Categories: Reviews

Midsumma: Pollyfilla leaves no gaps

In Kitsch in Synch, housewife Pollyfilla expresses the drag of her inner longings in her lounge room through lip-synching to songs and dialog from films and TV.

Lip-synching doesn’t have the best reputation thanks to famous frauds ranging from Milli-Vanilli to Julie Anthony at the 2010 AFL Grand Final, but done well, say in Drags Aloud’s Grease, it can be very entertaining.  Taking on a solo work shows a particular, well, eccentricity, but don’t crease your gingham because between some cooking, manic dancing, and un-suburban psychedelia, we can’t help but sympathise with Pollyfilla, a prisoner in a house-dress.

Kitsch in Synch

From the big opening song that claims not to be, Polyfilla’s helmet of styled hair shows her commitment to immaculate presentation. The diverse musical offerings that follow reach beyond the 1950s, and I was amused to hear some unfamiliar versions of songs I know, accompanied by Pollyfilla’s committed physicality and expansive facial expressions. Offerings ranged from upbeat “Love Your Vagina” (featuring an educational array of euphemisms) to portraying desperate efforts to hold on to a husband suggested in Burt Bacharach’s “Wives and Lovers”.

As cupcakes on a doily adds the finishing touch to a tea party, the discipline of a director would accentuate this show’s virtues, trimming the fat, making the amusing into laughs and building the impact of the dramatic aspects. It might be that the show strayed a bit too far from its original intention of chronicling the life of a housewife as it jumped around from concern for appearances and domestic despair to drunken club dancing and back — it felt like we could be watching either different characters or a retreat of Pollyfilla into memory. Deploying costume changes differently could make the distinction between these women or states much clearer.

Appealing through its extremes, Kitsch in Synch might just make you set down your after-work martini, pay a bit more attention to stereotypes in pop culture and have some empathy for women pressured to attain them.

Jason Whyte

Share
Published by
Jason Whyte

Recent Posts

RHAPSODY Artistic Director and Chief Conductor, Dr Nicholas Milton AM and Piano, Konstantin Shamray

Internationally renowned concert pianist Konstantin Shamray joins the Willoughby Symphony Orchestra for, ‘RHAPSODY’ to be…

7 hours ago

The Australian premiere of The Grinning Man

Vass Productions and Salty Theatre are thrilled to present the Australian premiere of West End…

11 hours ago

The Complex Dance of Broadway Shows and Theatre Critics

The fate of a show often hinges not just on the performances on stage but…

2 days ago

Predicting the 2024 Tony Award Winners and Nominees

As the buzz around the 2023-24 Broadway season reaches its peak, the theatre world eagerly…

2 days ago

Keala Settle to take over role of Angèlique in &JULIET

There’s a new nurse in Verona as star of stage and screen Keala Settle is…

2 days ago

Luisa Scrofani chats THE GRINNING MAN, playing at the Alex Theatre from May 2

With an extended West End run and an explosive world premiere at Bristol Old Vic,…

2 days ago