What becomes of the broken-hearted? This show breaks it to you gently
New Zealand writer and performer Karin McCracken was so fascinated by this that she made a show called Heartbreak Hotel with creative partner Eleanor Bishop, co-director of their contemporary theatre company, EBKM. Part of this year's Rising festival, it is the most affirming, original and compassionate exploration of heartbreak you'll likely ever see.
McCracken plays the show's hero, who explains the science of heartbreak to us and sings classic break-up songs. The old myths start being toppled in the first five minutes as she repeats advice from her mother: 'Exercise. Try something new … but the idea that time is a great healer should not be used, because for many people time stops … and it's a terrible thing,' she tells the audience.
McCracken, standing behind a synth (something new) on a stage lit like a shabby club, then launches into a cover of the Elvis song that lends the show its title. Later, there'll be other covers, from It's All Coming Back to Me Now by Celine Dion and Dreams by the Cranberries.
The show immerses us — with utmost tenderness — in the story of a painful breakup. As this story unfolds, Simon Leary plays every other character: a bad Tinder date, a wise doctor, a supermarket employee, the best friend, and finally, the ex-boyfriend, whose invisible presence has haunted the show right up until the point when we finally meet him.
McCracken began writing the show in 2021 when it felt, to her, as if the whole world was heartbroken. COVID provided a timely moment to explore the corners of grief. She and Bishop 'wanted to make a show about heartbreak that was useful,' she says.
They were interested in a contradiction: how we have a huge pool of heartbreak stories to draw from, but often these books, movies and songs are built from the same 'four ideas' about how to heal. Let time soothe you. Meet someone new. Drink water and go running. Find a hobby. Her own experiences of heartbreak had led McCracken to think about whether the received wisdom was inadequate, so she returned to first principles.
'I'd been thinking [about] what happens to your body, because anyone who goes through a heartbreak will tell you that it's a huge period of change, and often, you get sick or you feel really unwell. A lot of people lose weight or look different.' She became fascinated by the physiology of a separation, from the minute you get dumped, to the weeks, months and years afterwards. What she found is consistently intriguing.
In the first moments — when you're still sitting with the person who was, seconds ago, your long-term boyfriend — the body is flooded with norepinephrine, the fear hormone. This kicks off a cascading response from white blood cells, RNA (ribonucleic acid), and inflammatory proteins.
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'Our bodies think we can literally outrun or fight off a break-up at this point,' says McCracken, because physiologically we can't tell the difference between being dumped and, say, being attacked by a bear. The most startling thing is that the RNA that protects us from viruses is also stood down to funnel resources towards fighting the bear. Usually 'stars of the show', they now clog the system.
McCracken points out the absurdity of this situation, which might last for months.
'So we're primed to punch through a wall, but more vulnerable to flu.' Weeks later the body is in its 'resignation' stage; 'if someone's going to die of heartbreak, it's in this phase,' says McCracken. There is even a rare syndrome whereby 'someone is under so much emotional distress their heart literally changes shape'.
The show is carefully researched and, on one level, is a masterclass in science communication. It's also wildly entertaining. The challenge, says McCracken, was to bridge the gap between hard science, social science, popular accounts of heartbreak and 'anecdata'.
The stage design adds clarity. Every time we return to the science, informative section titles flow along 21 LED panels behind McCracken, like neon headlines in Times Square. This light installation gives the show the lingering texture of a Las Vegas chapel at night. 'There is something relentless about neon to me, which feels appropriate for heartbreak,' she says.
The power of Heartbreak Hotel also lies in the fact that it's drawn from experience; McCracken's vulnerability holds space for ours. I winced when McCracken's 'I love you' is met with Leary's pristine 'you too'. We have likely all been McCracken (or Leary) in this exchange.
The show is serious about heartbreak, but it's also warm and silly.
'Some of the things we all do [in a break-up] are totally unhinged, so there should be a space where you can laugh about that,' says McCracken. 'Or, a space where you can manage to take the bits that are funny as funny, because there are plenty of bits that aren't.'
Humour also underpins the pastoral care McCracken and Leary provide for the audience. Their performance is so naturalistic that audiences often mistake them for the couple they play. But they're actually long-term friends and collaborators. 'I love Simon on stage because he can drop into a character really easily and he also knows how to be with an audience,' McCracken says.
