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1 Taranaki Street, Wellington | Box Office Ph: 04 801 7992
Duration: 23 March - 20 April 2013

Written by: Kathryn Burnett & Nick Ward
Directed by: Kerryn Palmer

 

A Romantic Comedy About Romantic Comedy

“Let us consider the ludicrous nature of romantic comedy…”

So begins this fast-moving romp of a play from two of New Zealand’s busiest screenwriters. Kathryn Burnett (The Strip; Amazing Extraordinary Friends; The Cult) and Nick Ward (Stickmen, Second Hand Wedding and Love Birds) who have set out to explore and subvert every romantic comedy convention in the book resulting in a love story that is smart, funny and surprisingly tender.

Mike and Virginia are both single. Both competitive. Both lecturers in film studies. Her specialty is romantic comedy, his is monster movies. She thinks he’s an arrogant knuckle-dragger, he thinks she’s a bitter cow. The very worst thing they could do is fall in love.

A romantic comedy… about romantic comedy,Mike and Virginia is an evening of unabashed entertainment for lovers and cynics alike.

  • Starring

    Gentiane Lupi

    Will Hall

    Jennifer Martin

    Stephen Papps

    Perry Piercy

  • 23 March − 20 April

    Tues to Sat 7.30pm

    Sun 4.30pm

  • Adults $46

    Concessions $38

    Friends of Circa (until 7 April) $33

    Groups 6+ $39 Groups 20+ $36

    Under 25s $25

    $25 Preview Friday, 22 March and $25 Special Sunday, 24 March

  • Mike and Virginia

    BY DAVID FARRAR, KIWIBLOG, 24 MARCH 2013

    Mike and Virginia opened at Circa on Saturday night, and it was 100 minutes of almost non stop laughs. It is billed as a romantic comedy about romantic comedies.

    The lead characters of Mike and Virginia are both lecturers in film studies and the audience at times are their class. Virginia is the ice queen who tells you how romantic comedies always have an incompatible couple (due to personality, background etc) who implausibly overcome all barriers to show love conquers all, even though it doesn’t. Mike is the popular wise cracking Kiwi bloke, who is a published author as well as a lecturer. Of course Virginia hates him, and vice-versa and of course they form the focus of their own romantic comedy.

    There is some audience interaction, which was also comic. Mike has a thesis that all films have a monster. He goes through various films such as Shawshank Redemption and asks who the monster is. He then gets to Love Actually and asks the audience who is the monster in that film. The woman behind me yells out “the writer” and we’re all in hysterics.

    There were five actors making up the cast, and while in some plays there are one or two stand outs, I thought in this play all five nailed their characters. Gentiana Lupi (you may have seen her in Eagle vs Shark) was the icy Virginia. Her character started slightly one-dimensional but as the play progressed you saw her sense of humour and playfulness. Will Hall (Kip from Shortland Street) was perfect for laid back wise cracking Kiwi bloke Mike. Jennifer Martin was hilarious as the young and beautiful but rather clueless student poet who falls madly in love with, well I won’t give the plot away. But you’ll love her performance. Stephen Papps and Perry Piercey play the respective best friends of Mike and Virginia – their characters are Harry and Sally! Papps’ Harry shares his nuggets of wisdom in a very droll fashion and generates laughs a plenty. He just fits the role of down to earth tradesman so well. Piercey’s Sally is an actor, and gets possibly the best lines of the play. I won’t give too many plot details away but one part of it is how they are meant to be just friends with benefits but Virginia freaks out when Mike holds her hand at one point. She heads home alone complaining to Sally that Mike is getting too intimate. Sally responds with “You’ve had his dick in your mouth with no problems, and you’re complaining that he held your hand!” – classic.

    The music and sound effects were done incredibly well, adding to many a dramatic moment with comic effect.

    Mike and Virginia was hilariously good fun. Is on until 20 April, and well worth seeing.

     

    OTHER REVIEWS

    John Smythe, Theatreview, 24 March 2013

 

Running time 1 hour 40 minutes (no interval)

NO LATE ADMITTANCE