- Rosie comes back from her trip in Europe to see her family who live in Adelaide. We are then introduced to her overprotective mother, loving father, business savvy sister, brother who wishes to transition and criminal brother.
- Rosie's sister, Pip, decides to move from Adelaide to Canada to take up a job for 12 months and has to leave her entire life behind. We then find out she'd been having an affair.
- Rosie's brother, Mark, tells his family he wants to move to Sydney and transition to Mia.
- Rosie's other brother, Ben, has been stealing money and spending it on cocaine.
- Rosie's parents, Bob and Fran, try to help all the children with they problems.
- The children don't appreciate their parents' concerns and excessive worry which is why they needed to move from Adelaide in the first place.
- Rosie then decides to take up a creative writing course in Brisbane.
- Soon after she left, Fran with all her stress and fatigue, fell asleep on the expressway and flipped her car and died on impact.
- The family then reunites in Adelaide to attend her funeral and support Bob.
- Relationship, family, marriage, heartbreak, sense of belonging, tragedy.
STRUCTURE
- Naturalistic and non-naturalistic - moments of dialogue as well as moments of direct audience address and physical theatre.
- Linear timeline - chronological, with ellipses - shown through physical theatre, direct audience address monologues, music
- Sort of cyclical structure - Rosie talking about the things she knows to be true before coming back to Adelaide and after her mother died.
SIGNIFICANT MOMENTS
- The first scene of Rosie explaining her trip to Europe - heartbreak she felt foreshadows the events in the play.
- Meeting the family - sets the base of the play, we get some exposition on the relationships of the characters.
- Pip explaining she wants to go to Canada - after she's left, Fran reading the letter Pip wrote admitting to having her affair - Fran lies to Bob about the letter - foreshadows lies that the family keep from each other.
- Mark telling his parents and Rosie about transitioning to become female - a lot of selfishness is shown from both parties - Mark wants the entire conversation to be about him coping and doesn't think about it being hard for his family to deal with all this information at once.
- Finding out Ben is a criminal - see a scary and threatening side to Ben - "I want mum" shows he relies on his mother for help but almost abuses it
- Fran dying - so tired from trying to help her entire family and just as things appear to be getting better, she falls asleep on the expressway and dies.
ACTING / MOVEMENT
- First scene physical theatre - shows relationships between family members and portrays the way Rosie was feeling without her needing to say it.
- Table when Rosie gets home - transitions from garden to kitchen in a smooth way.
- Physical theatre - showing the passing of time.
- Fran and Bob dancing - the proxemics of how close they are emphasises the love they have for each other (even if it wasn't always there).
- Monologues - providing exposition on the play and also showing the situation from a different point of view.
TECHNICAL DESIGN
- Different lighting - sometimes a low light with a spotlight (usually during monologues) - sometimes a brighter light covering the entire stage (when the family were in the kitchen in the beginning) - sometimes a blue light (usually during times with physical theatre).
- The garden - signified the passing of time (through the seasons with the rose bushes) - at the end, when Bob had lost everything (his wife dying and the children all leaving him) ripping out the rose bushes.
- Bridge - only used once for Mark's monologue - water signifying rain drops coming down on him.
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