The Bigger Picture | Sachém, featuring Matt Hsu’s Obscure Orchestra.
review, poetry Claire Alcock review, poetry Claire Alcock

The Bigger Picture | Sachém, featuring Matt Hsu’s Obscure Orchestra.

With the colourful ensemble of Matt Hsu’s Obscure Orchestra providing a sonically vibrant depth to Sachém’s poetic innovation from his 2021 debut EP Part of the Picture, The Bigger Picture is explosive but not unstable, complex yet entirely focused, and expansive without ever being overwhelming. Altogether, the experience is simultaneously the manifestation of the incredible skill and ambition of one man while also being an unreservedly proud celebration of a rich, inclusive community. 

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34 Scenes About the Weather | Lunch Friend & Anywhere Festival
review, theatre Virag Dombay review, theatre Virag Dombay

34 Scenes About the Weather | Lunch Friend & Anywhere Festival

Featuring 34 Playwrights including two of Brisvegas’s treasures David Burton and Claire Christian, each scene had a distinctive tone and voice, even if sometimes the content sometimes overlapped. Actors Eliza Allen, Harrison Paroz, Jordan Stott and Grace Teng all had their own unique presence on stage and acting prowess. Even off-stage, when they were manually creating weather sound effects – such a brilliant addition – they carried that presence and watchability with them.

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Recipe for Relativity | Here + There Productions & Anywhere Festival 
review, theatre Darcie Rae review, theatre Darcie Rae

Recipe for Relativity | Here + There Productions & Anywhere Festival 

The “escape” for this unique Anywhere Festival experience was to assist dimension hopping Hadley to leave our dimension before their DNA broke down from too much inter-dimensional exposure. To help them escape, we were asked to fix their traveling device, a meticulously crafted object that had multiple dials, lights, and doors to fiddle with made by show producer Regan Henry.

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The Human Centipede Parody Musical | Synergy Production Co & Anywhere Festival
review, musical Darcie Rae review, musical Darcie Rae

The Human Centipede Parody Musical | Synergy Production Co & Anywhere Festival

Writers Liam Hartley and Oliver Catton have taken the storyline of the horror movie and turned it into a camp, self-aware, and ridiculous romp, a parody of the film and the cheesiness of musicals generally. The musical numbers are hilarious, clever, and performed with great skill. The content is gruesome, but the energy is high, and the choreography is peppy. We are even treated to a tap-dancing centipede nightmare, complete with a cane held by Dr. Heiter.

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Tipsy History | Glitter Martini & Anywhere Festival
review, circus Kristy Stanfield review, circus Kristy Stanfield

Tipsy History | Glitter Martini & Anywhere Festival

One thing I love about the Glitter Martini shows I’ve seen is they’re always audience participation heavy, which is great to keep the crowd entertained at changeovers between the acts. A particular crowd favourite this time was a modern spin on an Ancient Greek drinking game, which everyone got right into, and it really brought out their competitiveness. These interactive segments made the show intimate and that little more special and memorable for everyone.

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I'm Not Entirely Here | Vena Cava Productions & Anywhere Festival
review, theatre Kaylee Vera review, theatre Kaylee Vera

I'm Not Entirely Here | Vena Cava Productions & Anywhere Festival

While it was impossible to be present for every character interaction or read every scribbled note, I was able to create a complete understanding of the plot. The cast achieved this through moments where all present characters came together to move the plot along. As a result, everyone's experience at I'm not entirely here will be unique, but every experience will also be complete.

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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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Murder Village | David Massingham & Brisbane Comedy Festival
comedy, review Ads J comedy, review Ads J

Murder Village | David Massingham & Brisbane Comedy Festival

Murder Village is great night out for lovers of absurd comedy, Agatha Cristie style murder mysteries and all those inbetween. With a rotating cast of some of the best improvisers in the country, it’s also the perfect introduction to improv and a show you’ll want to see again and again. And not just because it will never be the same show twice.

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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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Queen and Friend | Grimes Productions & Anywhere Festival
review, comedy Kristy Stanfield review, comedy Kristy Stanfield

Queen and Friend | Grimes Productions & Anywhere Festival

With a complete lack of props, set or special effects, they crafted vivid worlds with just their voices and bodies, illustrating the different characters through changes in posture, voice and positioning. A real highlight, I have to say, was watching Imogen portray both the human-eating horse and human being eaten by the horse, both the consumer and the consumed, simultaneously. Bloody funny.

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Lucie in the Sky | Australasian Dance Collective (ADC)
review, dance Ranjini Ganapathy review, dance Ranjini Ganapathy

Lucie in the Sky | Australasian Dance Collective (ADC)

Lucie in the Sky is far more than a dance performance. It is an endearing and provocative work of art compelling us to consider deep-diving into the world of cybernetics. Evaluating the potentially detrimental repercussions of AI’s revolutionary progress on some businesses, it begs the following question: What does it mean to see, situate, and elevate humanity at the centre, if not the forefront, of technology?

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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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Urinetown | Phoenix Ensemble
review, musical Katie Rasch review, musical Katie Rasch

Urinetown | Phoenix Ensemble

The cast was accompanied by a live band that really elevated the whole show, and interacted with the characters in ways that fit really well and made the whole audience laugh. The same could be said for the choreography and dance, it was sharp, well placed and well executed. Frantic jazz moves or hip thrusts might have been ill fitted to a story about resource hoarding and capitalism, but it was exactly that contrast that made otherwise funny scenes hilarious.

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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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Rough, Red and Raw | Architects of Sound
review, cabaret Kristy Stanfield review, cabaret Kristy Stanfield

Rough, Red and Raw | Architects of Sound

As architects of sound, they’re far more important, far more conceptually insightful and artistically refined, percipient guardians of the zeitgeist. They are a whole new level of artiste, and we mere mortals cannot possibly comprehend their brilliance. With a certain vivacity, an ironic holier-than-thou attitude and so much lycra, the group expertly poke fun at influencer culture. In fact, I was just thinking to myself how brilliantly they embodied the wankiness so often found in the art world when they revealed the title of their latest album: “Art Fap”. Perfect.

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