All posts by lorna

Blak Yak January 2016 Meeting

Title: Blak Yak January 2016 Meeting
Location: TBC
Link out: Click here
Description: Blak Yak Theatre 2016 January meeting, all comers are welcome!

Please message Lorna Mackie for the location.
Start Time: 18:00
Date: 2016-01-17
End Time: 20:00

2015 AGM and Annual Christmas Party

Title: 2015 AGM and Annual Christmas Party
Location: Email for Details
Link out: Click here
Description: Our annual AGM and Christmas knees up, come one, come all!

Drinks and Foodstuffs from 4pm, meeting from 7pm ish.
Start Time: 16:00
Date: 2015-12-20
End Time: 23:59

Saucy Jack and the Space Vixens

Polish your disco balls and set your glitter beams to fabulous!

Saucy Jack and the Space Vixens is coming!

Book and Lyrics by Charlotte Mann and Michael Fidler Music by Jonathan Croose and Robin Forrest
Based on original ideas by Johanna Allitt, Simon Curtis, Charlotte Mann and Michael Fidler

Directed by Lorna Mackie

The UK cult classic musical “Saucy Jack and the Space Vixens” produced by Blak Yak Theatre in collaboration with Phoenix Theatre comes to the Hamilton Hill memorial hall November 19 – December 05 2015

“Cheers meets Red Dwarf meets Rocky Horror” in this tack-tastic naughty show set in a galaxy far, far away….
As the audience settle back for an evening of cosmic cabaret, all is not well at Saucy Jack’s… The evil shadow of a serial killer looms over the bar; cabaret acts are being killed off one by one, found stabbed by the heel of a sequinned slingback shoe.

WARNING: This show contains crude language, adult situations, drag, bad wigs, disco beams and glitter! With music set to country rock, gospel, blues and disco, it’s everything a trash- talking musical should be!

The show contains no swearing, nor is there any nudity however the show is not intended for young audiences. It is brash without being offensive… It is sexy but not lewd… It is cool and crazy but never chaotic… and it pretends to be a little more racy than it really is.

Book via TryBooking

 

 

Never Ever Move It

Blak Yak are thrilled to be presenting two one act productions, ‘Move It’ and ‘Never Ever’, as part of their short play season downstairs at Rigby’s. Doors will open at 7pm and food and drink will be available for purchase.

For two nights only, so book early and book often.

September 12th and 13th.

Bookings through http://www.trybooking.com/ITTP

Or try your luck at the door 🙂

 

Poster for Never Ever
Poster for Never Ever

Audition – Saucy Jack and the Space Vixens

Title: Audition – Saucy Jack and the Space Vixens
Location: Bassendean Community Hall
Link out:
Description:

Saucy Jack and the Space Vixens
Saucy Jack and the Space Vixens

The UK cult classic musical “Saucy Jack and the Space Vixens” produced by Blak Yak Theatre in collaboration with Phoenix Theatre comes to the Hamilton Hill memorial hall in November, and we are proud to announce auditions will take place on the weekend of 1st and 2nd August 2015. Call backs if necessary will be held on Saturday 8th August.

We are looking to cast 9 principal actors – 5 male and 4 female roles plus chorus. All roles are speaking, singing and dancing, with a large dose of improv. All ages are stage ages.

“Cheers meets Red Dwarf meets Rocky Horror” in this tack-tastic naughty show set in a galaxy far, far away….
As the audience settle back for an evening of cosmic cabaret, all is not well at Saucy Jack’s… The evil shadow of a serial killer looms over the bar; cabaret acts are being killed off one by one, found stabbed by the heel of a sequinned slingback shoe.

The staff at the Saucy Jack’s bar are terrified but their boss, Saucy Jack himself, doesn’t seem that bothered by the threat of murder or the tragic loss of his cabaret acts – he’s more concerned it’ll be bad for business.

We meet and hear the dreams and fears of the characters in the bar: down-trodden waitress Booby Shevalle, talented young saxophonist Sammy Sax, willing barman Mitch Maypole and eccentric regular at the bar, Dr. Willhelm von Whackoff.

There is much excitement at the explosive arrival of Chesty Prospects, a plastic smuggling outlaw: there’s an eco-war going on in this part of the galaxy and fashionable fabrics like bubble-wrap have been made illegal. Chesty charms the bar, talks business with Jack and heralds the arrival of The Space Vixens who hit the ground singing their dance anthem ‘Glitter Boots Saved My Life’.

