10 episodes

The Witness Interview series - in depth Interviews with prominent practitioners in the Australian performing arts, by the Witness team - Robert Reid, Carissa Lee and Alison Croggon (Subscription-only)

The Witness Interview Witness Performance

    • Arts

The Witness Interview series - in depth Interviews with prominent practitioners in the Australian performing arts, by the Witness team - Robert Reid, Carissa Lee and Alison Croggon (Subscription-only)

    The Witness Interview: Stephen Armstrong and Dan Koerner

    The Witness Interview: Stephen Armstrong and Dan Koerner

    Ben Keene talks to Asia TOPA creative director Stephen Armstrong and director of design studio Sandpit and Asia TOPA digital dramaturg Dan Koerner about the innovation across digital platforms that followed when Covid-19 hit a major performing arts festival.

    • 37 min
    The Witness Interview: Daniel Schlusser

    The Witness Interview: Daniel Schlusser

    ‘I’m absolutely one for watching a performance that is held by a beautifully written play … but if it’s the only thing you’re eating, it’s horrifically dangerous to your system.’























    Ben Keene talks to director, performer and dramaturg Daniel Schlusser about his practice, his thinking about theatre, and his continually shifting relationship to reading, writing and performance. Schlusser’s work encompasses many approaches to theatre making and traverses opera and installation as well as a wide range of work for companies ranging from the Melbourne Theatre Company to Chunky Move to the exploratory work of his own company, Daniel Schlusser Ensemble. Over the past few decade he has created some groundbreaking work, including memorable interrogations of classics such as Ibsen’s A Doll’s House and Peer Gynt, and has worked with writers from Jack Hibberd to Falk Richter.







    He formed the Daniel Schlusser Ensemble in 2009, creating works such as They Divided the Sky (Belvoir), M+M (adapted from Bulgakov’s The Master and Margarita for Melbourne Festival), Menagerie (Melbourne Theatre Company), Ophelia doesn’t live here anymore (Chamber Made Opera), Poet #7, Life is a Dream, The Dollhouse, and Peer Gynt. Outside his own company, directing highlights include two works Thomas Bernhard’s The Histrionic for Malthouse/Sydney Theatre Company and Euripides’ Medea for the 2002 Melbourne Festival. Premiere productions of new Australian work including Ben Ellis’ Zombie State for Melbourne Workers Theatre/Union House Theatre, Angus Cerini’s The Barbeque for La Mama, and many works by Jack Hibberd including the premiere productions of The Death of Ivan Ilych, Legacy, Long Time No See and Slam Dunk (all La Mama) as well as his plays The Overcoat, Odyssey of a Prostitute and The Prodigal Son for Playbox.







    As a performer Schlusser’s work includes Trustees with Belarus Free Theatre and Malthouse, which he also co-wrote, Trapper directed by Christian Leavesley and Jolyon James (Arena Theatre Company at the Victorian Arts Centre and the Sydney Opera House) which was nominated for a Green Room Award for Best Ensemble, The Judgement directed by Samara Hersch (La Mama), the role of ‘Husband’ in Adena Jacob’s multi-award winning production of Persona (TheatreWorks/ Malthouse/Belvoir), and Laius in Matthew Lutton’s production On the Misconception of Oedipus (Malthouse/Perth TC) which won a Green Room Award for Best Ensemble. With THE RABBLE he created the role of Herod in Salome (Carriageworks) and the role of Bernarda Alba in Cageling (fortyfive downstairs/Carriageworks) for which he was nominated for a Green Room Award for Best Male Actor.















    Further reading:







    Daniel Schlusser: Official websiteReview: Alison Croggon on Peer Gynt (2009)Review: Alison Croggon on The Dollhouse (2011)

    • 29 min
    Witness Podcast: Does art matter?

    Witness Podcast: Does art matter?

