Each night, a 14-year-old tasks two actors with playing her parents. They haven’t seen the script

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One evening in June last year, actor Ewen Leslie rocked up at Sydney’s Belvoir St theatre to find out what show he was performing that night and meet his fellow actors for the first time.All he had was an email telling him to prepare his best Werner Herzog impression, to wear comfortable clothes, and to expect content around “childhood, parenthood and mental health disorders”.A couple of hours later he was on stage, script in hand, being directed by a 13-year-old in front of an audience and struggling not to cry.The assignment was POV: a micro-budget, 70-minute show which follows a teenager named Bub, who is making a documentary about her parents.Each night, two adult actors who have not rehearsed or seen the script before step into the role of the parents, guided on stage by the young actor playing Bub.

Actors who have played Bub’s parents include Orange is the New Black star Yael Stone and Play School presenter Zindzi Okenyo.Sign up for the fun stuff with our rundown of must-reads, pop culture and tips for the weekend, every Saturday morningLeslie has gone toe-to-toe with actors including Richard Roxburgh and Nicole Kidman, and scaled peak roles such as Hamlet and Richard III – but POV presented a unique challenge.“You have no control over it, and there was nothing I could do to prepare for it because I had no idea what I was about to go through,” he says.“There’s something scary about that, but also strangely empowering.”When actor Geraldine Hakewill asked him if she should participate in the show’s upcoming season at Melbourne’s Rising festival, he didn’t hesitate: “Do it.

”Leslie had been hearing “for years” about the show’s creators, re:group: a collective of performance graduates from the University of Wollongong who have been using live cinema on stage for more than a decade, in shows such as Coil, a tribute to small town video stores in which they made a movie in real time.In POV, the teen and two adults “re-enact” Bub’s experience as she tries to make a documentary about her parents but is stymied by their reluctance to participate.At the top of the play, the actor playing Bub (alternated by 14-year-olds Edith Whitehead and Mabelle Rose) explains the show’s concept to the audience, then proceeds to direct her adult co-stars in a series of scenes.She’s often filming the action at the same time, with a mixture of the live camera feed and prerecorded footage screened on video monitors on either side of the stage.It’s a slippery, meta-theatrical show, and between pondering the layers of artifice, enjoying the Werner Herzog references and watching two unrehearsed actors thrown in the deep end, it’s tremendous fun – and exhilarating, in the same way that watching good improv or a high-wire act is.

As in all the best theatre, there’s something going on beneath the surface,Halfway through POV, it becomes apparent that Bub’s parents’ reticence about the documentary stems from her mum’s mental health, which her dad doesn’t want to talk about,It’s what the show then reveals about adult-child dynamics and conversations about mental health that makes it particularly fascinating – and emotionally powerful,As POV’s playwright Mark Rogers puts it: “To put adult performers in that vulnerable position, where they’re unrehearsed, mirrors the way in which you’re unprepared, as a parent, to talk to your kid when crises happen,”As an audience member, the adult actors are your proxies: none of us are prepared; all of us are processing challenging scenarios and conversations at the same time, thinking: how would I – or have I – had these conversations in my own life? Experiencing this communally, within the safe structure of a show, is a special kind of magic unique to theatre.

Sign up to Saved for LaterCatch up on the fun stuff with Guardian Australia's culture and lifestyle rundown of pop culture, trends and tipsafter newsletter promotionThe genesis of the play was Rogers’ own experiences and anxieties around parenthood, and his conversations with the show’s director, Solomon Thomas, about growing up with a mum with bipolar,The resulting mix is a fictional story infused with lived experience,“For a while the play was just about this fictional family who had a mum who was going through depression,” says Thomas, who was initially “really scared” to expose this part of his life to the creative process,“And then we kind of chipped away at it, and slowly I began to feed Mark parts of my life,”The key ingredient for the show was Edie Whitehead, one of the two Bubs, who re:group enlisted during early development.

“As soon as we saw her in the space with the camera, Sol and I just looked at each other and were like, ‘This is it’,” Rogers recalls,“We were extremely lucky to find Edie,”Whitehead and Rose are the steady hands guiding the adult actors and audience alike through what is an emotional and cathartic experience,For Leslie, a father of two, the play’s most challenging moment was a monologue in which he reads a letter to Bub,“I found myself getting very moved by it.

And because I wasn’t prepared for it, I started to get quite emotional,” he says,“I had this weird impulse to stand up and jump up and down – so I did that, to get out of my head for a sec so that I didn’t start crying,”In another performance, the actor playing Bub’s mum did burst into tears,How does Whitehead feel in those moments, encountering big emotions while being the person in charge? “I actually really liked it,” she says, “because it meant that they were really listening to the show and experiencing being that mum or dad,I thought that was really cool.

”POV is on as part of Rising festival, Melbourne (4-8 June); Heartland festival, Parramatta (2-5 July); Bondi festival, Sydney (10-12 July)
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