Shock! Horror! But who is the real monster in the Frankenstein story?

So you think you know the Frankenstein story? With so many iterations of this 200-year-old story, it’s hard to believe we know how it all started. Our review of Frankenstein at Theatre Royale.

Frankenstein, the play, is currently running at the Theatre Royal Sydney – and if you don’t believe that live theatre can recreate horror, and you think you know who the villain is, prepare to be surprised.

This Shake and Stir production of Mary Shelley’s original creation – lots of fascinating history here, but I’ll save that for another time – demonstrates how far theatre has come in embracing multi-media and sensory experiences. The brilliant use of smoke and giant screens really gives the stage a genuinely eerie feel.

Frankenstein at the Theatre Royal

But at the centre of it all is a story about a scientist who creates life. In an age of AI when we’re all worried about what place we have in the future, it resonates. The problem: the life Frankenstein creates – yes, the scientist is Frankenstein, not the monster – is hideously ugly.

Now, in today’s world this would be no problem. Woke society would demand equal rights for hideous monsters, and they would regularly appear in the media outing scientists who refused to acknowledge them as “human”. Two centuries ago, things were different. And our monster just wants a mate. Frankenstein, its creator, is both ethically challenged and weak.

No happy ending


It’s a story with no happy ending. But certainly a modern-day parable with many reasons for us to relate.

This adaption first appeared in Brisbane last year, and has been in Melbourne. It is at the Theatre Royal in Sydney for just a short run. Its stagecraft is clever, and the cast is brilliant. Jeremiah Wray as the creature (I’m not saying monster because I’m going to let you make up your own mind) brings a believability to a difficult role, while Darcy Brown plays Frankenstein.

There are plenty of shocks and surprises along the way. And if you need to steady your nerves at the interval, there is always a Frankentini or Elixir of Life cocktail at the bar!

Frankenstein

Where: Theatre Royal Sydney
When: Until October 13, 2024
Price: tickets from $69.00

theatreroyalsydney.com



Related
24th Biennale Kaylene Whiskey

Sydney’s 24th Biennale opens at White Bay

Sydney will come alive in a burst of colour, movement and creative works with the 24th Biennale of Sydney, titled Ten Thousand Suns, at seven major locations across the harbour city.   This international art festival is the largest contemporary art ... Read more
Alice's Adventure Ballet

Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland a curiously big ballet hit

This wildly entertaining adaptation of the famous Lewis Carroll book is an extraordinary mix of commercial showbiz and ballet.  Brilliantly put together by The Australian Ballet in a production where everyone from the orchestra pit to the dancers on stage ... Read more
malevo drumming drummers opera house

See the hot Malevo drummers

Hot Argentinian dance and drumming sensation Malevo are heading to the Sydney Opera House this month. The 17-strong all-male ensemble will be making their Australian debut, offering a contemporary take on the traditional Argentinian folkloric, Malambo; a folk dance originally ... Read more
GATSBY opera house

Gatsby gets the green light at Opera House

GATSBY at the Green Light, a new cabaret variety show inspired by F. Scott Fitzgerald’s classic text, is set to open its doors at the Studio, Sydney Opera House this summer. A century after first being introduced to Jay Gatsby, ... Read more