The Glass Garden

Export event | Export network | Feedback | Print
Event The Glass Garden
Venue Secret Location, Melbourne, VIC
First Date 11 September 2003
Last Date 27 September 2003
Dates Estimated No
Status Professional
World Premiere No
Description Brooke and I were sitting on a beach late at night. Brooke said imagine if the ground split open. And I pictured the sand falling through and being heated by the earths core and turning into glass. Then came a story: this is it. James Brennan, 2002 Set in a timeless era of guns, meat and violence, The Glass Garden told the story of a strange couple who escape this world to the wilderness. There they tend a garden made of glass which allows them to see through to the other side of the world. Escape too did the audience; through language portholes, musical incisions and choreography. Of course, the only places they can escape to are the wonderful mazes beneath their own skins. Combining experimental and ambient narrative, it inhabits the mind of an unlikely criminal en-route to death row; and serves as a cautionary tale on how not to fall in love between a crime and it's punishment. This site-specific performance was developed in a heritage grain storage building in Melbourne's inner north. It has been presented in a disused abattoir in Melbourne's outer suburbs and an off limits bomb bunker for Sydney festival in 2004.
Description Source Other
Primary Genre Music Theatre
Secondary Genre Drama
Organisations
Contributors
Name Function Notes
James Brennan Actor
Brian Lipson Actor
Carlee Mellow Actor
Mia Hollingworth Dancer
Brooke Stamp Dancer
Marg Horwell Designer
Agatha Gothe-Snape Dramaturg/e
Tim Wood Lighting Designer
Ubin Ollie Chang Musician
Joe Lamonte Musician
James Brennan Playwright
Natalie Crupi Publicist
Jethro Woodward Sound Designer
Margaret Cameron Performance Coach
Works
Text Nationality Australia
Production Nationality Australia
Event Status Completed
Data Source
Source Description
Web https://aphids.net/projects/glass-garden-2/
Data Set AusStage
Event Identifier 169595