The Almighty Sometimes
The Almighty Sometimes

The Almighty Sometimes

Written by Kendall Fever

With – Nadine Garner, Max McKenna, Louisa Mignone, Karl Richmond

Melbourne Theatre Company

Role: Set and Costume Design

Director: Hannah Goodwin

Assistant Director: Jennifer Sarah Dean

Set Design: Jacob Battista

Costume Design: Jacob Battista

Lighting Design: Amelia Lever-Davidson

Sound Design and Composition: Kelly Ryall

Photos:  Pia Johnson

Quotes from Reviews:

As Anna begins to spin out of control, so does Jacob Battista’s clever set. The suburban kitchen setup looks deceptively simple, but it soon becomes an obstacle or a maze giving us a glimpse into Anna’s inner state. – Time Out – Ashleigh Hastings

Jacob Battista’s ingenious set – a series of gunmetal grey interlocking shapes that spin on a central axis – is both highly functional and emotionally impactful. It suggests anodyne domestic and medical spaces, frosty and soulless, but it transforms, with the help of Amelia Lever-Davidson’s excellent lighting, into something sinister and overwhelming.  – The Guardian – Tim Byrne

Jacob Battista’s excellent set design evolves in many fascinating ways, made up of several wall components, set inside a frame, that pivot freely from a mid-point. Goodwin has Anna in command of the settings when she is unmedicated and unable to control them when she is not. – Kris Weber – Theatre Matters

Jacob Battista’s mesmerising set design consists of movable pieces that are mechanically operated or manipulated by the cast, so the same locations can be seen from different perspectives while also creating cold and clinical ambiguous spaces. Paired with Hannah Goodwin’s direction where characters walk behind, underneath and around the pieces, the stage can be interpreted as an extension of the uncertainty and confusion occurring inside Anna’s mind. – Myron My – My Melbourne Arts

Jacob Battista’s set, lit by Amelia Lever-Davidson, initially feels like an IKEA-perfect staged apartment – until it moves. Its wooden floor and clean benches become hospital, doctors’ offices and houses that are moved in and around like a maze. Those in the maze can’t see or feel it moving for all the clear space, but everyone watching is waiting for a crash. – Anne Marie Peard – Australian Arts Review