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Mama Does Derby review – Virginia Gay’s Town Hall takeover is ambitious, entertaining and irresistibly warm

3 days ago
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Sydney’s Town Hall has transformed into a tennis court and a beach for recent iterations of the Sydney festival; this year, it’s a roller derby rink, with a moving set and music stage, and a live band belting covers,Inside the ornate Victorian interior of Centennial Hall, an oval flat track has been installed; on either side are stadium-style seating banks,This is the set for Mama Does Derby, the new family dramedy from Adelaide’s Windmill Production Company, premiering in Sydney ahead of Adelaide festival,There’s something thrilling about seeing art in unusual spaces, and about seeing familiar places rendered strange and wonderful through art,This has become the bread and butter for city festivals over the past decade, offering the thrill of the catch-it-while-you-can live communal experience as a counterpoint to our increasingly isolated lives.

As the audience fills the seating banks on opening night, a flock of skaters drawn from the Sydney Roller Derby League are already in flight, running drills and relaxed loops around the track.By the time the show’s lead actors appear, even a roller derby novice has got a sense of the sport.We’ll have to wait a while longer to find out how roller derby fits into this tale.First, we meet our protagonists: mum Maxine, or Max (consummate comic actor Amber McMahon); and teen daughter Billie (Elvy-Lee Quici).They’re here to usher us into their story: a globetrotting, fly-by-the-seat-of-her-pants, hot-mess single woman and her earnest, anxious, responsible-beyond-her-years daughter, who unexpectedly inherit a rundown house in regional Victoria, and are forced to a standstill in which their demons and dysfunctions catch up with them.

Over the next 90-or-so minutes, we get to know and love Max and Billie and their droll, Gilmore Girls-esque comedy-duo energy, and watch as they build a new life and community: Billie with school and driving lessons, Max with a new hobby – roller derby.There’s an eccentric neighbour, a fastidious counsellor-cum-family therapist, cute love interests for both Max and Billie, and a fabulous spandex-clad demon called Nathan (Benjamin Hancock, take an extra bendy bow please), who threatens to steal every scene he’s in.The entire cast is fantastic, and even these smaller parts are living, lovable characters rather than mere narrative chess pieces.Mama Does Derby is inspired by director Clare Watson’s real life experience.She entrusted the scripting to friend and former collaborator Virginia Gay – and you couldn’t pick a better theatre-maker for the job.

As the writer and lead of shows such as Calamity Jane and Cyrano, Gay has proven herself a virtuoso in a kind of generous, communal, fourth wall-breaking theatrical style that brings people in, and a special-sauce narrative mix of relatable comedy and vulnerability,Gay makes shows that are like a big hug, full of heart and community,It’s what we all need right now – and this show knows it,It might be a mother-daughter tale, but Billie is the heart of it: beset by the anxiety of living in an erratic co-dependent relationship within a politically and socially unstable world on the brink of climate catastrophe, in which gender-based violence is on the rise – and, as she reminds us, there are literal Nazis on our streets,“I think being a grown up means dissociating,” Max quips early on.

Billie is still a teen though, and the show is really about her facing her fears, finding her strength and stepping up to advocate for her needs.Gay navigates this with a typically light touch, and she and Watson keep things – for the most part – clipping along, with witty banter and playful pop cultural references, moving stage pieces, and fast-flowing transitions between scenes and music breaks.Skaters thread in and out, serving as stage hands when they’re not playing themselves, holding props or pushing larger pieces of stage furniture – therapy couches, a makeshift car – around the track.As with most new Australian work, there are some lags in momentum and some repetition.It feels like 15 minutes could be shaved out of the script with no noticeable deficit; the music breaks are too frequent and long, and the skating sequences are frustratingly slow at times.

For a roller derby show, it takes a little too long for that part of the narrative to arrive,But these are small quibbles for this ambitious, entertaining and irresistibly warm show, that speaks not only to parents and teens, but to the broader community; the village it takes to raise young people and sustain the rest of us,Mama Does Derby continues at Sydney festival until 22 January, before a run at Adelaide festival from 27 February
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Why is the UK investing in £6.45bn Kraken when it doesn’t need public money? | Nils Pratley

The state-owned multi-tentacled British Business Bank has never been a simple organisation to understand, but at least one could vaguely grasp its intended role in life. “Our mission is to drive economic growth by helping smaller businesses get the finance they need to start, scale and stay in the UK,” declares its website.Jolly good. For decades, complaints have been heard about gaps in the financing ecosystem for startups and for promising young UK companies, particularly those in tech-related and life science fields, or those spinning out of universities. So one can applaud the existence of a large and distinctly British source of capital to “crowd in”, as politicians like to say, private venture funds

about 7 hours ago
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Rollout of AI may need to be slowed to ‘save society’, says JP Morgan boss

