The soundtrack by musical theatre royalty Terrence McNally, Stephen Flaherty and Lynn Ahrens is both highly entertaining and ...
Like many beloved animations of the 1990s, these cherished childhood movies make an easy leap to the musical stage.
Nearly forty years on, David Williamson’s Emerald City is possibly more pertinent, poignant and passionate, the skewering satire and sparkling dialogue finding solid contemporary footing in Mark ...
Ice cold likes Alex. Alex is a two year old born at 25 weeks, survivor of three strokes and a constant bundle of special needs care for his single mother, Mary Jane, the titular character of Amy ...
Musicals can get a bad rap; the old-school 1940s-style “classics” are often filled with outdated concepts and blatantly offensive racial and gender stereotypes or are, as Gen Z would say, simply ...
A hit, a palpable hit, Hamlet Camp is full of wit, palpable wit. It begins with three poems, autobiographical, lyrical, wry, funny, each presented individually by the author/actor: Skip Retail Therapy ...
Above – Riley Warner and Chanella Macri. Cover – Jennifer Vuletic. Photos – Matt Byrne. The Director, Stephen Nicolazzo has come to this play with lived experience of having to understand the ...
Above – Will O'Mahony, Emily Rose Brennan, Deep Sroa and Ratidzo Mambo. Cover – Emily Rose Brennan and Deep Sroa. Photos – Daniel J Grant The title of this play takes its name from a “drinking game” ...
With its concerns continuing to resonate today, Tom Wright’s adaptation of Joan Lindsay’s novel, Picnic at Hanging Rock is an excellent choice of an Australian classic to bring to the stage. The novel ...
Hitting the sweet spot in a corner shop, Koreaboo is a theatrical pleasure, pure and simple. Written by and starring Michelle Lim Davidson, Koreaboo takes its name from the term used to describe ...
Above – Brea Macey and Eleni Cassimatis. Photo – Phil Erbacher. Hamlet is not healthy, not developed enough to know about affection and love. Also he is a coward, a smouldering blonde brooder and ...
Sedition feels like an additional character in Jean Tong’s Malaysian centric new work – as the lights came up in the Lawler theatre, I felt somewhat unoptimistic about any forthcoming Kuala Lumper ...
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