Review: White Noise
Picture: Alisha McLennan Marler, White Noise (Image credit: Creative Futures Photography).
White noise can refer to constant background sound, particularly that which drowns out other sounds. For people living with a disability, their personal ‘white noise’ might be the challenge of hearing, being heard, seeing or being seen. Alisha McLennan Marler, the White Noise lead creator, choreographic collaborator and performer, has created a memorable work that communicates aspects of lived experience as a mother with disability. In inviting audiences into Alisha’s world, White Noise also encourages us all to ‘consider our place in the conversation.’
The excellent Easy English program describes White Noise as including dance and circus. I came away describing it as performance art; dance and circus are at the centre of a show, but it is an all-encompassing artistic event that incorporates voice, animation, art, microphone manipulation, and an excellent soundscape.
The Diane Cilento Studio is a great choice for the world premiere of this new work, being at the same time intimate but also having sufficient room for the performer to move around. Alisha makes full use of the space, with movement that includes the use of aerial hammock silks, ‘writing’ on the floor and mirrored wall, and dancing with and against a wheelchair.
The White Noise set is deceptively simple, with upstage reflective surfaces that the performer confronts, moves against and ‘writes’ over—and which we in the audience are always looking at our own reflections and thinking about how we are part of what is being shared. The technical aspects of the show really enhance the overall experience, particularly when Alisha’s drawings and animated images are also projected onto the set and silks (set and lighting design by Bradley Gledhill, Filament 11 AV).
White Noise also makes clever use of what feels like a ‘fourth dimension,’ with a great soundscape that includes the clever use of recordings, the sounds of rain and water, and a pulsing electronic ‘heartbeat’ (soundscape composed by Andrew McMillan). The manipulation of a corded microphone was particularly impressive in dance moves that included the microphone ‘interaction’ with the dragged wheelchair, generating some sudden squarks and noises—communicating to me the senses of the challenges and frustrations of being seen as a wheelchair user.
Picture: Alisha McLennan Marler, White Noise (Image credit: Creative Futures Photography).
Picture: Alisha McLennan Marler, White Noise (Image credit: Creative Futures Photography).
Picture: Alisha McLennan Marler, White Noise (Image credit: Creative Futures Photography).
Picture: A gift at the curtain call (Image credit: Creative Futures Photography).
Picture: Alisha McLennan Marler, White Noise (Image credit: Creative Futures Photography).
Sadly there were only two opportunities to experience White Noise in the 2025 Undercover Artist Festival, which means that I feel I can introduce a spoiler and reflect on my main personal takeaway from this performance. The show includes several points where Alisha is connecting with a child—communicated through words, dance, movement, and projected animation. I found this exploration of the reciprocal relationship between a parent and a child to be particularly special. Throughout the show, recorded and spoken word reflected how the artist felt they were often ‘talking through water’ or ‘through bubble wrap,’ making the concluding aerial movement particularly special when Alisha speaks about knowing that the child understands and hears her mother: ‘always you hear me through the white noise.’
At the Friday curtain call a small child walked confidently onto the stage, to present the Alisha with a congratulatory gift—as an echo of the earlier words of the artist that, ‘sometimes, I feel you know when […] I need a hug.’ Thanks to Alisha, and to the Touch Compass team, for bringing this bold, thought-provoking, and insightful new art work to the Undercover Artist Festival.
Picture: Alisha McLennan Marler, White Noise (Image credit: Creative Futures Photography).
Audience information: World Premiere showing of Touch Compass’ White Noise, Diane Cilento Studio, Queensland Theatre, 78 Montague Rd, South Brisbane (25 & 26 September 2025). 45 minutes, no interval. Sensory warnings for sudden sounds and volume shifts. Recommended for ages 12+ (see also Easy English Program). Tickets $36-42, plus $5 transaction fee, with companion and group ticket options.
The reviewer attended the Friday 26th September performance (4:00pm).
Additional credits: White Noise benefits from the creative and technical support of Jessie McCall (Choreographic Collaborator), Eve Gordon (Costume Designer, Aerial Consultant), Jaine Mieka (Aerial Rigging Consultant), Ricky Olfacius (Aerial Rigger for Undercover Artist Festival), Peter Davison (Show Operator), and Fiona Saunders (Producer).
A version of this review first appeared at Nothing Ever Happens in Brisbane.