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The Advertiser
24-07-2025
- The Advertiser
Exes Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham reissue album
They're not going their own way anymore. After much speculation, Fleetwood Mac's former couple Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham have announced the reissue of "Buckingham Nicks," more than 50 years after the release of their only full-length album as a duo. Originally released in 1973, "Buckingham Nicks" is not currently available on streaming platforms. The album was last issued on vinyl in the US in 1981. The remastered version arrives September 19 via Rhino Records' high-fidelity series and was sourced from the original analog master tapes. The album will receive a CD and digital release for the first time, and the opening track, "Crying in the Night," was available to stream Wednesday. Buckingham and Nicks were in their early to mid-20s during the making of their album. Despite their relative inexperience, "it stands up in a way you would hope it would, by these two kids who were pretty young to be doing that work," Buckingham says, according to the announcement release. The reissued version of "Buckingham Nicks" features the same album cover as the original, despite Nicks' public dissatisfaction with the photograph, telling classic rock magazine MOJO that she "felt like a rat in a trap" during the shoot. "I'm actually quite prudish. So when they suggested they shoot Lindsey and I nude I could not have been more terrified if you'd asked me to jump off a speeding train," Nicks told MOJO in 2013. "Lindsey was like, 'Oh, come on — this is art. Don't be a child!' I thought, 'Who are you? Don't you know me?'" "Buckingham Nicks" was released one year before they joined Fleetwood Mac, and was met with little commercial success. But it did attract the attention of Mick Fleetwood, who invited Buckingham to join Fleetwood Mac. Buckingham in turn insisted Nicks come, too. The two then became the central faces, voices and songwriters of the group for the four decades that followed. The pair's tumultuous relationship appeared across the band's discography: She wrote "Dreams" about him. He wrote "Go Your Own Way" about her. Infamously, they broke up while writing the 1977 hit album "Rumours." Buckingham left the band in 1987, returning in 1996. The last time the band reunited, however, for a 2018-2019 tour, the rest of the members kicked him out, and Buckingham sued them. He claimed he was told five days after the group appeared at Radio City Music Hall that the band would tour without him. He says he would have been paid at least $12 million for his share of the proceeds. Later that year, Buckingham said they had settled the lawsuit. They're not going their own way anymore. After much speculation, Fleetwood Mac's former couple Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham have announced the reissue of "Buckingham Nicks," more than 50 years after the release of their only full-length album as a duo. Originally released in 1973, "Buckingham Nicks" is not currently available on streaming platforms. The album was last issued on vinyl in the US in 1981. The remastered version arrives September 19 via Rhino Records' high-fidelity series and was sourced from the original analog master tapes. The album will receive a CD and digital release for the first time, and the opening track, "Crying in the Night," was available to stream Wednesday. Buckingham and Nicks were in their early to mid-20s during the making of their album. Despite their relative inexperience, "it stands up in a way you would hope it would, by these two kids who were pretty young to be doing that work," Buckingham says, according to the announcement release. The reissued version of "Buckingham Nicks" features the same album cover as the original, despite Nicks' public dissatisfaction with the photograph, telling classic rock magazine MOJO that she "felt like a rat in a trap" during the shoot. "I'm actually quite prudish. So when they suggested they shoot Lindsey and I nude I could not have been more terrified if you'd asked me to jump off a speeding train," Nicks told MOJO in 2013. "Lindsey was like, 'Oh, come on — this is art. Don't be a child!' I thought, 'Who are you? Don't you know me?'" "Buckingham Nicks" was released one year before they joined Fleetwood Mac, and was met with little commercial success. But it did attract the attention of Mick Fleetwood, who invited Buckingham to join Fleetwood Mac. Buckingham in turn insisted Nicks come, too. The two then became the central faces, voices and songwriters of the group for the four decades that followed. The pair's tumultuous relationship appeared across the band's discography: She wrote "Dreams" about him. He wrote "Go Your Own Way" about her. Infamously, they broke up while writing the 1977 hit album "Rumours." Buckingham left the band in 1987, returning in 1996. The last time the band reunited, however, for a 2018-2019 tour, the rest of the members kicked him out, and Buckingham sued them. He claimed he was told five days after the group appeared at Radio City Music Hall that the band would tour without him. He says he would have been paid at least $12 million for his