Sydney Theatre Company 2024

Sydney Theatre Company 2024

STC Artistic Director Kip Williams has announced the Company’s 2024 Season, which will include his new cine-theatre production, an adaptation of the iconic Bram Stoker’s Dracula. Starring solo performer Zahra Newman, Dracula will complete Williams' trilogy of Victorian gothic stories that began with The Picture of Dorian Gray and Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde.

The 15-production strong season, which includes 11 works written or adapted by Australian playwrights, will also present the Australian premiere of Tony Award-winning Broadway musical Dear Evan Hansen, co-produced with Michael Cassel Group; the return to the STC stage for Hugo Weaving in a first-time collaboration with Dublin’s Gate Theatre for Thomas Bernhard’s The President; premieres of new Australian works from Van Badham and previous Patrick White Fellows Angus Cerini and Anchuli Felicia King; as well as encore seasons and national tour dates for RBG: Of Many, One by Suzie Miller and Joanna Murray-Smith’s Julia which Williams says will “ensconce two phenomenally successful STC commissions in the Australian canon’’.'

Image: Kip Williams. Photographer: Rene Vaile ©

"Audiences come to the theatre to find their collective sense of truth and the most powerful way for them to do that is through new writing,” Williams says. “Our 2024 Season is a collection of stories from some of Australia’s best playwrights, award-winning new international writing and some thrilling reinterpretations of classics that bring them right up to the minute.

"Australian plays are the lifeblood of STC and next year will see the world premiere of four brand new Australian plays on our stages and three recent new Australian plays cement their position in the canon with encore seasons. We will also reinvestigate an existing Australian classic, Muruwari playwright Jane Harrison’s 1996 seminal play, Stolen."

Image: Hugo Weaving and Olwen Fouéré in The President. Photographer: Rich Gilligan ©

 

STC 2024 At a Glance:

 15 productions in total including 11 plays written or adapted by Australian playwrights

 The world premiere of four brand new Australian works:

- Kip Williams’ adaptation of Bram Stoker’s Dracula, the finale of his gothic ‘cine-theatre’ trilogy (following on from The Picture of Dorian Gray and Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde), starring Zahra Newman (Fences, Julius Caesar)

- Van Badham’s hilarious love-farce A Fool in Love directed by STC Resident Director Kenneth Moraleda

- Anchuli Felicia King’s electrifying one-performer show American Signs

Image: Kerry Armstrong and Colin Friels in Into the Shimmering World. Photographer: Rene Vaile ©

- An STC commission from former Patrick White Playwight’s Fellow Angus Cerini called Into the Shimmering World - a poetic ode to the Australian landscape starring Kerry Armstrong and Colin Friels and directed by STC Director of New Work, Paige Rattray

• Hugo Weaving will return to STC joined by one of Ireland’s greatest actors, Olwen Fouéré, in an exciting first-time co-production with Dublin’s Gate Theatre for Thomas Bernhard’s The President, directed by Tom Creed

• Australian premiere of Tony Award-winning musical Dear Evan Hansen, in a brand new production co-produced with Michael Cassel Group and directed by Dean Bryant (Fun Home, Hubris & Humiliation)

Image: Nikki Shiels in Sunday. Photographer: Jo Duck ©

 Two transfer productions of new Australian writing from Melbourne Theatre Company and Griffin Theatre Company respectively: Anthony Weigh’s Sunday directed by Sarah Goodes, and Merlynn Tong’s Golden Blood 黄金血液 directed by Tessa Leong

 The reimagining of an Australian classic - Jane Harrison’s 1996 seminal play Stolen - directed by Richard Wherrett Fellow and Wilman Noongar man Ian Michael

Image: Kartanya Maynard and Luke Carroll in Stolen. Photographer: Rene Vaile  ©

 Two Pulitzer Prize-winning plays: Sweat by Lynn Nottage, directed by Resident Director Shari Sebbens; and Cost of Living by Martyna Majok, co-directed by Dan Daw and Priscilla Jackman.

 Three critically acclaimed STC works with encore seasons:

- Suzie Miller’s RBG: Of Many, One starring Heather Mitchell

Image: Justine Clarke in Julia. Photographer: Rene Vaile ©

- Joanna Murray-Smith’s Julia, a co-production with Canberra Theatre Centre starring Justine Clarke

No Pay? No Way!, which had its original STC season cut short by the pandemic in March 2020  

- Barking Gecko Theatre’s puppet-show Cicada, an adaptation of Shaun Tan’s classic picture book

The year will kick off with the riotous rom-com A Fool in Love, written by Van Badham (Banging Denmark) and directed by STC’s newest Resident Director, Kenneth Moraleda. Featuring the comedic talents of Melissa Kahraman (Hubris & Humiliation), Contessa Treffone (On the Beach) and Megan Wilding (The Importance of Being Earnest), A Fool in Love is a twenty-first century adaptation of Spanish Golden Age classic comedy La dama boba.

