Through three short performances, the play looks at how the element has shaped regional Western Australia for Indigenous Australians and European migrants, performed by Kalgoorlians themselves.
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Through three short performances, the play looks at how the element has shaped regional Western Australia for Indigenous Australians and European migrants, performed by Kalgoorlians themselves.
This performance is a sweet, sweet thing, full to the brim and overflowing with charm and sass.
If you like Shakespeare but have a short attention span, you’ll probably find something to enjoy here.
The Three Deaths of Ebony Black is a farcical romp reminiscent of Death at a Funeral - without the drugs, nudity and secret lovers. Which was a relief, because my date for the evening was my ten year old nephew.
An explorative work built on improvisation and audience interaction, CollageN is going where few have gone before.
Lauded as one of the heavyweights of British dance, Michael Clark has finally brought his 'To a Simple Rock Song' dance production to Perth. Read our review here.
A Fringe Festival newbie embarks on his first Fringe adventure with Rian Howlett’s journey into the Museum of Lost Things, an interdimensional black hole where all things lost go to live out their days.
Resonant drumming, martial arts and serene set design grounds the oriental production held at the gorgeous His Majesty's Theatre.
This esteemed collective from the northern French city of Lille pushes the limits of physical ability and brings poetry to the body in motion with daring, gasp-inducing stunts. The 22 acrobats will make your jaw drop in wonder as they catapult each other through the air or create multi-storey human towers of power.
Rarely does a show with so many players capture the fundamental essence of human relationships, but this one has it in the bag. A diverse tale of individual and collective histories, a living tapestry for all who behold it, and one of those 'all' should be you.
Testoni knows stories are anything but silly. She gives a voice and a face to a Victorian-era girl who is graceful and fierce, young in her curiosity, but wise in her insight.
I'm always impressed when small theatre shows transcend their limitations through an artful use of performance, light and sound. Timothy Green's Night Sweats is such a show.
Cardboard Kingdom is the most heartfelt wakeup call imaginable. The passion on display in all facets of the play is the kind that made me fall in love with theatre in the first place.
Less Light is a deeply unique theater experience.
This is the story of a girl... who loved stories but didn't like her own world! Written and directed by Scott McArdle and embodied by the magnificent team at Second Chance Theatre, with musical prodigy Georgina Cramond on keys, there is never a dull moment in Josephine!
Banned is a thought provoking piece of work that deftly examines a myriad of social issues in a sensitive and nuanced yet entertaining manner.
One Punch Wonder is a timely exploration of what it means to be a man, in a year which has already been defined by the impact of the murky depths of the male psyche.
You'll leave laughing, weeping, with a memory to hold in the corner of your ribcage forever.
It harnesses the honest power of poetry, although each show is tailored for an audience there is an authentic energy to every word uttered in this show. For anyone who has been in love, out of love or even speculated the concept, there is something here for you.
This two-person play can only be described as an experience. What they brought was a boundary-pushing, uproariously funny night of dark slapstick comedy at its finest.