share of the proceeds. Later that year, Buckingham said they had settled the lawsuit. They're not going their own way anymore. After much speculation, Fleetwood Mac's former couple Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham have announced the reissue of "Buckingham Nicks," more than 50 years after the release of their only full-length album as a duo. Originally released in 1973, "Buckingham Nicks" is not currently available on streaming platforms. The album was last issued on vinyl in the US in 1981. The remastered version arrives September 19 via Rhino Records' high-fidelity series and was sourced from the original analog master tapes. The album will receive a CD and digital release for the first time, and the opening track, "Crying in the Night," was available to stream Wednesday. Buckingham and Nicks were in their early to mid-20s during the making of their album. Despite their relative inexperience, "it stands up in a way you would hope it would, by these two kids who were pretty young to be doing that work," Buckingham says, according to the announcement release. The reissued version of "Buckingham Nicks" features the same album cover as the original, despite Nicks' public dissatisfaction with the photograph, telling classic rock magazine MOJO that she "felt like a rat in a trap" during the shoot. "I'm actually quite prudish. So when they suggested they shoot Lindsey and I nude I could not have been more terrified if you'd asked me to jump off a speeding train," Nicks told MOJO in 2013. "Lindsey was like, 'Oh, come on — this is art. Don't be a child!' I thought, 'Who are you? Don't you know me?'" "Buckingham Nicks" was released one year before they joined Fleetwood Mac, and was met with little commercial success. But it did attract the attention of Mick Fleetwood, who invited Buckingham to join Fleetwood Mac. Buckingham in turn insisted Nicks come, too. The two then became the central faces, voices and songwriters of the group for the four decades that followed. The pair's tumultuous relationship appeared across the band's discography: She wrote "Dreams" about him. He wrote "Go Your Own Way" about her. Infamously, they broke up while writing the 1977 hit album "Rumours." Buckingham left the band in 1987, returning in 1996. The last time the band reunited, however, for a 2018-2019 tour, the rest of the members kicked him out, and Buckingham sued them. He claimed he was told five days after the group appeared at Radio City Music Hall that the band would tour without him. He says he would have been paid at least $12 million for his share of the proceeds. Later that year, Buckingham said they had settled the lawsuit. They're not going their own way anymore. After much speculation, Fleetwood Mac's former couple Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham have announced the reissue of "Buckingham Nicks," more than 50 years after the release of their only full-length album as a duo. Originally released in 1973, "Buckingham Nicks" is not currently available on streaming platforms. The album was last issued on vinyl in the US in 1981. The remastered version arrives September 19 via Rhino Records' high-fidelity series and was sourced from the original analog master tapes. The album will receive a CD and digital release for the first time, and the opening track, "Crying in the Night," was available to stream Wednesday. Buckingham and Nicks were in their early to mid-20s during the making of their album. Despite their relative inexperience, "it stands up in a way you would hope it would, by these two kids who were pretty young to be doing that work," Buckingham says, according to the announcement release. The reissued version of "Buckingham Nicks" features the same album cover as the original, despite Nicks' public dissatisfaction with the photograph, telling classic rock magazine MOJO that she "felt like a rat in a trap" during the shoot. "I'm actually quite prudish. So when they suggested they shoot Lindsey and I nude I could not have been more terrified if you'd asked me to jump off a speeding train," Nicks told MOJO in 2013. "Lindsey was like, 'Oh, come on — this is art. Don't be a child!' I thought, 'Who are you? Don't you know me?'" "Buckingham Nicks" was released one year before they joined Fleetwood Mac, and was met with little commercial success. But it did attract the attention of Mick Fleetwood, who invited Buckingham to join Fleetwood Mac. Buckingham in turn insisted Nicks come, too. The two then became the central faces, voices and songwriters of the group for the four decades that followed. The pair's tumultuous relationship appeared across the band's discography: She wrote "Dreams" about him. He wrote "Go Your Own Way" about her. Infamously, they broke up while writing the 1977 hit album "Rumours." Buckingham left the band in 1987, returning in 1996. The last time the band reunited, however, for a 2018-2019 tour, the rest of the members kicked him out, and Buckingham sued them. He claimed he was told five days after the group appeared at Radio City Music Hall that the band would tour without him. He says he would have been paid at least $12 million for his share of the proceeds. Later that year, Buckingham said they had settled the lawsuit.