Image: Heather Mitchell in RBG Of Many, One. Photographer: Rene Vaile ©

Following this will be the return of Suzie Miller’s RBG: Of Many, One after a sold-out premiere season in 2022. Starring Heather Mitchell in an award-winning, “virtuosic performance” (The Conversation), the production will play the Sydney Opera House Drama Theatre before embarking on a national tour to Brisbane, Melbourne, Canberra and Parramatta. 

Then, from 2020 Patrick White Playwrights Fellow Angus Cerini (The Bleeding Tree, Wonnangatta), comes Into the Shimmering World - an epic and poetic story of love, loss and renewal in the Australian outback performed by stage and screen legends Colin Friels and Kerry Armstrong.

Image: Mandy McElhinney and Catherine Văn-Davies in No Pay? No Way! Photographer: Rene Vaile ©

After original STC season was cut short due to COVID in early 2020, Marieke Hardy’s adaptation of Dario Fo’s No Pay? No Way! is back for an encore. Directed by Sarah Giles (The Importance of Being Earnest) and starring Mandy McElhinney (The Tempest) and Catherine Văn-Davies (Constellations), this play combines political satire, hilarious plot twists and sharp-as-a-tack dialogue. 

In a first, STC will join forces with the Gate Theatre in Dublin to mount a co-production of Thomas Bernhard’s The President, starring two of the pre-eminent actors from both countries - Australia’s Hugo Weaving and Ireland’s Olwen Fouéré. At the helm is award-winning Irish director Tom Creed, who will be joined by a creative team featuring world-class Australian talent, including Designer Elizabeth Gadsby (Appropriate) and Associate Director Ian Michael (Constellations).

Ian Michael will then direct the reimagining of an Australian classic - Jane Harrison’s 1996 seminal play Stolen; and from former Patrick White Playwright’s Fellow Anchuli Felicia King (White Pearl, The Poison of Polygamy) comes American Signs, an eviscerating look at corporate culture starring Catherine Văn-Davies (Constellations).

Image: Zahra Newman in Dracula. Photographer: Rene Vaile ©

In July, Kip Williams’ trilogy of gothic cine-theatre adaptations will conclude with Bram Stoker’s Dracula, performed by one actor - Zahra Newman (Fences, Julius Caesar). Following the critical-acclaim of its predecessors The Picture of Dorian Gray (2020) and Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (2022), Dracula promises to be a thrilling end to one of the most innovative theatrical feats in recent history that will show off the full-range of Newman's performing prowess. 

Next up is US playwright Martyna Majok’s Cost of Living, winner of the 2018 Pulitzer Prize for Drama. Starring Kate Hood (Escaped Alone and What If If Only), Olivier Award-winning Philip Quast (Do not go gentle...) and Dan Daw (The Dan Daw Show), who also co-directs with Priscilla Jackman. 

Justine Clarke will once again step into the shoes of Australia’s first female prime minister in the return season of Joanna Murray-Smith’s Julia, following its sold-out, run in 2022. Julia, a co-production with Canberra Theatre Centre. 

Image: Charles Wu and Merlynn Tong in Golden Blood 黄金血液. Photographer: Rene Vaile  ©

Merlynn Tong’s Golden Blood 黄金血液 is a sweeping and intimate semi-autobiographical insight into the lives of two Singaporean siblings, coming to STC after a premiere season at Griffin Theatre Company; and for the kids there’s Barking Gecko Theatre’s Cicada, adapted from Shaun Tan’s best-selling picture book of the same name. 

Then STC is joining forces with Michael Cassel Group to bring the Tony-Award winning Broadway musical Dear Evan Hansen to Australia for the first time. Directed by Dean Bryant (Fun Home, Hubris & Humiliation) and featuring music from Grammy and Academy Award-winners Benj Pasek and Justin Paul (La La Land, The Greatest Showman).

The second transfer season of the year is Anthony Weigh’s Sunday from Melbourne Theatre Company, starring Nikki Shiels (The Picture of Dorian Gray) and directed by Sarah Goodes (Julia); and to finish the year, Paula Arundell and Lisa McCune will come head-to-head in the Australian premiere of Lynn Nottage’s Pulitzer Prize-winning play Sweat, directed by STC Resident Director Shari Sebbens (Fences). 

Explore STC's 2024 Season and ticket information at sydneytheatre.com.au/season-2024.'

Click here to read about more 2024 seasons.

 

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