13: The Play |  Legacy Ensemble & Anywhere Festival
review, theatre Virag Dombay review, theatre Virag Dombay

13: The Play | Legacy Ensemble & Anywhere Festival

Each of the thirteen performers seamlessly snapped between different set pieces and characters, sometimes even mid-sentence and didn’t miss a beat. In a split second, one actor could be a young child complaining to their parents and in the next breath, they were a gang member. Each transition was seamless as the last.

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ART | Staged Theatre Company & Anywhere Festival
review, theatre Kaylee Vera review, theatre Kaylee Vera

ART | Staged Theatre Company & Anywhere Festival

As part of the Anywhere Festival, this play was held in a screening room at the Institute of Modern Art. The small space allowed for an intimate performance, something uncommon in Brisbane theatre. All audience members were within meters of the actors, creating an engaging environment in which to enjoy the show.

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SHE | indelabilityarts
review, theatre Writeousness review, theatre Writeousness

SHE | indelabilityarts

SHE is an evocative rollercoaster ride of emotions where the dark, the neutral and the light share the stage equally just like in real life. SHE is at once unsettling, discomforting, provocative, engaging, seamlessly invoking a plethora of emotions ranging from anger to serenity, from dark to light, from pessimism to optimism but above all, from hopelessness to hope. SHE is brave enough to take a deep dive into women and their particular mental health issues. 

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Venus in Fur | The X Collective
review, theatre Georgia McKenzie review, theatre Georgia McKenzie

Venus in Fur | The X Collective

What truly made this play stand out was the performance of the actors, AJ and Nick Sinclair, who dynamically portrayed the two main characters. The performances were nothing short of exceptional, with both actors delivering nuanced portrayals of their characters. They both playfully and skilfully moved through the complex tonal and vocal shifts demanded of the piece.

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REVOLT. SHE SAID. REVOLT AGAIN | Vena Cava Productions
review, theatre Virag Dombay review, theatre Virag Dombay

REVOLT. SHE SAID. REVOLT AGAIN | Vena Cava Productions

REVOLT. SHE SAID. REVOLT AGAIN is an audacious and bold production. Breaking down text, vocabulary, and vernacular to its most surreal roots, it explores how words and society’s changing definition of them, have shaped the way we perceive and behave towards women, and placed arbitrary – and often absurd – boundaries around gender roles.

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Nineteen | Underground Theatre Company
review, theatre Virag Dombay review, theatre Virag Dombay

Nineteen | Underground Theatre Company

Overall, the actors as an ensemble were quite tight and captured the emotional repression and despondency that their characters were feeling. A special mention to Dominic Graves, who gave his character Noah’s broken masculinity and repressed trauma nuance and an emotional depth that was called for.

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I Love You, Bro | THAT Production Company
review, theatre Aaron Dora review, theatre Aaron Dora

I Love You, Bro | THAT Production Company

Quick, now’s your chance to experience an excellent young actor in a small black box theatre before he hits the big time and is too famous for all of us. In all seriousness, Jordan Stott was flying - his performance leaps forward with presence and electricity, never leaving the audience behind. This performer knows how to work a crowd, and this piece was perfect for him.

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A Life in Theatre | Ad Astra
review, theatre Virag Dombay review, theatre Virag Dombay

A Life in Theatre | Ad Astra

An absurd satire and love letter to theatre, director Pierce Gordon brought the text to life with such nuance; acknowledging the slice of the theatre industry it represents and finding parallels to contemporary theatre practices. From the actor’s relationship to the space, the dynamic role of the sets and the combination of naturalistic and comedic acting styles, Gordon expertly captured Mamet’s chaotic world.

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La Boite Season 2023: Bolder and braver
article, theatre Virag Dombay article, theatre Virag Dombay

La Boite Season 2023: Bolder and braver

When introducing the season, Stewart shared that she hopes that La Boite’s four main-house new Australian works will be the theatre classics of tomorrow. Stewart noted that it is, “… an entire season of necessary, never-before-seen work, brought to the stage by talented Australian artists and local creatives.  From morality and betrayal, relationships and grief, identity and displacement, and crushes and cosplay, there is a show for everyone.”

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"Our biggest and boldest season yet!" Lachlan Driscoll on the launch of Observatory Theatre's 2023 Season
article, interview, theatre Catherine Lawrence article, interview, theatre Catherine Lawrence

"Our biggest and boldest season yet!" Lachlan Driscoll on the launch of Observatory Theatre's 2023 Season

I think seasons are a fantastic way to involve audiences more deeply in what we do as a company and also the shows themselves. The season becomes an invitation to get a bit closer. The curation of a season of work around a core focus is a chance for audiences to gain more meaning than if the shows were just standalone.

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Sexual Misconduct of the Middle Classes |  Josie Cross & Stephen Hirst
review, theatre Virag Dombay review, theatre Virag Dombay

Sexual Misconduct of the Middle Classes | Josie Cross & Stephen Hirst

The emphasis on Jon’s inner thoughts and Hirst’s delivery poses the question of whether it is he who should be telling the story? Why aren’t we hearing the nineteen year old’s side? All of this gets resolved and answered in the most delicious way near the closing of the play. I actually shrieked in my seat and grabbed my friend’s hand in delight. Can you get better writing than that?

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Bloom Girl | Charli Burrowes
review, theatre Harmonie Downes review, theatre Harmonie Downes

Bloom Girl | Charli Burrowes

Bloom Girl takes us to her world, a world of instant attention, interaction, gratification. Of being hyper alert ready for the next beep and armed with the next retort complete with the right hashtag. It reminds us of how demanding being connected to social media is, and what it like to be an influencer seeing what other influencers do. I’m led to think perhaps social media is a virus when I hear the mispronounced influenza spoken.

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Breaking | Counterpilot
review, performance art, theatre Writeousness review, performance art, theatre Writeousness

Breaking | Counterpilot

A heavy feeling of helplessness and hopelessness overcame me as my anxiety increased with the unsettling news bulletins becoming grimmer and grimmer, sometimes bordering on the absurd, sometimes tinged with the darkest humour. Overall the weight of the well-scripted news bulletins was nothing short of palpable.  

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Slippery | Curtain World
theatre, review Claire Alcock theatre, review Claire Alcock

Slippery | Curtain World

There is a clear internal logic to the fantastical in Slippery, but with just enough of the familiar that it’s both hilariously weird and painfully relatable. Slippery feels like being pulled down a rabbit hole into a fantastical genderless fever-dream where everyone in the Vatican is gay, spoons are idiots, and cucumber vape juice will kill you. It’s unashamedly absurd, unapologetically queer, and hysterically funny.

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Pierrot | Martelle Simon-Green
review, theatre Kati Murphy review, theatre Kati Murphy

Pierrot | Martelle Simon-Green

[Pierrot] was so intimate. I felt like it was just me and them and the simply dressed stage. I went with them wherever the performers took me. At times the performance was so tiny, but I was still with them, peeking into their stillness. I left feeling quite speechless which isn’t like me.

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