Review: Heaven (Qtopia)

Venue: Qtopia (Darlinghurst NSW), May 14 – 31, 2025
Playwright: Eugene O’Brien
Director: Kate Gaul
Cast: Noel Hodda, Lucy Miller
Images by Alex Vaughan

Theatre review
Mairead and Mal are attending a wedding, but we see them spend all of their time apart, even though they are themselves a married couple. Heaven by Eugene O’Brien comprises two interweaving monologues, about people who are “fifty-plus” in age. It explores ideas of finality and potential, for those who have lived prescribed lives, exhausting all rules and expectations, only to find so much more that can be experienced.

A gently humorous work, directed by Kate Gaul with elegant conciseness, Heaven speaks with simplicity, about notions of personal fulfilment, especially for middle-aged individuals who tend to be characterised as being past their prime. Convincing performances by the cast inspire meditations on the meanings of freedom and selfhood.

Noel Hodda as Mal is compelling with his cheeky charm, and Lucy Miller’s effortless sass for the role of Mairead conveys the possibilities, of attaining something greater, if only one would allow themselves that liberty. Also noteworthy is Topaz Marlay-Cole, whose subtle lighting design provides appropriate enhancements at every atmospheric shift.

Central to the story are the character’s sexualities, and how Mairead and Mal are incompatible on that front. They take time apart to discover what it is that excites them, and therefore find versions of selves that are deeper and more authentic. Never for a moment in Heaven do wife and husband see or speak with each other. All of this happens at a wedding, which only serves to make us feel more than a little sceptical about that ancient tradition.

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