Circa Theatre continues to run with thought-provoking content. Monument follows similar themes to other recent productions at Circa such as Burn Her and Prima Facie concerning women in power and the pressures and contradictions that they face. Nicola was, as ever, on ushering duty.
We decided to dine in-house at ChouChou, the newly-revamped restaurant at Circa. We both had the burgers – the Camembert and the
Royale. Mine was, frankly, disappointing. I’m running out of things to choose
from their menu so we might be ditching them as an option soon.
The play was in Circa 2, the smaller theatre, with a 100 minute runtime and no interval. The show kicks off in a hotel room, and that’s where all the action takes place. In this case, newly-elected youngest ever woman premiere Edith Aldridge is facing her first live appearance after gaining power. All of her usual support crew are stranded at a fogged-in Auckland airport (the play has been transplanted from its native Australian setting), and a last-minute make-up artist has been drafted in from a local department store. At first Edith is distrustful of Rosie and doubts her abilities, but over the course of the play opens up more, listens to advice from a member of the younger generation, and they change their decisions about dress and make-up accordingly. Rosie’s discourse on how much make-up you need for the “no make-up look” is illuminating in the TikTok and Insta era. Their relationships with the men in their lives, alive and dead, come into play, and these also end up on the chopping block.
There’s a serious message in the sometimes hilarious exchanges, and the positions they find themselves in: about perceptions, media and politics. Go see it if you get a chance.
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