Categories: Reviews

Livin’ The Dream


I had no idea that I had lived someone’s dream. Back in 1988, little Kate McLennan would so have hated me because I went to Expo 88.



MELBOURNE FRINGE 2010
Fiona Harris and Kate McLennanMeeting Room, Fringe Hub Tuesday, 5 October, 2010 
I had no idea that I had lived someone’s dream. Back in 1988, little Kate McLennan would so have hated me because I went to Expo 88.
In Livin’ the Dream Kate McLennan and Fiona Harris open their hearts and embarrassing pasts to explore what it means to live your dreams. With vision boards (you’ve watched Oprah and know what they are), family pics, a blackboard and videos of their comedian friends, Kate and Fiona sit down to a cup of tea and talk about the dreams they achieved and their total fails.
Fiona directed Kate in the award-winning and bloody marvellous The Debutante Diaries in 2006 and in last year’s Dead River. It’s so wonderful to see this duo being themselves and I can’t say enough good about them. Except that it’s great to see them joined by director Roz Hammond. Roz is already one of the best comedy actors around and twists stand up and theatre into a structure that makes the show feel like a chat in the living room with your best friends, while being as therapeutic as a year in expensive therapy.
The stories we love the most aren’t devised by overly-clever writers (who all secretly admire the Da Vinci Code for its plotting), but are the day-to-day things that really happened. Real stories are the ones that our hearts love, even if our brain tells us to love the clever plotting.
By listening to Fiona and Kate read their childhood literature (I would buy the picture book about the baby chook being flushed down the toilet), show pictures of their not-as-hot-as-they-are-now teen years and reveal some big relationship scars, everyone in the audience can re-live their own remarkably similar experiences.
I know I wasn’t the only person inanely grinning with recognition. Being neither blond nor hot, I too aspired to be the achievable Jan in Grease (and it solved my lack of dancing/singing skill), discovered at 15 that getting off your face was totally the best way to talk to boys, used the phrase “get on” (what one did when “talking” to boys), liked The Pirate Movie and have spent time following and staying with men who had made it clear that I wasn’t the one.
But at least I didn’t talk to trees and can remember the name of my first with-tongues kiss.
Dreams are what get us out of bed to face each day, so don’t consider missing Livin’ the Dream.

Season Closed  www.melbournefringe.com.au

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.

Share
Published by
Anne-Marie Peard

Recent Posts

Sting To Star In THE LAST SHIP At Theatre Royal Drury Lane

Music icon Sting will return to the stage in a newly adapted production of his…

1 day ago

Broadway’s Biggest Night: What To Watch For At The Tony Awards

Broadway’s biggest night is fast approaching, with the Tony Awards set to celebrate another busy…

1 day ago

TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRDHARPER Opens at The Genesian Theatre

The Genesian Theatre Company is proud to present a moving new production of Harper Lee’s…

2 days ago

The Songs Of John Farnham: A Living Legend The Celebration Concert

Minister for Sport and Major Events Steve Dimopoulos, together with producers Tony Cochrane AM and…

2 days ago

Lanterns Light Up Liverpool in Powerhouse Debut

Liverpool City Council’s much-loved celebration of Asian culture and cuisine, Lanterns and Lights, returns on…

2 days ago

The Australian Premiere of Tootsie Opens Tonight at Teatro

The Australian Premiere of the smash-hit Broadway musical Tootsie, officially opens at Teatro at the…

2 days ago