Theatre Archive

REVIEW: SCENES FROM THE CLIMATE ERA AT BELVOIR

Billed as ‘immersive and thought-provoking’, this production is a series of vignettes – some 50 short scenes in all – that details attitudes to, consequences of and the potential horror climate change could unleash both now and in the relatively near future. The …

REVIEW: PONY AT THE STABLES

Billed as an ‘oh, so crass, one-woman crusade’, Eloise Snape’s debut play Pony is also a hilarious (and so on point) depiction of the one-way, life-changing journey into motherhood. Hazel (Briallen Clarke) is pregnant. She is also delusional, in denial and doing …

REVIEW: BLESSED UNION AT BELVOIR ST

    It is the children, more often than not, who observe most closely the tragedy and pain of marriage breakups – and that is true whether the breakup is within a ‘conventional’ nuclear family or, as is the case of the …

Review: Hairspray

  Hairspray is transporting Sydney audiences back to the swinging Sixties when hair was big, boots were high and the call for racial equality was loud. The Buddy Deane Show aired from 1954 until January 1964 when producers chose to cancel the show …

REVIEW: DARKNESS AT THE LIBRARY, NEWTOWN

The team behind Darkness – and it’s quite a team, Andrew Bovell, Zoey Dawson, Dino Dimitriadis, Dan Giovannoni and Megan  Wilding – invites audiences to ‘experience darkness’. This new work was inspired by certain events that took place in 1816, known now as the …

REVIEW: A BROADCAST COUP AT THE ENSEMBLE, KIRRIBILLI

An impressive cast, snappy dialogue and some instantly recognisable archetypes make for an entertaining ninety minutes. Much like forerunners such as the movie Bombshell, A Broadcast Coup takes as its subject matter misogyny in the workplace and, in particular, sexual harassment of …