Cover story
Raiders of the Lost Land

For this year’s Christmas panto, Stanwell Park Arts Theatre (SPAT) presents an archaeological adventure with a feminist twist. Bethan Farmer reports. 

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This December Stanwell Park audiences are in for a treat with the return of SPAT’s traditional Christmas Panto to the CWA Hall after a three-year hiatus.

Montana Smith and the Raiders of the Lost Land is a rip-roaring, globe-trotting adventure ride featuring a cavalcade of colourful characters, stunning sustainable sets, vicious vile villains, huge-hearted heroes, and a nitpicking narrator with an appetite for annoying alliteration.

We dug deep with lead actors Adam Wade (Montana Smith) and Emma Reid (Gail Friday):

For the uninitiated, what is Panto?

Emma: It’s a melodramatic take on a comedy play, with lots more audience interaction.

Adam: A very silly play where you get to shout at actors who have worked hard and see if you can get them to forget their lines. The kids will get a laugh at me falling over and the parents will get a laugh for reasons they’ll have to lie about to their kids.

I’ve heard pantos have audience involvement – what does that mean?

Emma: We are trying to solve a mystery and need help from the audience to work out the clues – so please call out to us if you can help! Don’t forget to ‘boo’ the baddies and ‘cheer’ for the goodies! 

Adam: People get to shout “It’s behind you!”, “Oh no, you’re not! / Oh yes, you are” when the opportunity comes up. If you want to try to throw me off by yelling out at me – please don’t. I will not resist improvising and our director Kelly will kill me if this panto ends up becoming a play about Star Wars.

Lead actors Emma Reid (Gail Friday) and Adam Wade (Montana Smith). Photo: Anthony Warry

What is special about this year’s show?

Emma: It was written by two fabulous local women (Kelly-Maree Michael and Bernadette LeMesurier) and is witty and fun. There are lots of old movie references and jokes that the grown-up audience will recognise, plus plenty of utter silliness to entertain the younger audience.

Adam: There is a huge amount of enthusiasm and talent going into all aspects of the production. The protagonist (me) is unusually flawed and hilarious, which persuaded me to not play the villain this time around. 

Tell us about your character.

Emma: Despite what Monty might think, Gail is THE BEST archaeologist in Australia! She’s clever, hard-working, a bit serious, loyal and pretty fed-up with being mistaken as a medical doctor!

Adam: Despite what Gail might think, Monty isn’t THE BEST archaeologist in Australia! He’s a nut, and a loaded cannon that audiences will get a laugh out of and won’t know when to take cover. 

Who do you think you are most like in real life, Monty or Gail?

Emma: Definitely Gail! She’s a bit of a nerdy goody-goody and so am I!

Adam: In. Every. Aspect: Monty. I’m unashamedly proud and expressive on and off the stage – that can sometimes both work for and against me. On the front cover of my script where it says ‘Role’, I wrote ‘THE STAR.’ So I’m basically playing myself.

What’s your favourite line?

Emma: There are so many funny lines in the play, and I do love a good dirty joke, so it’s hard to pick a favourite. When Monty thinks that his manhood might be cut off is delivered so well by Adam – his talent for physical comedy is incredible! 

Adam: When the Narrator is talking about a saucy pop-up book Monty has: “I bet it caused something else to pop-up.”

It’s been said that you should never work with children or animals, yet this show has a chorus of 20 kids and, I believe, a pantomime camel – what’s that been like?

Emma: Hectic! Ever since I saw my first SPAT panto, I knew I wanted to perform in one alongside my son, James, one day. I’m thrilled to have that opportunity this year.

Adam: The theatre’s for everyone, especially kids. If you want to ensure a future generation of talented actors, they need these opportunities to grow, even if it just makes them a more outgoing and expressive person (I should know). These kids have shown they’ve got amazing potential as actors, and I hope they see it through in future years.

Tell us a funny story from the rehearsal process.

Emma: My darling husband Patrick has been working hard to 3D print many of the props for the show. One of them only lasted one scene after an overly exuberant “Monty moment” – sorry, honey! 

Adam: Hey. It’s hard learning 200+ lines so I roughly ad lib them on the go. One time I was meant to say something along the lines of “Byron and I will be camping in the tent, getting in with nature and fishing with our hands”, but I ended up saying “Byron, I will be doing it hard in the tent.”


Montana Smith and the Raiders of the Lost Land has performances at Stanwell Park CWA Hall every Friday (7.30pm), Saturday (7.30pm) and Sunday (2pm – great for younger kids!) from 2-18 December.

For tickets and more information on accessibility go to spat.org.au. Tickets cost $20 (Adult 17+), $15 (Concession) and $55 (Family 2A, 3C). They sell out fast so don’t delay!

Read SPAT president Kelly-Maree Michael's article about the inspiration for this year's panto here

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