Sue Ann Muller Archive

Review: Miss Nikki and the Tiger Girls

Review: Miss Nikki and the Tiger Girls

Miss Nikki and the Tiger Girls is the story of a journey incorporating music, women’s issues, politics and globalisation, produced in a country at a time of massive societal and political change. We first meet the Tiger Girls in 2010 when Myanmar is …
Review: Slow Dances for Fast Times

Review: Slow Dances for Fast Times

This work is an eclectic showcase of 12 solo performances by some of the best dancers from the independent dance sector in Australia. Slow Dances for Fast Times opened at the Carriageworks on March 6. As always when visiting Carriageworks I was …
Book Review: To Hellas and Back

Book Review: To Hellas and Back

When Australian-born Lana Penrose’s boyfriend Dion is offered the job of a lifetime in radio in Athens, they are thrilled. Penrose sees it as an opportunity to have a sabbatical, take a well-earned break from a hectic career and discover the joys …
Sculpture by the Sea

Sculpture by the Sea

The spectacular Bondi to Tamarama coastal walk has once again been transformed into a two-kilometre long temporary sculpture park featuring more than 100 sculptures by artists from Australia and across the world for the annual Sculpture by the Sea . This is Sculpture’s 16th year …
Review: Salome

Review: Salome

Salome, an opera in one act, was written by Richard Strauss who based it on Oscar Wilde’s atypical and rarely performed play of the same name. Wilde wrote the play in French although it was translated into German for the opera adaptation. …
Selling off the Serengeti

Selling off the Serengeti

The President of Tanzania is poised to sign a deal with the United Arab Emirates owned Otterlo Business Corporation Ltd (OBC) which would force up to 48,000 members of Africa’s famous Maasai tribe from their land in the Ngorongoro District of Tanzania to …
Dig deep for a dollar on July 25

Dig deep for a dollar on July 25

What can you buy for a dollar? A lot if you spend it right. 1$Day is dedicated to reducing the global inequities in children’s health and education.  And it just takes $1. There are over 22 million people in Australia. What if everyone …