FWAYMTZOT What to expect | Page 3

OCTOBER 30 2016 Kids lose their minds in Fight With All Your Might the Zombies of Tonight Every year, Halloween celebrations seem to get bigger and bigger, scarier and scarier. But did you know that this year's fright fest coincides with a terrifying once-in-every-two-centuries phenomenon that turns ordinary kids into zombies? We're not talking your common-or-garden, braineating Dawn of the Dead zombies, either. No, these are zombies who dress alike, think alike, dance in unison and meet after school to sip decafmocha-latte-soy-frappuccinos. dead," says Rosy Cardis, 11, who plays a sharpeyed leading character named Alex. "They are people who have lost their identities, so it's like they have lost their brains. The moral of the story is all about being yourself." Alex is the leader of a bunch of school misfits, one of whom is Leo, played by 10-year-old Jasper Reucassel. "Leo is a dork who has a lot of opinions and won't stop talking," Jasper says. "He uses a lot of big words. He's a wimp but he's very smart. The narrator says we are all weird but some of us are better at hiding it than others." Whittet has set the play on Halloween night. "It plays on the idea of everyone dressed up in costume. You've got kids dressed like zombies who see that other kids are acting like zombies, and then everyone seems to be becoming zombies. Th en yo u h av e th e o dd -b o d k ids in Ghostbusters costumes and a banana suits running around trying to save their town." Will it be scary? "It's not super scary, like MA15+, but it has a few scary scenes," Rosy says. "There are some pretty funny jokes, too," adds Jasper. "It has child humour and some adult stuff that I don't get myself. I'm saying lines that I don't get!" If you saw the recent Australian movie Girl Asleep, it might not be all that surprising to learn that these zombies are the product of the imagination of that film's writer, Matthew Whittet. "I really like genre stories and then subverting and playing with them," he says. "So I asked my son Jasper, who is 10, about his favourite stories. At that point he was really into zombies, and that got me thinking. There is a plethora of films about zombies – but I couldn't think of a play. I thought writing one would be awesome." The Australian Theatre for Young People agreed. Whittet's new play, Fight With All Your Might the Zombies of Tonight, walked away with the 2015 ATYP Foundation Commission Award. Now it is about to receive its premiere, a production featuring actors aged 10 to 13 and directed by Robert Jago. "The zombies in the play aren't back from the http://www.smh.com.au/entertainment/stage/kids-lose-their-minds-infight-with-all-your-might-the-zombies-of-tonight-20161026-gsb0md.html Whittet says there will be a few "jump scares" if everything goes right on the night. "There are some special effect moments where people pop out from behind things or jump out of a box. And there are 20 kids in the cast so there are a lot of zombies." Whittet's association with ATYP goes back many years. He was an ATYP kid before he went to study acting at NIDA. "I've wanted to come back and do something with the company," he says. "The kids are so great to work with. I enjoy the craziness in it. It's wild and woolly but at the same time loaded with meaning so that it's not just silliness." Fight With All Your Might the Zombies of Tonight plays at ATYP, Walsh Bay, November 919, atyp.com.au