These super fashion crime fighters from a groovier galaxy are part celebrity, part super-hero: strong, sexy, liberated…and all woman! Their mission is to fight crime and liberate the universe harnessing the Power of Disco. The audience join these sassy space cops as they arrive on Frottage III to uncover the Slingback Killer and watch as they are drawn into a cosmic underworld where their unique powers promise justice, hope and unadulterated funk!

WARNING: This show contains crude language, adult situations, drag, bad wigs, disco beams and glitter! With music set to country rock, gospel, blues and disco, it’s everything a trash- talking musical should be!

The show contains no swearing, nor is there any nudity however the show is not intended for young audiences. It is brash without being offensive… It is sexy but not lewd… It is cool and crazy but never chaotic… and it pretends to be a little more racy than it really is. However, as this show has adult humour and dark themes, all auditionees must be 18 years of age at the time of audition.

To book your auditions, please email the Director (Lorna Mackie) via lorna@htth.com.au or phone 0413031509 (email preferred).

We look forward to seeing you at the auditions!

– Mitch Maypole – Male, barman. Dreams of something more, is required to strip to underwear. 20 – 30 Tenor

– Sammy Sax – Male, singing saxophone player – must be able to actually play the sax and sing; slightly geeky and dreams of a space vixen of his very own. 18 -30 Tenor

– Dr Von Wackoff – Male –psychologist, observing human behaviour in the bar. Narrates chunks of the show. 30 + Baritone

– Saucy Jack – Male – bar owner, acts as ringmaster of the cabaret, is charismatic, sleazy, strong and powerful – a very big role! 25+ Baritone

– Booby Shevalle – Drag Queen – working as an entertainer and cocktail waitress in the bar but dreams of something better. .Very strong female role, a great “transformational” piece. 20+ Tenor

– Vulva Savannah – Female, cabaret performer – doubles with Chesty and Shirley or Chorus member 30+ Alto

– Bunny Lingus – Female, space vixen, strong female role. 20+ Alto

– Jubilee Climax – Female, queen of the space vixens, strong female role. 25+ Mezzo

– Anna Labia – Female, Space vixen recruit – keen to make a good impression, strong female role. 20+ Soprano

– Shirley Tri-Star = Female, insterstellar space trucker – doubles with chesty 25+ Mezzo

– Chesty Prospects – Female, plastic smuggler – doubles with Shirley 25+ Mezzo

– various chorus members
Start Date: 2015-08-01
Start Time: 10:00
End Date: 2015-08-02
End Time: 16:00

Picasso’s Women

Blak Yak Theatre is thrilled to announce their production of Brian McAvera’s Picasso’s Women for a strictly limited season at the Chrissie Parrott Arts centre in August.

Picasso’s Women is a series of monologues told by the eight women who lived with, loved, and inspired Pablo Picasso. It is the story of their lives and experiences with the man who was to become the most influential artist of the twentieth century. The production uncovers their buried histories and gives voice to the women who were used, and frequently abused, by Picasso.

So often in theatre (and cinema, and literature) the complaint is heard that there are not enough strong roles for women. Picasso’s Women is a rare beast indeed to showcase eight powerful, fascinating, and engaging female characters. For art lovers, history buffs, or theatre aficionados, Picasso’s Women is meticulously researched and masterfully written. Powerful, confronting, hilarious, and heartbreaking, the show is a tour de force for the actresses.

The monologues can stand alone but, viewed as a whole, they deliver a satisfying synergism. Each piece has been individually rehearsed, with a director and performer collaborating to bring to life each of Picasso’s women.

The eight monologues–on average–are each 30 minutes long, and so are spread over two nights. Each night can be enjoyed on its own or Blak Yak is offering a discount price for both evenings.

Picasso’s Women–Harlequin explores the artist’s early life and features Fernande, Eva, Gaby, and Olga, on August 21, 22, 27, 30.

Picasso’s Women–Minotaur examines Picasso’s later years and features Marie-Therese, Dora, Françoise, and Jacqueline, on August 20, 23, 28, 29.

