Review: Pickled ﻛﺑﯾس (25A Belvoir)

Venue: Belvoir St Theatre (Surry Hills NSW), Aug 20 – Sep 8, 2024
Concept: Najee Tannous
Story: Antony Makhlouf, Francesco Pelli, Najee Tannous, Hayden Tonazzi, May Yousif
Directors: Hayden Tonazzi, May Yousif
Cast: Antony Makhlouf, Najee Tannous
Images by Anna Kucera

Theatre review
Summoned home by the death of his mother, Sam returns after a long absence. His brother Yousif is understandably resentful, having stayed put all this time, and now feeling as though he has missed out on a lot. Conceived by Najee Tannous, Pickled ﻛﺑﯾس deals humorously with family ties and the myriad complications involved in these often difficult entanglements. Thoroughly amusing, and interminably relatable, Pickled ﻛﺑﯾس explores some of the most authentic challenges in our emotional lives. Wonderfully candid and intricately considered, the interactions between Sam and Yousif offer valuable insights into human behaviour, and that eternally troublesome nature of love.

Pickled ﻛﺑﯾس is also an exploration of masculinity, in which we witness the tensions between the need for connection, alongside the obstacles to truthful expression. The characters may only rarely say what they mean, but thoughtful and innovative direction by Hayden Tonazzi and May Yousif always offers substantive illumination, to all the critical undercurrents that inform how the brothers think and act. What results is a show that proves immensely entertaining, whilst inspiring some stirring meditations about kinship that many will certainly find resonant.

Set design by Soham Apte depicts an unpretentious scene of domesticity, that turns poignant at pivotal moments. Lights by Elyse Drenth are a creative touch that brings theatricality and sentimentality, whenever we need a sense of intensification for the storytelling. Sounds and music by Chrysoulla Markoulli are  inventive, penetrating and beautiful, bringing to the production an air of elevated sophistication.

The siblings in Pickled ﻛﺑﯾس  are played by the aforementioned Tannous as Yousif, and by Antony Makhlouf as Sam, who both bring extraordinary authenticity to their portrayals of contemporary gay Lebanese-Australian men, as well as being a marvellously engrossing and endearing pair. The harmony in their performance has us entirely captivated, in their sometimes moving and often kooky presentation, of a sweet tale between queer Arab siblings.

Sam and Yousif might not see very much of each other, but there is no questioning the depth at which they know one another. There are people we see often in passing, but whom we only know on perfunctory levels. Queer Arabs are a marginalised group, whose voices are rarely represented in so many parts of Australian life. There are Australians who dominate our consciousness, and there are Australians who are routinely excluded. We are meant to be equal, but evidence suggests that the disparities are profound.

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