Melbourne Observer. 111207C. December 7, 2011. Part C.

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Melbourne Observer - Wednesday, December 7, 2011 - Page 91

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www.MelbourneObserver.com.au

Observer Showbiz Every Week in the Melbourne Observer

Radio Confidential: Grubby, Dee Dee axed .. Page 92 Veritas: Lah-Lah and Friends at MRC .............. Page 93 Nightline: Paul Cronin, Sullivans on DVD ............ Page 93 Jim and Aaron: Best DVD-film selections ................. Page 94 Cheryl Threadgold: Community Theatre - it’s a wrap ...... Page 95 PLUS THE LOVATT”S MEGA CROSSWORD

DRAMA LEAGUE WINNERS ‘Cooking The Books’ launch

● Kerry Greenwood. Photo: Harjono Djoyobisono Corinna ■ If you have a penchant for good food, handsome lovers and the exciting tapestry of life you discover with inner city living, then solicitor-turned-author Kerry Greenwood has just the right recipe for you. It's called Cooking The Books and it's Kerry's latest Corinna Chapman detective novel. With her heroine described as 'talented baker and reluctant investigator', Kerry has given the generously proportioned Corinna a new venture in taking on the baking for the film set of a soap opera. As is always the case in a detective novel, there are twists and turns - this time with complications involving nursery rhymes and a tiger called Tabitha. Regular Greenwood fans are used to the presence of a variety of much revered domestic cats as associate stars in the novels, but a tiger is a rather larger variation on this theme. If you haven't had the pleasure of meeting Corinna Chapman, she is one smart cookie who swapped corporate suits and a high flying career as an accountant to follow her passion for good bread, by opening a specialist bakery that produces fabulous rustic bread and muffins to die for. She also has a hunky lover called Daniel, an elegant patrician cat called Horatio, and the working cats that keep the mice down - Hekyll and Jekyll, the well-named Mouse Police. While Corinna just wants a peaceful life creating fabulous baked treats, somehow her nose for mystery lands her on a trail of detection, and this time her previous career comes in useful, as she also investigates the case of a young woman being unmercifully bullied by her corporate employers, who spend a lot of time cooking the books…… In real life, Kerry Greenwood has been a solicitor with a western suburbs legal centre, has cats to feed and lives with a registered wizard. Full time writing is a recent development. "Nowadays I just write - I'll get back to the law in due course. The Magistrates' Courts are my escape from fiction, a dose of real life. I think they're good for me." And in answer to the question of the kind of person who might like to find the new Corinna Chapman book in their Christmas stocking? "Anyone who ever breathed deeply, passing a bakery!' Kerry said. And isn't that most of us? - Julie Houghton

■ The Victorian Drama League announced its annual awards on Sunday night. TechnicalAwards Best Set Designer for a Comedy or Drama Production: Silver: John Shelbourn. Not About Heroes by Stephen Macdonald. Williamstown Little Theatre Gold: Graham McGuffie. Death of a Salesman by Arthur Miller Lilydale Athenaeum Theatre Company Best Lighting Designer for a Comedy or Drama Production Silver: Deryk Hartwick. Life After George by Hannie Rayson Encore Theatre Gold: Graham McGuffie. Death of a Salesman by Arthur Miller Lilydale Athenaeum Theatre Company Best Sound Designer for a Comedy or Drama Production: Silver: Neil Williamson. The History Boys by Alan Bennett Heidelberg Theatre Company Gold: Andrea Cole. We Happy Few by Imogen Stubbs. Eltham Little Theatre Best Costume Designer/s for a Comedy or Drama Production: Silver: Shane Ryan. Not About Heroes by Stephen Macdonald. Williamstown Little Theatre Gold: Kristina Doucouliagos and Emma Sproule. The Importance of Being Earnest by Oscar Wilde. Beaumaris Theatre Acting Awards ActingAwards Minor RoleAwards The Gold Award for Best Actor in a Minor Role for a Comedy or Drama Production. Peter Emery as Lane and Merriman. The Importance of Being Earnest by Oscar Wilde. Beaumaris Theatre The Gold Award for Best Actress in a Minor Role for a Comedy or Drama Production. Rose Jowett Smith as Young David Sarnoff and others. The Farnsworth Invention by Aaron Sorkin Malvern Theatre Company Comedy Supporting Role Awards The Gold Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role for a Comedy Production. Daniel O'Kane as Doug. Cosi by Louis Nowr. Gemco Players Community Theatre The Gold Award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role for a Comedy Production. Jennifer Gilchrist as Lady Bracknell. The Importance of Being Earnest by Oscar Wilde. Beaumaris Theatre ● Continued on Page 102

Messiah by the Sea ● Roxane Hislop ■ At this time of year there are several performances of The Messiah in the Melbourne metropolitan area, but Mornington Peninsula residents don't have to travel too far to enjoy Handel's masterpiece. The highly regarded Glorania Chamber Choir is joining with the Choir of St Peter's Eastern Hill and the St Peter's Chamber Players and taking Messiah to the beach! On Saturday (Dec. 10) at 5pm, Sorrento's St Mary's Star of the Sea Church will play host to these massed choral forces, and four excellent soloists - acclaimed singers soprano Merlyn Quaife and mezzo-soprano Roxane Hislop, with rising young talent tenor Jacob Lawrence and bass Nicholas Dinopoulos, all directed by Andrew Raiskums. Tickets start at $30 if they are pre-booked, or from $35 at the door. Enquiries and bookings to 5989 8620. St Mary's Star of the Sea is located in Constitution Hill Road, Sorrento. - Julie Houghton

Present Tense company forms

● Meet the collaborators of new theatre company Present Tense: Back row from left: Rodney Twitt, Dave Patterson, Dan Davidson, Grzegorz Gozdz and Robert Van Winkle; Second row from left: Dave Harford, Nicola Andrews, Nate Gilkes, Bryce Ives, Emma Leah, Sophie Woodward; Front row: Zoe McDonald, Laura Burzacott and Anna Boulic and Herman Vermont (seated). ■ Melbourne director Bryce Ives has spent the past few months kick-starting a new theatre company called Present Tense, which currently has three significant projects in development. These include a response/adaptation of the landmark novel The Book of Rachael by Dr Leslie Cannold, a new Australian musical about the amazing life of Margaret Fulton and further development of an earlier work, Chants Des Catacombes, for seasons in Adelaide, Melbourne and Edinburgh. Present Tense wants to cultivate a new generation of artists and audiences in Australia by producing extraordinary theatre work in unusual locations. The company has just launched a campaign to raise $10,000 to mount seasons of Chants Des Catacombes in Adelaide and Melbourne in 2012 and a future season in Edinburgh and invites donations to help fund this project at: www.pozible.com/index.php/archive/index/4146/ description/0/0 Bryce says that by making a donation to Chants Des Catacombes you will advance the work of a team of dedicated and committed theatre makers. Donors will also receive direct access to the company's performances, an inside view of how the company operates, public acknowledgement of their generous support and tickets to a show. A video of Chants Des Catacombes can be viewed on You Tube

André Rieu on screen ■ André Rieu’s Amsterdam Arena performance will be screened at cinemas on Wednesday, December 11. The two-hour spectacle, including Australian Mirusia Louwerse, will be shown at Classic Elsternwick, Cameo Belgrave, Centre Cinemas Horsham, and Wangaratta, Ticket holders ($35) receive a copy of Rieu’s The Christmas Love DVD/CD.

● André Rieu


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Melbourne Observer. 111207C. December 7, 2011. Part C. by Ash Long - Issuu