Frumpus developed out of the rich anarchic Sydney performance scene of the early 90’s, which included peers the Post Arrivalists. An all-girl ensemble, exploring ideas embedded in pop culture around beauty and the grotesque, their frumpy red tracksuit image soon became a hit. The line up changed over the years but a core consistently returned with Cherlye Moore at the helm.
The Frumpus style incorporated striking visual imagery that was at once subversive, disturbing and uncomfortably humorous. Using text and sound bytes and dramaturgical resources to develop their unique visual language, recurring themes included the awkward, the victim as heroine and the monstrous female in life and popular culture. Combining bizarre and surreal comic moments they sought to explode taboos around the representation of women.

Frumpus. Photo: Tess Peni
Frumpus devised and performed four major shows, and countless short performances.
They have never officially announced their retirement and there are rumours of a Frumpus nanna review in 20 years time.
Julie has been involved with Frumpus since 1996
The Boxed Set - Live Bait Festival Sydney, 2004
Boxed Set. Photos: Heidrun Lohr
"Notions of feminine fear, gothic horror and female representation (depicted as its own type of horror story) are all given a comic bite in Frumpus’ Ripper 2004 (director Cheryle Moore, video Sam James). Transforming Gravity Feed’s smoking tabernacle into a house of horrors, Frumpus emerge ridiculously red-tracksuited with torchlights and begin running (and dropping) pac-man style in a pantomime of fear and dodgem’ bullets. In front of a projected sequence of blonde women (again) running (presumably excerpts from various slasher films), enter the Frumpus women newly dressed in the archetypal white nighties and blonde wigs requisite of any truly gruesome horror flick. They "want water" they tell us, "water to drink", in a peculiar moment of mimicry and satire that mirrors their thirst-crazed ‘feminine’ counterparts on screen. And then they are running again, this time their nighties becoming those in the projection, whilst a miniature ‘evil’ Frumpus doll is bloodily birthed from a backpack serving as a prosthetic womb.
Frumpus are masters at clinching just the right edge between comic artistry and ridiculous silliness. Ripper 2004 explores connections between mythologies of fear (especially a ‘feminine’ fear) of unknown territory and of femininity replayed on the omnipotent boxes of popular visual culture. Hence, later in the piece they construct a curious juxtaposition of sleeping Red Riding Hoods set against a video of buxom naked women teaching Tai Chi. At times these textual collisions can be oblique or alternately too obvious, but the skit-like quality and general buffoonery Frumpus employs suggest that not only are they running from the horror of their own representation, they are running because they just do it so well."
Live Bait - Boxing the Monstrous
Bryoni Tresize - RealTime issue #60 April-May 2004 pg. 31
http://www.realtimearts.net/article/issue60/7405
Crazed - Adelaide Fringe Festival, 2004
Crazed. Photo: Heidrun Lohr
"It’s about getting that right expression. That perfect look of fear...Crazed is an audio-bite cut-up live show of blood-curdling screams, breathless voices pleading to the insane one to please stop knocking, even though we all know what’s gonna happen next."
"Sigourney Weaver would fall so deeply in love with the alien glove puppets whose seedy obsession with porn, sauna orgies, car hoonin’ and chain smokin’ would endear anyone’s tender (soon to be torn open) stomachs for a spot of sci-fi bio-tech co-habitation."
Jason Sweeney - RealTime issue #60 April-May 2004 pg. 40
http://www.realtimearts.net/article/issue60/7415