McGuffin

 A scruffy man hands me a business card. It says: One briefcase. No memory. Three rules. Haven’t you always wanted to write a TV show?



MELBOURNE FRINGE 2010
Shaolin PunkLoft, Fringe Hub Friday, 1 October, 2010
A scruffy man hands me a business card. It says: One briefcase. No memory. Three rules. Haven’t you always wanted to write a TV show?
Yes I have.
McGuffin was a seven-episode Aussie TV drama series, but it was like watching TV in a time before re-runs and VCRS – miss it and it’s gone. This was TV on stage and it was improvised. 
Ben McKenzie and his company Shaolin Punk call it hybrid improvised theatre. The structure of each episode was created in advance, but the dialogue, character development and plot were created on the night by the performers, the directors (McKenzie and Sean Fabri) and the audience – who were asked to suggest the pivotal turning points and reveals for each episode.
I only saw the last episode, but – like any good telly story telling – I was hooked into the mystery of the Sanchez Cross and those who sought it. It was a bit like the Da Vinci Code meets Dr Who and Offspring.
Fabri was joined on stage by Gina Morley, Chris Broadstock and Kate O’Neill, who know the rules and style of TV storytelling so well that they must spend many wonderful hours on the couch watching the box.
McGuffin was far from slick high art, but it was never meant to be. It was a lot of fun (for the creators and the audience) and the next time they do a series, I’d try to be there from episode 1.
The TV show is over, but Shaolin Punk are presenting three performances of Dungeon Crawl at the Fringe. Impro Dungeons and Dragons. Yes, it will be geeky.
Season Closed

Anne-Marie Peard

Anne-Marie spent many years working with amazing artists at arts festivals all over Australia. She's been a freelance arts writer for the last 10 years and teaches journalism at Monash University.

Anne-Marie Peard

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