Blanc de Blanc Encore
burlesque, review Catherine Lawrence burlesque, review Catherine Lawrence

Blanc de Blanc Encore

Blanc de Blanc Encore delivers a high-paced 100+ minutes of variety-style entertainment, ranging from song, dance and European-style clowning, through to foot-juggling, Chinese pole and aerials. Be ready for a quick and entertaining ride.

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Ruby Moon | Ad Astra
theatre, review Jaydem Martin theatre, review Jaydem Martin

Ruby Moon | Ad Astra

Ruby Moon is an important work and was inspired by the headlines of missing children in the past. When we think of the tragic news of Daniel Morcombe and William Tyrell, and how today we live in a world where media plays such a big role in our lives that when a story like that happens it becomes almost unavoidable to not get caught up in the anxiety or feel the grief of their family. I think it does a great job at exploring the corruption of innocence and how our perceptions can drastically change after such incidents.

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Our Blood Runs In The Street | Shane Anthony and Ensemble
theatre, review Tristan Niemi theatre, review Tristan Niemi

Our Blood Runs In The Street | Shane Anthony and Ensemble

All in all, Our Blood Runs In The Streets does the job it set out to do. It provides audiences with a hidden history of this place and does so in a way that is emotionally evocative rather than destructive – with a slightly more nuanced range of representations and more rehearsal I think this work could have left me a sobbing mess rather than a lightly weeping one.

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An Ideal Husband | Lewis Treston & La Boite Theatre
theatre, review Tristan Niemi theatre, review Tristan Niemi

An Ideal Husband | Lewis Treston & La Boite Theatre

An Ideal Husband provides a grim insight into how a lot of the peril we encounter currently – climate change, corruption, rampant racism, homophobia, and xenophobia – could have been prevented had a few more people stuck to their principles and didn’t give-in to corporate greed or a lust for power. All while managing to be the most joyous experience I’ve had in a theatre in a long time. Deeply hilarious. Wild(e)ly entertaining.

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The Sunny Tribe District | Robert the Cat
theatre, review Virag Dombay theatre, review Virag Dombay

The Sunny Tribe District | Robert the Cat

The cast were tight knit; not a move or beat out of place in delivering this chaotic script. Each member of the cast effortlessly carried the weight of the responsibility placed on the ensemble. From the Olivia Rodrigo sing-along, to the synchronised, lavish dance sequences to the perky rap battles to the overly sexual demonstration of how to pour water over each other, everything that they threw at us no matter how absurd or obscene was executed to glorious effect.

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La Traviata | Opera Queensland   
opera, review Tristan Niemi opera, review Tristan Niemi

La Traviata | Opera Queensland  

What does it mean to choose love when it always ends (either in death or heartbreak)?

What is it to truly connect with people in a world obsessed with the immediacy of pleasure?

Why do men still feel entitled to scorn and humiliate women when they live in authentic ways?

Why must women only be one thing? Why can’t they decide to change? Why does society still berate them for their multitudes?

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La Traviata | Opera Queensland
opera, review Kian Dillon opera, review Kian Dillon

La Traviata | Opera Queensland

As curtains rose on the lavish opening party scene, I couldn’t help but feel it was simply an extension of the pre-show mingling that I’d borne witness to just outside the doors. I’d also heard that opera, in its penchant for the re-staging of classic works and the capacity to afford to do so, often offers a vivid window into an era, a place, or a moment in time. And for Opera Queensland’s La Traviata, this was true of both the stage and the foyer.

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Cool Story Bro | Big Fork Theatre
improv, storytelling, comedy, review Fliss Morton improv, storytelling, comedy, review Fliss Morton

Cool Story Bro | Big Fork Theatre

One of the coolest parts of Cool Story Bro is that every show night is its own opening and closing night. What happened on Friday night will never happen again, and the only people in the world who got to experience it are those who were in the room. So for all those reading this, I’m sorry, but you will never, ever, get to experience the pure extasy of watching a group of people spontaneously assume the role of sperms and egg in the fight for fertilisation.

