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Wednesday, January 22, 2025

From page to stage: Tempo’s ‘Book of the Month’

Book of the Month, Tempo Theatreโ€™s first play of the year, is a โ€œgentle English comedyโ€ โ€“ just the ticket for this time of doom and gloom, director Jon Elphick believes.

Scandal erupts in a respectable English town when the M.P.โ€™s daughter writes her first novel: Bare Bosomโ€™d Night, a steamy romance featuring her family and neighbours. (Less roman ร  clef than roman ร  cleavage?)

Betty Halliday (Sarah Jackson) is 17 turning 18; her journalist friend (Ryder Gavin) is an aspiring novelist, but has never finished a book. So, she gives writing a go to see how hard it is. The result is โ€œa torrid tale of love and lustโ€ (albeit seen through the eyes of an innocent teenager in 1950s England). In it, her father (Kim Wilson) is having an affair with his wifeโ€™s sister (Debra Byrne); her mother (Rina Onorato) is having an affair with the doctor (Chris McGrane); and the maid (Anna Hemmings) has had a baby to the colonel (Paul Cowan). The novel becomes a bestseller, hence the title โ€“ and the town must deal with the fallout from the book.

The playโ€™s highlight is the second act, which shows the novel acted out onstage. Even after two months of rehearsals, the actors still find the piece amusing.

โ€œThe cast were still laughing at it last night,โ€ Elphick said. โ€œHaving seen it a thousand times, if theyโ€™re still laughing, it must be alright.โ€

Mother, Joanna (Rina Onorato) and father, Edward (Kim Wilson), with daughter, Betty (Sarah Jackson). Photos by Methinks creative.

The 1954 play was by Basil Thomas, a prolific writer of plays, screenplays, and pantomimes in post-war Britain. Stage called it โ€œingeniousโ€ and โ€œgood light entertainmentโ€ โ€“ โ€œone of the best laugh shows of the seasonโ€. After Thomasโ€™s early death in 1957, aged only 44, his cousin, Gerald Thomas, director of the (in)famous Carry On films, adapted it for the cinema as Please Turn Over (1959).

But Tempoโ€™s production is the first time Book of the Month has been performed in Australia since the 1980s.

Elphick admits he faced several hurdles tracking down the script. โ€œIt was a miracle I found it,โ€ he said.

One wet Saturday evening two years ago, Elphick watched the film adaptation on television. He liked the film, and went straight to the computer to find the original play.

โ€œI looked for hours, and thought this is a lost cause โ€“ itโ€™s probably out of print, and no-oneโ€™s ever heard of it.โ€

Last November, the film was run on telly again, and Elphick finally tracked down a copy in an English theatre company script library. But that library didnโ€™t open until mid-January, and even then, the library couldnโ€™t send it to Elphick because of a postal strike. In the end, it reached Canberra thanks to a cousin in England. But the delays were worth it, Elphick believes.

โ€œ[The script] could have been absolute rubbish, but it wasnโ€™t. It was much better than the movie. We thought it was funny from the moment we first read it.โ€

And he hopes Canberra audiences will think so, too.

โ€œWith everything thatโ€™s happening in the world, people need a break. If you want an afternoon of thought-provoking theatre, this isnโ€™t for you. If you want an afternoon just to relax and enjoy yourself, this is the show to come and see. Spend a couple of hours, have a good laugh, and forget about your troubles.โ€

Tempo Theatre presents Book of the Month at the Belconnen Theatre, 26 May โ€“ 3 June. Tickets are available from Canberra Ticketing or phone (02) 6275 2700.

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