Jamie Dimon, the boss of JP Morgan, has said artificial intelligence “may go too fast for society” and cause “civil unrest” unless governments and business support displaced workers.While advances in AI will have huge benefits, from increasing productivity to curing diseases, the technology may need to be phased in to “save society”, he said.Dimon said companies and governments could not ignore AI or “put your head in the sand”. The Wall Street lender would probably have fewer employees in five years’ time as it rolled out AI, he told an audience at the World Economic Forum in the Swiss resort of Davos.“Your competitors are going to use it and countries are going to use it,” he said

about 7 hours ago
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World would be a ‘better place’ if US took over Greenland, says Nigel Farage

The world would be a “better, more secure place” if America took over Greenland, Nigel Farage said at Davos, while insisting that he still believed in the sovereignty of nation states.During a panel at the World Economic Forum’s “America House” in the Swiss ski resort on Wednesday, the Reform UK leader said he had “no doubt” that the world would be safer if a “strong America” was in Greenland “because of the geopolitics of the high north, because of the retreating ice caps and because of the continued expansionism of Russian icebreakers, of Chinese investment”.Speaking just after Donald Trump appeared to rule out taking position of Greenland by force, while doubling down on his demand to annex the “big, beautiful piece of ice”, Farage insisted that while he “agreed strategically” with Trump he believed in “nation states … not globalist structures”.“[I]f you believe in the nation state and not globalist structures, you believe in sovereignty,” he said. “And if you believe in sovereignty, you believe in the principle of national self-determination

about 8 hours ago
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Middle powers assemble? Trump disorder prompts talk of new liberal alliances

Donald Trump has told the Davos economic forum “without us, most countries would not even work”, but for the first time in decades, many western leaders have come to the opposite conclusion: they will function better without the US.Individually and collectively, they have decided “to live in truth” – the phrase used by the Czech dissident Vaclav Havel and referenced by the Canadian prime minister, Mark Carney, in his widely praised speech at Davos on Tuesday. They will no longer pretend the US is a reliable ally, or even that the old western alliance exists.Trump’s threat to invade Greenland – half-withdrawn in his unnervingly rambling Davos speech on Wednesday – and his glorification of the use of tariffs to intimidate his allies have been the final straw. As such – on the first anniversary of his second term – the taboos around denying him the role of “leader of the free world” seem to have been broken

about 9 hours ago
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Nato chief urges ‘thoughtful diplomacy’ after US treasury secretary’s jibe at Denmark

Donald Trump has landed in Switzerland for the Davos global gathering as Nato’s secretary general said “thoughtful diplomacy” was the only way to deal with growing transatlantic tensions, remarks that came shortly after the US treasury secretary had dismissed Denmark as an irrelevance.The US president’s threats to seize Greenland, a largely self-governing part of Denmark, risk tearing the transatlantic alliance apart, while his promise to impose tariffs on European nations who oppose him could trigger a trade war with the EU.Speaking at the World Economic Forum in the Swiss town on Wednesday, Nato’s Mark Rutte said that there were “tensions at the moment” but that talks, and a concerted drive to bolster Arctic security, were the only ways forward.He dismissed fears that the Greenland crisis could unravel the 76-year-old alliance, and pushed back at repeated comments from Trump casting doubt on whether its European members would help to defend the US if asked, saying: “They will.”Speaking on the sidelines of the forum, the US treasury secretary, Scott Bessent, earlier dismissed Denmark as “irrelevant” and brushed aside claims that European investors, such as Denmark’s pension funds, might pull out of the US market

about 13 hours ago
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Next buyout saves footwear brand Russell & Bromley but 400 jobs likely to be lost

Next has rescued the footwear retailer Russell & Bromley out of administration for £3.8m but about 400 jobs are likely to go at 33 shops not included in the deal.The British brand, founded in 1879 in Eastbourne, East Sussex, trades from 36 stores and nine concessions across the UK and Ireland. Next will take on only three stores – in Chelsea, Mayfair and the Bluewater shopping centre – and about 48 store staff, it is understood.The rescue deal, which includes Russell & Bromley’s brand and other assets including £1

about 14 hours ago
foodSee all
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Nine easy swaps to reduce ultra-processed foods in your diet: it’s not an ‘all-or-nothing approach’

2 days ago
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Rukmini Iyer’s quick and easy recipe for harissa-spiked orzo with chickpeas and pine nuts | Quick and easy

3 days ago
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My week avoiding ultra-processed foods: ‘Why is it this hard?’

3 days ago
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How to make mapo tofu – recipe | Felicity Cloake's Masterclass

4 days ago
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Corenucopia by Clare Smyth, London SW1: ‘Posh, calories-be-damned cooking and a dad rock soundtrack’ – restaurant review

4 days ago
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Two stars from Michelin, one for hygiene: star chef’s poor score ignites UK dining debate

5 days ago