 

Picasso’s Women will be presented at Chrissie Parrott Arts, 4 Sussex St, Maylands. All performances commence at 7.30pm sharp. Tickets are $25 Adult, $22 Concession, or $40 for both nights (tickets can be upgraded at any time) at Click to book!

Cast/Directors

Jacqueline – Sherryl Spencer, directed by Melissa Merchant 
Fernande – Nisha Rivett, directed by Rob Whitehead
Francoise – Anna Head, directed by Jarrod Buttery 
Olga – Chandra Wyatt, directed by Joy Northover 
Dora – Nadia Collins & Sharnya Thomson, directed by Christine Ellis 
Eva – Jacinta Tavelli-Williams, directed by Michael McAllan 
Marie-Therese – Breeahn Jones, directed by Kimberley Shaw 
Gaby – Rose McKenna, directed by Louise C. Carson

 

Audition – Picasso’s Women

Blak Yak Theatre is thrilled to announce their upcoming production of Brian McAvera’s Picasso’s Women. This show is a series of 8 monologues which tell the story of the women (the mistresses, the wives, and the muses) of arguably the twentieth century’s best known artist, Pablo Picasso. Honest, brutal, funny, and confronting, this production pulls no punches.

The 8 monologues will be staged over 2 nights (4 each night), with performances on August 20, 21, 22, and 23, and again 27, 28, 29, and 30. The roles require strong performers who can carry a performance.

Each monologue will have an individual director, with an overall director ensuring the consistency of the production.

Auditions: Sunday, June 15th between 10am and 5pm.

Where: The Liddelow Pavilion at the Cannington Exhibition Centre (corner Albany Hwy and Station St, Cannington – where the Cannington Greyhounds race).

Auditionees are asked to prepare a two-minute monologue (no longer please) which showcases their talent. They may also be asked to read from selected pieces which will be available on the day.

 

There are only 28 audition slots on the Sunday, so we encourage you to book early. Bookings can be made at melissamerchant@hotmail.com.

 

Fernande

Fernande was Picasso’s first French model/ lover/ muse from 1904–12 and the subject of many of Picasso’s Rose Period paintings (1905-07). There is a quiet inner dignity to her character and sadness at the loss of the relationship, but also a person who is not afraid to speak her mind. This is a solo piece, a continuous monologue and so requires good memory, concentration, and recall. A great nuanced role, challenging but very rewarding for all actors and a wonderful string for your bow so DON’T be put off!!

 

Age range: Open.  From mid-20s +, as it is set in ‘limbo’ so can be viewed as any age or indeed ageless…

Director Rob Whitehead

 

Eva

Eva Gouel (real name Marcelle Humbert)

Eva is a social climber. She met Picassoin 1912, when she was twenty seven, and he was on his way toward fame and fortune. She died 1915 at the age of thirty from tuberculosis.

The actor cast in this role must look believably within this age range (27 to 30). She must also be able to portray a woman who is not in robust health!

Director: Michael McAllan

 

Gaby

Gaby Depeyre was involved with Picasso during 1915-16, when she was 27 and he was 34. Picasso began his affair with Gaby when his mistress Eva Gouel was dying of tuberculosis and kept it a secret from everyone – including his closest friends. At the time of the affair, Gaby was involved with – and eventually married – American artist Herbert Lespinasse. Gaby lived until she was 82.

 

The role: A 27 year old “ravishing” woman with a strong, no-nonsense character, Gaby comes from a comfortable family life, and has an allowance that allows her to live independently in Paris. She is already part of the artistic circles of the time and is not in awe of Picasso. Gaby – while happy to dally with Picasso – ultimately rejects him. The role is suitable for ages 25-80.

Director: Louise Carson

 

Olga

Age range:  40–60.  Picasso’s first wife and mother of his firstborn child, Paulo.  They were married in 1918 and never divorced, so they remained technically married until Olga’s death from cancer in 1955 at the age of 64.

 

She is a proud, strong, and embittered woman whose sense of injustice has driven her to the edge of insanity.  She still maintains her ballerina’s grace and poise, and shows glimpses of vulnerability.  This role requires the dexterity to switch emotions between comic sarcasm, vulgarity, anger, and melodrama almost without taking a breath.