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Love, Lust, Lost | Broad Encounters
immersive, theatre, review Kaylee Vera immersive, theatre, review Kaylee Vera

Love, Lust, Lost | Broad Encounters

Words cannot give this show justice, as the level of immersion and the depth of character cannot be overstated. Immersive theatre is the way of the future, and Love Lust Lost proves that. No show has ever made me so curious, and I want more people to see the show simply so that I can talk to more people about it. I would say I will see the show again, but I worry that won't be enough.

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THREE 2.0 | Australasian Dance Collective
dance, review Gloriana Grace dance, review Gloriana Grace

THREE 2.0 | Australasian Dance Collective

The dance pieces intrigued me and left me thinking about the meaning and message behind them. Each piece was abstract and unique, and brought out their own essence, mood and atmosphere. The choreography, utilising various techniques, with both soft and sharp movements, efficiently expressed human being’s emotional boundaries, the surrounding political physical space, our individuality, as well as our relationship with other people.

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The Ugly One | AllEntertainment
theatre, review Nadia Jade theatre, review Nadia Jade

The Ugly One | AllEntertainment

This performance is lively and light-hearted, not skirting away from its darker undertones but embracing them with a jaunty devil-may-care attitude. It’s an absurd play, with the supporting actors playing multiple characters each with the same name; which had me tumbling for clarity on a couple moments. It is relentless; the scenes blur quickly into, across, under and over each other, and the actors did a fantastic job of taking us along for a ride with them.

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Between Olas | NUDO
dance, review Jaydem Martin dance, review Jaydem Martin

Between Olas | NUDO

It was evident how dedicated the performers are at their craft. Each performer excelled in what they do, both bringing their own cultures to the stage, and performing in sync with each other, culminating in the dance routines coming off as flawless.

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Club Extimacy | The Black Box Collective
theatre, review Fliss Morton theatre, review Fliss Morton

Club Extimacy | The Black Box Collective

Each character felt like a person I’d met in a club bathroom, or at least someone like them. The work was a revolving door of fleeting interactions, as the world of the club thumped just outside the piss-stained walls. A hilariously authentic depiction of the bathroom chats and antics that many of us know all too well, this show accurately captured the liminality of club bathrooms.

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Carnival of Animals | CIRCA
circus, review Darcie Rae circus, review Darcie Rae

Carnival of Animals | CIRCA

Carnival of The Animals has been performed many times (almost 300) since its premiere in 2014, and for this season Circa redid and added sections of the show to include an ensemble of local children. These kids took part in group acrobatics with the Circa ensemble and with each other. It was a sweet addition that suited the show, and many of these kids clearly have a strong acrobatic foundation in which to grow into. It might be them in the professional Circa ensemble in a decade or so.

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Murder On The Not-So Orient Express | Mystify Events
theatre, review Darcie Rae theatre, review Darcie Rae

Murder On The Not-So Orient Express | Mystify Events

The story, written by Siobhan, had all the tangled storyline fun of a classic absurd crime mystery, with lots of crossovers with the pasts of the passengers, and a plot full of exciting twists and turns. Audience members were inserted into the show by the actors, taken out of their seats and placed right into the action. The cast were skilled at picking these people, and moving on quickly if someone seemed hesitant to be thrown into the spotlight.

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STOP THAT NONSENSE | Nicholas ‘Prince’ Milverton & IMA
theatre, installation & visual art, review Writeousness theatre, installation & visual art, review Writeousness

STOP THAT NONSENSE | Nicholas ‘Prince’ Milverton & IMA

In spite of its brevity, STOP THAT NONSENSE managed to touch on what it takes for a young black man to excel with the loving support of his adoring parents and set within the context of race, privilege and perception underpinned by colonialism. I look forward to the playwright expanding STOP THAT NONSENSE into a full-length work where the many levels of black excellence can be explored in greater depth.

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This Time It’s Personal | Sam Evans
dance, review Kati Murphy dance, review Kati Murphy

This Time It’s Personal | Sam Evans

Evans came out strong and committed to character, bringing robots, dolls, and puppets to life amidst hectic high energy tricks in a very small space. It was a lot of fun. He is a strong comedic performer and commanded the audience early on with dance techniques you really need to see to believe.
In a show of his versatility, Evans also took us to his darkness and his quiet peace too, all the while holding space, manipulating it with his body… sometimes seemingly defying the laws of physics.

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