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Review: Playing Beatie Bow, directed by Kip Williams. Playing Beatie Bow is the coming-of-age story of the teenage Abigail who, from her home in Sydney’s The Rocks, slips back in time to 1873. Here, she is taken in by the Tallisker/Bow family, immigrants from the Orkney Islands who run a confectionery shop. Abigail finds herself cast as the mysterious “Stranger” the subject of a Tallisker family prophecy which she must enact before she is able to return to her own time. In adapting Ruth Park’s 1980 novel for the stage, Kate Mulvany carries forward Park’s detailed, loving attention to the city of Sydney and the lives that play out within it. Her adaptation thrums with heart, humour and a sense of creative legacy. ....
How the power of teenage girls makes Playing Beatie Bow an enduring classic Save Normal text size Advertisement In a small cabin in Broken Hill, Sofia Nolan propped her phone up on a cereal box and was preparing to audition over Zoom for her first lead mainstage theatre role. âIt was really dark and I really struggled to get the light in, because the sun kept moving,â she recalls. âAnd I was like, âIn what universe is this going to go well?ââ Catherine VÄn-Davies (left) and Sofia Nolan tap into their natural chemistry for their lead roles in Playing Beatie Bow. ....
Brothels, narcs and Peter Phelps: how Playing Beatie Bow stacks up now Save Normal text size When the curtain goes up on Playing Beatie Bow at the Sydney Theatre Companyâs Wharf Theatre, it wonât be the first adaptation of Ruth Parkâs novel to reach the public eye. In 1986, just six years after the book was published, a film of Playing Beatie Bow was released into cinemas. In the year of Top Gun and Crocodile Dundee it didnât last long, with the box-office reportedly falling just short of $100,000, but given the subject matter it fittingly had a long and unexpected second life: with the book on high school reading lists, the movie played in countless English classes and sold steadily on video. ....