GRAND OPENING
28/03/2015 - 29/03/2015
Production Details
DATES: 28th & 29th March 2015
VENUE: WELLINGTON OPERA HOUSE
Barbarians throw open Opera House doors for Cuba Dupa Grand Opening
Who or what will be onstage when the curtain goes up?
Cuba Dupa festival is launching into being on the 28th and 29th of March and Barbarian is joining the celebrations by premiering a new work called Grand Opening, in a very exciting historical venue: the Wellington Opera House!
The Barbarians have been given the keys to one of Wellington’s most iconic performance venues – the Opera House – and as you’d expect, they’re turning the place upside down, throwing open the doors and letting everyone in. So come and join them!
Grand Opening is Barbarian’s contribution to the inaugural Cuba Dupa Festival, and while some secrecy needs to be maintained about the performance it will be characteristically bold and comical, involving a host of collaborators – some old friends, some brand new. Artists, community groups, eccentrics, outsiders, maybe even some celebrities. They’re taking the opportunity to give the Opera House an invigorating blast of fresh, progressive, FREE theatre, in an event that showcases the grandeur of the Opera House architecture.
“We’ve been dreaming about an opportunity like this for a long time: A chance to combine our passion for accessible, celebratory community events with our love of grand-scale theatricality,” says Barbarian’s dramaturge Thomas LaHood.
“The show is a massive logistical challenge. We’ve kept it short – only half an hour long – so people can keep enjoying the Cuba Dupa party. We want to provide our audiences with a wild ride!” says artistic director Jo Randerson. “We are biting our fingernails a bit – we’ve never quite done anything like it before. We can’t wait for people to see it!”
Barbarian has been dedicated to making waves with cult audiences at home and abroad since 2001. Since then it has grown into a progressive theatre powerhouse that collaborates with both international artists and local community groups to make complex, challenging works.
Last year Barbarian premiered four new works: a street kiosk for a company of Grim Reapers seeking help to change their image (Help Us Change), an intergenerational dialogue in song performed by choirs from age 6 to 80 (Sing It To My Face), a pop-up political hairdressing salon (Political Cuts) and an epic physical comedy about socio-economic privilege (White Elephant).
Now Barbarian is upping the stakes with Grand Opening, their most ambitious project to date. Dozens of artists and community collaborators are joining the company to fill the Opera House with exciting voices from all over Wellington. Over the next month Barbarian will reveal more information about our incredibly diverse collaborators.
So when you’re out celebrating Cuba Dupa style, come by the Opera House and see what’s lurking behind the curtain at Grand Opening.
Opera House, Opera House, Opera House – Wellington
Entry every 15 minutes throughout session times.
Duration 30 minutes.
Supported by Creative New Zealand.
Saturday 28th:
12:00pm-2:00pm,
4:15pm-6:15pm,
9:15pm-10:30pm
Sunday 29th:
12:00pm-2:00pm, 4:15pm-6:15pm
Theatre , Site-specific/site-sympathetic ,
30 mins
Engaging grumpy kids is doing something right
Review by Shannon Friday 29th Mar 2015
Grand Opening, an interactive show produced by Barbarian Productions, is basically a tour of the Opera House. Instead of seeing an empty space and being told about its history, we see artists and technicians at work. And we’re encouraged to think not only about the space, but also about our guides, our partners in the tour and all the myriad people who work here, and significantly, those who work in creative areas but not at the Opera House.
Before even arriving, there are buskers outside (and sometimes inside) who harass or help the various tour guides and tourists. We meet our tour guide – J-J-Jeremy, an aspiring but definitely amateur actor, in my group’s case – and ascend to the Dress Circle foyer. And here’s the first departure. So often in tours, the guide is hiding their personality behind the approved text for the tour and facts about the attraction. J-J-Jeremy, with his desperation to be recognized for past (totally ignorable) performances and networking is worth our interest. It’s another hint at the politics of this show: what are we encouraged to think about and admire here? What gets left in the shadows?
As we head into the auditorium, there’s a hitch – the door gets locked behind a departing tour group. And so begins a twisting, turning path through various backstage areas around the Opera House, each set up with different attractions. These include glimpses at the work that goes on there, such as the dominating techie who checks for OSH approved shoes backstage, or a frantic visit to the hair and makeup department, who are dismayed at the arrival of 20 extra people to get ready for the stage.
Other areas include performances or displays by artists working outside traditional venues, including CCCP, a community singing group, or the Clown Doctors. It is quite enjoyable, but since our drops in and out are so short, it’s hard to connect to these groups or artists much. A table at the end provides contact information for some groups.
The tour finishes in the auditorium, where we are encouraged to recount our experiences seeing shows there. It’s a lovely way to wind down after the high-energy excitement of the areas visited and prepare to head back into the craziness of Cuba Dupa. A cute final touch has each group’s exit providing the inciting incident for an ingoing tour group.
Ironically, for a show where so many of the people we interact with are doing the invisible work of theatre, the front of house on this show is pretty poor. Capacity on each tour is limited – some of the spaces visited are pretty small – so visitors need to reserve a place. In addition, there are quite a few legal bits that the single front of house person needs to communicate, which is done only by that person telling you once you reach the reservation window. This means that reserving a place takes almost 90 seconds per person. That may not sound like much until you consider how many people are going through. Expect some delays.
That said, I went through with a family whose kids went into the experience clearly overwhelmed and more than a little tired, but who finished smiling and engaged. If you’re reaching the tired, grumpy kids in your audience, you’re doing something right.
Copyright © in the review belongs to the reviewer
Comments
Thomas LaHood March 30th, 2015
Thanks for your review Shannon. A few things I'd like to add - Firstly Barbarian Productions would like to acknowledge the support, assistance and generosity of spirit shown by Positively Wellington Venues in hosting this performance. We felt at all times welcome and encouraged in the building, and I think the staff of PWV came to really appreciate the value of what we were trying to achieve.
Secondly I think it's important to acknowledge the scale of this production - with some 80 cast and crew members involved across a wide variety of performance spaces it was in some ways like a miniature street festival, and special acknowledgement must go to the stage and production management team - particularly Natasha James and Bridget Carpenter - for their stellar management of a massively challenging logistical exercise. The cast of six ushers - Guy Langford, Hayley Sproull, Leon Wadham, Alice Canton, Harriette Cowan and Erina Daniels worked incredibly hard, performing almost continuously for 10 hours across the two days.
Finally I want to thank our amazing audiences, at least a third of whom had had no advance publicity of the show and were lured in by our street hawkers or came snooping after hearing positive word-of-mouth from other festival-goers. It was certainly the most diverse audience Barbarian Productions has ever presented our work to and we were delighted by the responses. Despite our Front Of House difficulties (which fortunately we were able to remedy on the second day to dramatically reduce queue times) we had capacity attendance for almost every single tour - showing some 500+ people the bowels and backstage labyrinths of the Opera House.
It was a real wild ride for us and we feel exhilarated by our achievements.