, suggests someone – Atlas, as it turns out – has done very well for themselves.

Not that we discover exactly how, other than that he’s been overseas and returned when his mother was ill. A photo of him with Frank Ocean and Elizabeth Warren, plus a set of ‘Russian dolls’ featuring US presidents, suggests the USA – possibly something to do with academia … But I’m getting ahead of myself.  

Jane’s opening monologue brings her, and us, through the sequence of events that have led to this moment; to her sitting on a dining chair in this apartment. It is vividly written and delivered, as a random encounter on a bus is detailed alongside the Facebook ‘friending’ that has ignited the reunion. Loveranes’ word-pictures are surprising and succulent, and O’Carroll’s evocation of conflicting responses to the parallel events is rivetting.

The moment of reuniting has already happened, it turns out, which is important to know when, in retrospect, we seek further answers to questions not raised in the play. They have already covered that ground and it is up to us to fill in those blanks. The focus is firmly on their responses – their changing moods – as they get to know each other again and confront their unfinished business.

Given their shared passion for film studies back in the day, a key device for moving through their agenda items is film-related ‘top 5’ challenges, and later: ‘the worst thing you ever did’. Often raised as a diversionary tactic, they sometimes take them deeper. As such the devices work a treat, principally for the authenticity both actors bring to navigating what they encounter in each other – and also because we also become engaged empathetically in the answers to the challenges and the revelations that follow.

Because what is revealed and the subsequent effects are continually surprising and enriching, I cannot say much more here. You have to share their experiences for yourselves. Let me just reassure you it’s not just talk. The physical dynamics are eloquent, the very first meeting of Jane and Atlas is recalled in ‘present action’, and the more recent meeting between Atlas and Eliot is re-enacted ‘on demand’. And director James Cain’s skill in facilitating the utterly absorbing interactions between Heather O’Carroll and Ali Foa’i is augmented by ‘intimacy choreographer’ James Kiesel.

Matthew Loveranes’ wrote MoodPorn when he was 23 and 24; it was shorlisted by Playmarket’s Playwrights b4 25 and selected for 2018’s Asian Ink Playwriting Development Programme. As such his ability to manifest, with such intimate understanding, an earlier generation, and to explore an age and stage he has not yet lived through, is remarkable. He also takes risks relating to sex and sexuality that may jolt the complacency of those who think they have it all neatly sorted.

Enough said. MoodPorn is a thrilling debut for a clearly talented playwright. 

Comments

Graham Atkinson April 24th, 2019

Not being sure what to expect at this premiere I certainly wasn't suspecting such a tour de force. I fully expect this to feature in the 2019 Theatre Awards listings.

Can't recommend this too highly. 

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