Holmes & Watson

Past Show

Holmes and Watson

WRITTEN BY JEFFREY HATCHER
DIRECTED BY AMY CALVERT

Holmes and Watson

Sherlock Holmes is dead. Or so it is assumed. The world knows the great detective went over the falls at Reichenbach with his nemesis Professor Moriarty. But as Holmes’ body was never retrieved, a number of frauds, fakes, and charlatans have come forward since to lay claim to his identity, and it falls to Dr. Watson to disprove them.

Then a telegram arrives informing Watson that three men, each claiming to be Holmes, have been committed to a remote asylum off the coast of Scotland. Now Watson must discover if one of the mad men is the real Sherlock Holmes.

NOTE: This performance will have recorded gunshot sound effects.

WHEN:

27 February – 8 March

Cast

Amy Calvert

Director

Amy Calvert

Amy Calvert has been involved with several theatre companies in various capacities, on and off stage.
Directing highlights include THE SWEET DELILAH SWIM CLUB and, part of the Direction Team for CONFUSIONS both for The 1812 Theatre, OLIVER with Eltham Little Theatre and THE PINK UMBRELLA for Peridot Theatre.Onstage in recent years, Amy has appeared in CHAIM’S LOVE SONG, CALENDAR GIRLS, SHERLOCK HOLMES and THE ADVENTURES OF THE SUICIDE CLUB with 1812 Theatre, LOVE, LOSS AND WHAT I WORE with Encore Theatre Company and THE WISDOM OF EVE with Peridot Theatre.

Joseph Bough

John Watson

Joseph Bough

This is Joseph’s first collaboration with Mordialloc Theatre Company. He has previously worked with the
BBC and Amazon on audio dramas. Notable stage roles include Joseph in JOSEPH AND THE AMAZING
TECHNICOLOR DREAMCOAT, Reecey in OUR HOUSE and Orin in LITTLE SHOP OF HORRORS.
Joseph is excited to support his fellow cast members and hopes audiences enjoy his portrayal of John Watson.

Fadi Zeitoune

Doctor Evans

Fadi Zeitoune

Holmes and Watson marks only the second play Fadi has performed in almost 30 years, and his first with Mordialloc Theatre Company. He was delighted to play Lenny in Neil Simon’s Rumors earlier this year with Heidelberg Theatre Company. Holmes and Watson returns Fadi to the world of Conan Doyle, after playing the famous detective in high school in 1991. He is grateful to the team at Mordialloc for being so welcoming.

Hamish Walker

Orderly

Hamish Walker

Holmes and Watson is Hamish’s first venture into acting. He is more experienced behind the camera, having gone to film school at VCA and then working briefly in visual effects, before a decade-long career as a television news producer at the BBC, the ABC and Sky News. He now seeks to balance a sensible career as a public servant with the creativity of treading the boards. Hamish enjoys absurdist dark humour, in particular the writings of British-Irish playwright Martin McDonagh.

Chloe Palmer

Matron

Chloe Palmer

Chloe is a lifelong fan of the Sherlock Holmes mysteries and is thrilled to collaborate on thisproduction. She is excited to return to Mordialloc Theatre Company where she previously worked behind the scenes on CONSENT in 2023 and performed as the villainous Sybil Burlington in DAISY PULLS IT OFF  in 2022.

Felix Green

Holmes 1

Felix Green

Felix is a writer and performer from South Australia. After several acting stints throughout school, he turned his attention to literary studies for many years but continued to feed his passion for performance by reciting poetry at open mics around the world. He returned to the theatre in early 2024 when he took on the bilingual role of the Fire Chief in Max Frisch’s THE FIRE RAISERS at the 1812 Theatre for which he was nominated for a Lyrebird Award.

Shane Morris

Holmes 2

Shane Morris

HOLMES AND WATSON is Shane’s third production since returning to community theatre after a very long break. Most recently, he played Bruce in THE NORMAL HEART at Strathmore Theatrical Arts Group, and before that George in DON’T DRESS FOR DINNER with Essendon Theatre Company. Back in his youth Shane performed with a variety of Melbourne theatre companies, including Heidelberg, Malvern, Williamstown, Hampton and The Powerhouse Players, but this is his first appearance with Mordialloc Theatre Company. Shane particularly enjoys the collaborative creative process that comes from working in an ensemble cast

Jack Hookey

Holmes 3

Jack Hookey

Jack is a versatile performer with experience in rock’n’roll, stand-up comedy, short film, sitcoms, voice-over, and even salsa dancing. He is thrilled to make his theatre debut in HOLMES AND WATSON, portraying Holmes 3. A highlight of Jack’s acting journey was starring in the sitcom UNDERGRADS during his Melbourne University days, capturing the antics of student life. Jack’s performance in Holmes and Watson promises to leave audiences both entertained and delightfully perplexed.

David Wearne

Inspector

David Wearne

David was born in Worcester in the U.K but only started in theatre in 1996 in CALAMITY JANE. He has played ensemble parts in two operas for FAAMPAC and performed and directed many shows for Mornington C.E.F. players, performed in many plays with Frankston Theatre Group and performed in many musicals with Peninsular Light Operatic Society. Over the years David has directed many shows including THE MOUSE TRAP, ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO’S NEST and TWELVE ANGRY MEN. David’s TV work includes NEIGHBOURS, COLES, WENTWORTH, S.B.S {SUNSHINE} and a movie called LONE WOLF.