Director: Joy Northover

 

Marie-Therese

In 1927, Picasso met Marie-Thérèse Walter (1909-1977), a 17-year-old whom Picasso then lived with in a flat across the street from his marital home. Marie-Thérèse and Picasso had a daughter, Maya, on October 5 1935. Marie-Thérèse understandably became jealous when Picasso started to fall in love with Dora Maar in 1936. It was Marie-Thérèse who was the inspiration for many of Picasso’s famous Vollard Suite etchings. Marie-Thérèse died by hanging herself in 1977, four years after Picasso died.

 

The role: While the monologue is set after Marie-Thérèse’s death, the image of Marie portrayed is that of the ingénue when she first met Picasso. She is a warm, gentle woman. She was bubbly, bright, and cheerful, and is filled with nostalgic longing about her time with Picasso. Stage age late teens or early 20s.

Director: Lorna Mackie

 

Dora

Dora Maar was a French photographer, poet, and painter, best known for being a lover of Picasso over nine years. He called her his private muse who brought back his love of painting.

The role: Dora Maar had a remarkable voice; she was intelligent, thus the voice should mirror her qualities: alert, perceptive, often dryly witty. She can be any age from mid-twenties to mid-thirties. Dora exists, for the purpose of this play on two levels; the early Dora, a sceptical, free-wheeling spirit and independently minded. The other Dora however is the image of herself that Picasso constructed, and which she eventually became: compliant, doormat, hermit. This piece will have 2 women portraying Dora to reflect the different aspects of her nature and experiences. They do not have to look alike and the actresses chosen will have a lot of input into the interpretation of the script.

Director: Christine Ellis

 

Francoise

Picasso met Françoise Gilot in France, 1943.  She was 21, he was 63.  An artist herself, she lived in Picasso’s world.  Aware that Dora was “on the way out” Françoise knew what she wanted, and knew what Picasso desired.  They lived and worked, loved and fought, together for ten years.  Françoise bore Picasso two children but, eventually incensed by his infidelities, left him in 1953. The only one of Picasso’s women still alive, Françoise is a successful artist living in New York and Paris.

The role:  Articulate, intelligent, and resolute, Françoise is frank in her praise of Picasso’s genius and in her condemnation of his improprieties.  The monologue looks back over her time with him, placing Françoise in her 30s or 40s.  She is well-spoken, professional, and unequivocal.

Director: Jarrod Buttery

 

Jacqueline

Remembered by history as ‘the unhappy widow who was to emerge in all her malevolence after the artist’s death’, Jacqueline Roque was Picasso’s last wife . . . or perhaps his final victim. McAvera describes the woman as ‘single-minded’ who was ‘indisputably . . . a good wife to Picasso in the practical sense’. Jacqueline was very much a woman of contrasts – generous to a fault with strangers and yet perceived as miserly and vindictive with Picasso’s children after his death.

Age between 27 and 60, the actress playing Jacqueline should be able to portray a ‘doormat’, under which a feisty, funny and engaging woman hides.

Director: Melissa Merchant

 

Blak Yak Directors Workshop

Blak Yak are proud to present a free Directors Workshop for new, budding and existing talent within the theatre community. This workshop is intended to help refresh existing directors in production management and give fresh faces some basics in putting together a show. It is a way of getting an introduction to broader aspects of stage and offer a deeper understanding of how things work behind the curtains.

We’d like this workshop to be open to the Perth theatre community as a whole and particularly targeting at the one act seasons in September. If you, or someone you know, are interested in taking part or require more information, please let us know. The proposed date is the 8th of August and the venue is currently being finalized. We will post an update in the following days.

Continue reading Blak Yak Directors Workshop

Blak Yak 2014/15 Seasons

Blak Yak are currently accepting one act and full length submissions from prospective playwrights and directors for shows for the end of 2014 and 2015.

If you have an expression of interest  or require further information please contact us with a copy of the play via http://www.blakyak.com.au/201314-season-submissions/

 

Blak Yak like to provide a chance for both experienced and first time writers & directors to stage their performances. It’s an opportunity to propose contemporary shows or alternative works on stage. Submissions close on the 9th of August.

Blak Yak – Special AGM

We will be holding a Special AGM on Sunday 23rd June at 4pm.

We would love to see as many members and interested people as possible attending, as our last AGM was very poorly attended. GET INVOLVED!

Please use the Contact page to register your attendance and to get location details.