A View From The Park at Old Mill Theatre

A View From The Park at Old Mill Theatre

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Posted 2020-10-03 by grooverfollow

Fri 23 Oct 2020 - Sat 31 Oct 2020



A park bench is the basis of six very different short plays at the Old Mill Theatre this October. Written and directed Perth playwright Noel O'Neill, each play features two actors and is presented by Maverick Theatre Productions under the umbrella title A View from the Park.

Passion Play is a comedy about an egotistical, lecherous theatre director who has walked out of auditions for an Easter play about the crucifixion and his agent trying to reason with him. It's followed by Daddy's Little Girl where a dominating father insists on orchestrating his daughter's wedding – but, underneath, it's about him not being able to let her go.



In Rules of Engagement, a man (played by Noel) is about to propose marriage after receiving some advice from his mother but soon realises his bride-to-be carries a lot of emotional baggage. A superstitious man meets his long-term partner in Sign Right There and she is under the impression he might move in with her, although he has other plans.

Walking Matilda is a twisted tale of betrayal and deception with the revelation of many secrets when two friends meet. Rounding out the set is One For Sorrow, featuring two lifelong friends – one is gravely ill and the other has neglected the friendship, so he tries to heal the wounds by lending a hand.

"I like the idea of the park bench because I consider it 'middle ground'," Noel said. "It's not 'your place' or 'my place' but a free atmosphere where people can either solve their differences or walk away from them. I always consider the bench itself to be a character that brings people together in conversation while exposing little pieces of what's going on inside."

The main challenge, according to Noel, is how to make each play interesting. "It's not so much about what the actors are doing but what they are doing to each other with the dialogue," he said. "That's where the action really is. I try to inject a little comedy into drama and a little drama into comedy because I always feel life is like that."



Born in Ireland, Noel moved to New York in his late teens and appeared in many off-Broadway productions before moving to Perth more than 20 years ago, clocking up numerous awards for writing and directing. He has previously worked as a lecturer at the WA Academy of Performing Arts and Perth Actors' Collective and is currently appearing as Watto in the ABC-TV series The Heights."The appeal of A View From The Park is the fact you have six unknown situations and there's s a curiosity to that," Noel said. "When you present a full play, you have one story and can more or less figure out the ending in most cases. But with the park bench plays you have six situations and the audience really has no idea of the outcome each time."



Malcolm Douglas plays the father Harry in Daddy's Little Girl and describes him as "a bit of a family despot". "He likes to control people and events around him," he said. "His daughter Mimi is getting married and he's in a bit of a snit about not being able to run things his way. Of course, Harry loves his little girl and would do anything for her but he has to have his ego stroked in just the right manner."

The main challenge, according to Malcolm, is that Harry is a New Yorker of a particular type. "It will be tricky to avoid the Scorsese characters that knock about in my head, especially after recently seeing his latest film The Irishman," he said. "Joe Pesci's role in that is probably a close match to Harry."



A professional actor with an impressive CV, Malcolm has worked in all of Ireland's major theatres and has toured with productions to the US, UK, Hong Kong and Japan. "Daddy's Little Girl appealed because it's a beautifully observed two-hander concerning a volatile father-daughter relationship," he said. "The dialogue bounces along like so many balls on a pool table and is laced with a wry familial humour."

A View from the Park plays at 7.30pm October 23, 24, 25, 29, 30 and 31 with 2pm matinees October 24, 25 and 31. All tickets are $20 – book at www.trybooking.com/BLLMM . The heritage-listed Old Mill Theatre is on the corner of Mends Street and Mill Point Road, South Perth (opposite the Windsor Hotel and Australia Post).



#october
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#south_perth
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!date 23/10/2020 -- 31/10/2020
%wnperth
132121 - 2023-06-13 08:31:26

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