A brand-new show from The Flying Fruit Fly Circus. Thirteen young performers with spectacular circus skills in a high-energy extravaganza which is hilarious, unsettling and awe-inspiring. Excellent holiday entertainment.
Adapted from John Wyndham's iconic sci-fi novel exploring human survival after large-scale catastrophe and the rise of the Triffids, mobile carnivorous plants. A bold, new theatrical experience from Newtown Theatre.
Unflinching and unsettling, Grace Malouf's bold new play spotlights questions of whether there are limits to medical ethics and to the right to personal self-determination.
"Mockingbirds just make music. they don't eat up people's gardens; don't nest in cornribs; they doon't do one thing but sing their hearts out. That's why it's a sin to kill a mockingbird." This Genesian production of an old classic asks the audience to experience its warmth, tension, humour and injustice up close.
In this film-within-a-play, story telling, commerce and environmental catastrophe collide with hilarious and disturbing consequences. Anything that can go wrong does as a frazzled film crew battle to take their final shot.
An smart and insightful play, set in the aftermath of the Typhoon Yolanda in the Philippines in 2013, playwright Happy Feraren examines
the blurred boundaries between corporate humanitarianism and self-interest. Feraren brings a first-hand insight and a sharp wit to what is both eye-waveringly funny and sharply satirical theatre. Another exceptional Griffin production.
A brave, honest and challenging piece of drama which gives a voice to the problems facing many young people. Described by the playwright as “a powder keg of emotion”, it is well worth a viewing ...
More than two million people tuned in to A Country Practice to watch Molly Jones’s final moments, in a heartbreaking scene that is widely considered to be the saddest Aussie TV death ever.
The struggle for personal survival in the unhinged world of late capitalism is both playfully and painfully observed by playwright Vivian Nguyen in the wild and wonderful Werkaholics.
Adapted from Max Porter’s much praised novel, the Belvoir Street production of Grief is the Thing with Feathers is electrifying, fantastical and deeply moving.
The expressions of regret in Alternative Facts’ production of Sincere Apologies cover a wide spectrum of human activity, from everyday domestic mishaps to very serious world-wide problems.
Koreaboo, from the fabulous Griffin Theatre Company, is a warm, witty and heart-wrenching two-hander, exploring the search for belonging and the pain of rejection.