REVIEW: instructions by SUBJECT OBJECT – Melbourne Fringe



In a week where an AI company is touting an all-digital “actor”, Tilly Norwood, as the next big thing, instructions by UK theatremakers SUBJECT OBJECT is on the pulse of things. Though Hollywood has been stealing people’s likenesses for a long time, digital special effects are making it harder and harder to discern reality from fantasy.

instructions makes use of a different unrehearsed actor stepping on stage every night to discover the script as it’s projected to them on a screen they see. The audience watches the actors’ performance projected onto a screen behind them. Ostensibly, they are in an audition for a new romantic comedy where they must act out the final emotional scene at the top of the Eiffel Tower.

On opening night, John Marc Desengano was the brave performer under the spotlight and his charm shone through as he’s run through his paces by the unseen director of the film he is trying out for. As with ECHO at Malthouse this year, every actor on stage throughout the run of instructions will bring a different energy. John Marc is the kind of actor who can make an audience laugh with his ebullience and a wry smile. (Later in the run you can see Vidya Rajan, Ash Flanders or Christie Whelan Browne taking the stage.)

I felt quite at a distance by the staging and while the premise is interesting – an actor’s likeness from an audition is used to create the final work – it's a hook that doesn’t really go anywhere. The show is humorous at times, because of the set-up and the tension of an actor who doesn’t know what they’ve got themselves into. But as work of live art, it’s an experience wholly dependent on how well the actor on the night acquits themselves.

John Marc did a great job, but I would have liked the creators to dig more deeply – into what they were saying and how it’s presented theatrically. Using digital replicas without someone’s permission is dystopian stuff, but instructions only gently nudges toward the horror of it.

- Keith Gow, Theatre First

Instructions runs at Trades Hall as part of Melbourne Fringe until October 12

Photo: Liv Morrison

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