a+coles

As a child, on my stomach, I would breathe-in the pages of Coles Funny Picture Book.

Black ink lithographs and sketches of faces and animals and people. Cartoons, rhymes, the deaf and blind alphabet, riddles and jokes and slogans and advice and curious small print that made me squint and come in closer to the book’s spine.

So how could I resist when I received an email from Hilary Bell letting me know that she has written a musical with husband Phillip Johnston and there would be a 30-minute excerpt showed at “my local” – Sidetrack Theatre as a part of New Musicals Australia’s Writers Weekend. The email said…

Do Good And You Will Be Happy
BY HILARY BELL AND PHILLIP JOHNSTON
DIRECTED BY JOHN BELL
WITH VALERIE BADER, BLAZEY BEST, PETER COUSENS, DARREN GILSHENAN AND JUSTIN SMITH
Remember Cole’s Funny Picture Book, that Victorian cornucopia of picture puzzles, rhymes and catches, moral tracts, pathetic poetical gems, covering the map from Pussyland to Temper Land to Funny Australian Natives? Do Good And You Will Be Happy is a fantastic imagining of E.W. Cole, assisted ably by Mrs Cole, creating this concoction as a way of saving the world. Overnight.
Produced by New Musicals Australia, we will perform a half-hour excerpt on:
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 26 | 12.30 PM | SIDETRACK THEATRE: 142 ADDISON RD, MARRICKVILLE | RSVP@newmusicals.com.au
If you’re intrigued but unable to attend, let me know and I can send you a package, containing images and an outline of the show.
Hope to see you there if you can make it!

The excerpt itself had a wonderful kaleidoscopic selection of images and characters – some I remembered, some I didn’t. It was such an exciting thing to be offered an insight into the work in progress – by some of Sydney’s most loved artists – Phillip a jazz musician of high regard and prolific repetoir, Hilary – one of Australia’s most loved playwrights and every emerging writer’s sweetheart/ Griffin writer’s course teacher/guide, John Bell – Mr Shakespeare himself… and then a cast of, well let me put it this way, wow-ers.

So imagine my horror and surprise when a panel of experts offered public feedback to the writers of the work. And not just feedback – extensive criticism and dramaturgical “suggestions”. Kris Stewart introduced the panel of feedback providers – Stuart Maunder, Matthew Robinson and Dennis Watkins. But not the writers. And did not bother to recite the large and impressive accomplishments of the authors. Imagine my horror when the youngest and least accomplished person on the panel started quoting anonymous luminaries about creative at Hilary Bell! Imagine my embarrassment when he refused to take note of Stuart Maunder’s gentle shepherding… And we as knowledgeable and informed audience members shifted in discomfort at the ignorance and arrogance in how the authors were being spoken to and how their developing work was being spoken about.

A barrage of comments from Matthew Robinson. Barrage.

And Hilary gave a gentle and calm and articulate reply to the interrogations.

She gave context and perspective.

She did not back down. She did not attack. She calmly and cleverly negotiated the situation.

I found it remarkable and depressing that not ONE of the panel representatives was a woman. And that by and large musicals seems to be dominated by men, and their tastes and opinions.

I found it remarkable how these writers were being regarded and spoken to. And felt very strongly indeed that New Musicals Australia, if they want to develop and foster ORIGINAL musical writing – and not just regurgitate musicals and dramaturgical templates they have “learnt in a recent workshop in New York” – perhaps they need to refine and re-assess how they speak to writers and composers. And I suggest they may want to re-define how they engage with new work in general. They also might want to re-think or thoroughly brief who they approach to give feedback and in what setting feedback is offered.