Perth Now
24-07-2025
- Perth Now
Exes Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham reissue album
They're not going their own way anymore. After much speculation, Fleetwood Mac's former couple Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham have announced the reissue of "Buckingham Nicks," more than 50 years after the release of their only full-length album as a duo. Originally released in 1973, "Buckingham Nicks" is not currently available on streaming platforms. The album was last issued on vinyl in the US in 1981. The remastered version arrives September 19 via Rhino Records' high-fidelity series and was sourced from the original analog master tapes. The album will receive a CD and digital release for the first time, and the opening track, "Crying in the Night," was available to stream Wednesday. Buckingham and Nicks were in their early to mid-20s during the making of their album. Despite their relative inexperience, "it stands up in a way you would hope it would, by these two kids who were pretty young to be doing that work," Buckingham says, according to the announcement release. The reissued version of "Buckingham Nicks" features the same album cover as the original, despite Nicks' public dissatisfaction with the photograph, telling classic rock magazine MOJO that she "felt like a rat in a trap" during the shoot. "I'm actually quite prudish. So when they suggested they shoot Lindsey and I nude I could not have been more terrified if you'd asked me to jump off a speeding train," Nicks told MOJO in 2013. "Lindsey was like, 'Oh, come on — this is art. Don't be a child!' I thought, 'Who are you? Don't you know me?'" "Buckingham Nicks" was released one year before they joined Fleetwood Mac, and was met with little commercial success. But it did attract the attention of Mick Fleetwood, who invited Buckingham to join Fleetwood Mac. Buckingham in turn insisted Nicks come, too. The two then became the central faces, voices and songwriters of the group for the four decades that followed. The pair's tumultuous relationship appeared across the band's discography: She wrote "Dreams" about him. He wrote "Go Your Own Way" about her. Infamously, they broke up while writing the 1977 hit album "Rumours." Buckingham left the band in 1987, returning in 1996. The last time the band reunited, however, for a 2018-2019 tour, the rest of the members kicked him out, and Buckingham sued them. He claimed he was told five days after the group appeared at Radio City Music Hall that the band would tour without him. He says he would have been paid at least $12 million for his share of the proceeds. Later that year, Buckingham said they had settled the lawsuit.


Perth Now
22-07-2025
- Perth Now
Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham tease reissue of 1973's Buckingham Nicks album
Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham look set to reissue their 1973 Buckingham Nicks album. The former couple, who haven't been on good terms since guitarist Lindsey was axed from the group once again in 2018 in acrimonious circumstances, unexpectedly shared a pair of matching Instagram posts last Thursday (17.07.25), fuelling speculation of a Fleetwood Mac reunion. Stevie shared a handwritten line from their 1973 song Frozen Love from the Buckingham Nicks LP, which read: 'And if you go forward…' Lindsey then shared a near-identical post with the next line: 'I'll meet you there." And that's not all, bandmate Mick Fleetwood went on to share a video of himself listening to the track, which was shared onto the group's Instagram page, too. His post was captioned: "Magic then, magic now." On Monday (21.07.25), meanwhile, a billboard of the pair's controversial topless album cover was spotted by fans on the Sunset Strip in Los Angeles, teasing a release date of September 19. One X user shared a photo of the promo and captioned it: 'stevie nicks and lindsey buckingham on a billboard together. buckingham nicks is officially happening. september 19. this is at 7365 sunset blvd and no it's not photoshop or AI or anything else i saw it with my own two eyes that i cried tears out of after. (sic)" Buckingham and Nicks was recorded at Sound City Studios in Los Angeles, and was released the year before Stevie and Lindsey joined the Dreams band. Although it wasn't a commercial success, it led drummer Mick to invite Stevie and Lindsey to join the legendary rock band. Mick previously admitted he is keen for Stevie and Lindsey to put their differences aside. The sticksman - who co-founded the iconic rock band in the 1960s - told Us Weekly: "I always have a fantasy that [Stevie] and Lindsey would pal up a bit more and just say everything's OK for them both. But we've had such an incredible career." Mick planned to reunite the band before Christine McVie passed away in November 2022, aged 79. The veteran musician has "struggled" to find a direction since Christine's passing - but he remains hopeful of working with another band in 2026. Mick shared: "I miss playing as much as we used to. I'm hoping next year, one way or another, some band somewhere will say, come and play with drums or something. "So I always love to do whatever I can do working on an album that next year we may tour with it. I don't know, [but] not Fleetwood Mac." Meanwhile, Mick previously admitted that he would love for their to be "a healing" between Stevie and Lindsey. The musician hopes that they can mend their relationship, even if it doesn't lead to a Fleetwood Mac reunion. Mick told MOJO: "It's no secret, it's no tittle-tattle that there is a brick wall there emotionally. "Stevie's able to speak clearly about how she feels and doesn't feel, as does Lindsey. But I'll say, personally, I would love to see a healing between them - and that doesn't have to take the shape of a tour, necessarily."