    Six months into the pandemic, Team Witness meets online to chew the fat on art, life and making meaning now







    In an age of pandemic, social isolation and increasing crisis, what does it mean to make live performance? What does it mean to critique it? Could the connections offered by art be the technology we need to combat disinformation and conspiracy theories? Robert Reid, Carissa Lee and Alison Croggon ask these questions and more. Produced by Ben Keene.















    Further reading:







    All the web’s a stage – Robert ReidNext Wave: Rest – Carissa LeeAbsurd pleasures: Caca-capitalismo – Olivia MuscatArt in a time of emergency – Alison Croggon

    • 28 min
    The Witness Interview: Candy Bowers

    The Witness Interview: Candy Bowers

    ‘You are asking someone from the field into the house, and we are going to fight. Because I will always fight to decentralise the white patriarchy’

    Candy Bowers is an auteur – in her work, she is a playwright, producer, director, performer and an activist. In this wide-rangng conversation she talks to Alison Croggon about her hiphop show for young people, One the Bear. Co-written with her sister, composer Kim Busty Beatz Bowers, it’s latest in a long history of activist collaboration. Candy discusses her history as an independent activist theatre maker, and how she brings her vision of decolonisation to her audiences. “A lot of time in the theatre space it’s felt like war,” she says.  But, she tell us, things are changing.

    One the Bear opens next week at Arts Centre Melbourne as part of the Big World Up Close series. Bookings

    Further reading: Candy Bowers’ production of Susan Lori-Parks Fucking A

    You can subscribe to Witness podcasts through iTunes or an RSS feed. Click here for instructions on how to subscribe.

    • 44 min
    The Witness Interview: Nicola Gunn

    The Witness Interview: Nicola Gunn

    ‘I don’t have a process… What I do is put things that interest me on stage.’

    In this month’s podcast, Robert Reid talks to the unclassifiable Nicola Gunn, one of Australia’s most important and intriguing theatre makers, about her practice. They discuss her practice, from her early “Edward Gorey phase” to her most recent work, including Working with Children, which she considers her “disaster” to what she’s making now, a “live pedadogical exercise”.

    Gunn works as a performer, writer, director, producer and dramaturg. She makes live performances, videos, objects, site-specific installations and books that borrow from theatrical, choreographic, literary, comedic and visual art languages to create a mode of contemporary performance that plays with form and pursues a narrative, working across theatre and dance. Her solo work has been shown in Australia, New Zealand, Chile, the US, Canada, France, Austria, Portugal, the Czech Republic, Italy, Finland and Belgium.

    Producer: Ben Keene

    Further reading:

    Review of Working with Children

    You can subscribe to Witness podcasts through iTunes or an RSS feed. Click here for instructions on how to subscribe.

    • 40 min
    The Witness Interview: Thomas M Wright

    The Witness Interview: Thomas M Wright

    ‘There’s something fundamentally wrong with young men…that they gravitate to war, that they gravitate to violence, that they gravitate to self destruction…I’ve always felt compelled to wrestle with that.’

    In this wide-ranging conversation, writer, director and performer Thomas M Wright talks to Alison Croggon about his new film Acute Misfortune, his background as a theatre artist as one of the founding members of Black Lung during the Australian theatre renaissance of the early Noughties, the construction of masculinity and what’s wrong with maleness today, and the formal conventions of film.

    Thomas M Wright came to international notice when he was cast in Jane Campion’s series The Top of the Lake and has starred in many series and film since. His most recent film Acute Misfortune, which he directed and co-wrote, is a biopic about the controversial visual artist Adam Cullen, explores the destructive masculinity that runs through Australian culture. Based on the biography by journalist Erik Jensen, it won the Age Critics Prize at the Melbourne International Film Festival and is now showing in cinemas Australia-wide.

    Further reading

    Lauren Carroll-Harris in Kill Your Darlings on Acute Misfortune

    Alison Croggon on Oscar Redding’s Hamlet

    Alison Croggon on Black Lung’s Avast

    You can subscribe to Witness podcasts through iTunes or an RSS feed. Click here for instructions on how to subscribe.

    • 37 min

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