The moon looks delicious from here


The moon looks delicious from here

At the Market Theatre for the opening of "The moon looks delicious from here". The story follows Aldo Brincat, from Malta, born in Egypt Alexandria, who immigrates to apartheid South Africa. The play explores identity, family, language, sexuality and a ever changing political landscape. 


No sets, no backdrop, clear stage, no fancy lighting, just him telling the story from different perspectives, dressed in all black with linking rings in his back pocket. He is on his feet the whole time. The magic tricks with his rings are spellbinding, so illusory, one moment he is holding two rings and the next six. When you look again the rings are all tangled up to form the Audi logo, then the Olympics logo and then the circles are in singles again. It's magic. As a magician, he dreams to perform for Nelson Mandela someday. 


Amazing storyteller who literally creates magic out of nothing. He is the show. He creates something from moment to moment, no lag time. He strings you along, you are in his capable hands. He provides the tempo and enacts the characters in his story with ease. He switches in and out, switching voices and mannerisms beat by beat to create a cadence that is seamless. He is captivating and tells the story with heart. The performance has a lot of range, that's to be expected considering the characters he inhabits. A storytelling magician, he is in complete flow the whole time. Makes it seem so easy but it's not because he does so much, inhabing different characters under one breath. The opening scene consists of two characters, one male and one female. To illustrate the differences between the characters, he uses one of the linking rings in his hand as a hat for the male and uses the other linking ring as a fan to convey the females perspective. It is effective, he also switches voices and intonation for dramatic effect. The show has elements of physical theatre, he mimics the sounds of objects. 


Solo performances are often tricky and difficult, to entertain and keep the audience invested in the storyline is no child's play but it's no big deal for Aldo, he seemingly does everything on his own, with just linking rings in his back pocket. It's easy, it's masterful, pure magic. A storytelling masterclass. 


Congratulations Sjaka Septembir and the whole team for a great show and a deserved standing ovation. 



https://youtu.be/bMexr2NdyxA?si=nl7aCdzUdPxERLjq

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