Gilbert Gauci

Moriarty

Gilbert Gauci

A greedy actor with 55 plays, this is oddly Gilbert’s debut with Mordialloc Theatre Company. Somehow typecast in his favourite roles of villains, last year he played monstrous-looking serial killer, Jonathan Brewster in ARSENIC AND OLD LACE with Encore Theatre Company and then covetous businessman, Mr. Potter in its A WONDERFUL LIFE with Powderkeg Players. Aside from villains, Gilbert has still played a mixture of colourful characters in his long list of stage performances such as prone-to-error secret agent, Maxwell Smart in GET SMART with Eltham Little Theatre) and more recently, the kind and lucky Miller’s son, Jack in PUSS IN BOOTS  with Encore Theatre Company

Reviews

VDL Performance Review

Reviewed by Andrew McAliece,
7 Mar 2024

I need to confess that no matter how I try I cannot fathom the appeal of Agatha Christie, which is undeniably widespread and enduring. Her characters to me are nothing more than cardboard cut-out stereotypes with all the depth and complexity of a saucer. And they are repeated in most of her stories: the military man, the spinster, the attractive young lady, the dashing young man, the doctor, the adventurer, the policeman, the upper-class sir or lady. And they all say and think exactly, and only, what you would expect them to say and think.

Having said that, Mordialloc theatre Company’s latest offering, ‘And Then There Were None’, was very much enjoyed by the audience when I attended and there was a bum on every seat, which says a great deal about the play and Christie’s popularity.

The play was adapted by Christie from her book of the same name. The original title, when the book was released in 1939, was an extremely un-PC version, which the Americans changed immediately for its release there and which has, fortunately, now been adopted everywhere.

There’s a glaring, truck-size plot chasm (it’s much more than a hole). It’s not giving anything away to reveal that all ten people on the island have each committed, or been responsible for, a murder. How any single person could possibly know this deep dark secret about ten completely disparate individuals, especially given that most of them have never revealed their dastardly act to anyone else, is glossed over. Few people seemed to mind this, apart from me.

I don’t believe dialogue was ever Christie’s strong suit and some of it got a lot of laughs from this modern audience, which I’m sure was not what Christie was aiming for.

Most of the actors, very much looked exactly as you would imagine their character to look, clearly thanks to the director’s astute casting. The cast did as well as one could with the bombastic, dated dialogue, which they almost all imbued with as much realism as was possible.

Neil Barnett played the dementing General very well. Christine Bridge was the prim, judgemental and censorious spinster. She did a very fine job and never let her persona slip in any way.

Tim Byron was the policeman, who started off with a very convincing South African accent, which is a very tricky one to master, and then switched very neatly to a lower class English accent. Top marks. Rob Coulson played the doctor admirably, being both authoritative and anxious.

Stuart Daddo-Langlois apparently had a fifty-year acting hiatus, but you wouldn’t know it. He was eminently believable and pompous as the retired judge. Welcome back to the stage. Chris Kirby as the butler, I felt needed a little more dignified deference in his demeanour.

Rory McGrath’s upper class English accent needed refining and accentuating and perhaps more fluidity in his dialogue. Kay Morton, to be fair, had very little indeed to work with, her dialogue being some of the most banal in the play. But she made as much of it as was possible. She seemed a little stilted in her physicality. More “stage business” to keep her occupied would have perhaps helped.

Josh Radford had a very small role (only his second) as the boat skipper, and we wish him well for his future acting endeavours. Many more roles ahead, fingers crossed.

Monique Wasa gave a sterling performance as the secretary. She had the most of all the cast to work with and was very much up to the task. An impressive performance in every way. Brett Whittingham as the adventurer was very convincingly swaggering yet dashing at the same time. Well done.

Director Travis Handcock, wrangled the large cast of eleven, many of whom were on stage at the same time, very well, managing to draw our attention to where it was needed and away from other spots. Very effective and spooky illumination of the now-dead victims at the end of the play was a master touch. A grandfather clock appears earlier in the same inventive way. He realised extremely clever (yet completely safe for the actor) use of a noose, which very gradually and realistically chokes one of the victims.

The set concept, also by the director, was extremely effective. Concept, I assume, means he came up with the ideas. Then they were translated by Martin Gibbs and Neil Barnett into a design that could be drawn up and then built. Top marks to all three and to the set builders also, too numerous to mention by name. We could believe we were in an upmarket, art-deco mansion, apart from the red curtains framing each doorway which seemed a little out of place.

The very simple backdrop beyond the nicely constructed French doors opening to the terrace was illuminated in many varied colours that very convincingly conveyed the time of day and the weather. That thanks partly to the lighting designer, Julian Camara, who did an overall excellent job, especially in the eerie scene when the actors enter with real candles.

Costumes by Juliet Hayday, were all very good, especially the three piece suits for the older gentlemen, apart perhaps from Miss Claythorne’s opening dress, which seemed a bit modern.

The little “soldier” figurines, crucial to the plot, three of which are smashed during the performance, were all made by Neil Barnett. Top marks for his work, which would have meant making a large number of the intricately painted and detailed “soldiers”. As each victim died, one soldier was removed from the set, very deftly and cleverly. I never saw one being whisked away.

A fine production by a large team of skilled cast and crew.