Miss_XL_MrsWhippy5

MissXL calls on her prestidigitatorial and pantomimic powers to expose a mother’s fears.

Miss_XL_MrsWhippy4    Miss_XL_MrsWhippy3    Miss_XL_MrsWhippy2    Miss_XL_MrsWhippy1

“Ushered from the foyer to the expansive tree-lined forecourt of the Seymour Centre, Long transports us back to childhood summers of long hot days and still nights, when the jangle of a Mr Whippy van would draw the neighbourhood kids like flies. We gather in line to grab our sweet treat and lick and suck and bite on our choc tops as a drama begins to unfold. A sense of unease – and suddenly we find ourselves in the middle of a mother’s worst nightmare; a lost child, a bogeyman on the loose and a panic that escalates. Donning the beard of a pantomime villain, Long cavorts around the space, a maniacal gleam in her eye, limbs moving in time, creating a sense of hidden menace. The once familiar shadows of the trees take on a more haunted feel and the audience is flipped on a dime as they trail around the space after this bearded fanatic. The dance changes, Mrs Whippy reappears and the search is once again on – urgency and pain, fear and loss are given full play by Long’s expressive features and movement. A video break reminds us of the terrors of stranger danger – where all good children can end up locked in a cage as food… The child is never found and Mrs Whippy returns to her van, smile pasted in place…” (Cec Busby, Revolver)

Concept/choreography/performance Julie-Anne Long
Dramaturgy/Song Lyrics Virginia Baxter
Original Music Sarah de Jong
Lighting/Prodution Janine Peacock
Video Samuel James
Audience Management Victoria Spence
Mr Whippy Guiseppe & the Roma Expresso Gelato van
Producer One Extra Dance
 Video Excerpt Chitty Chitty Bang Bang
starring Sir Robert Helpmann as the child catcher
MissXL: Mrs Whippy