Reviews

Aphrodite

By Nico Muhly, with a libretto by Laura Lethlan. Sydney Chamber Opera with Omega Ensemble at Carriageworks, Eveleigh, NSW. June 20 – 28, 2025.

 

In an opulent hotel suite the attractive, best-selling author of The Aphrodite Complex and now documentary relishes her success. Her  critique, we learn, is that time has stripped the once multifaceted goddess of female virtues and left her simply as the goddess of beauty. 

Hedwig and the Angry Inch

Book by John Cameron Mitchell. Music & Lyrics by Stephen Trask. GWB Entertainment and Andrew Henry Presents, in association with RISING. Atheneum, Collins Street. 18 – 29 June 2025

Here is a ‘rock opera’ that is fearlessly more than a rock opera: it is a layered mash-up of genres, musical references and allusions – from the glam rock of 1970s Bowie, plus Lou Reed, Iggy Pop, the Velvet underground and more – Mitchell and Trask repurposing the lyrics of many songs to fit the story.  Hedwig uses rock music, cabaret, on-stage drama, a confessional narrative, a rock concert setting and melds it all into one loud, glittering, angry, funny eighty-five minutes.

Pete Murray Solo Acoustic Tour

Presented by QPAC and TEG Live. Lyric Theatre, 21 Jun 2025, 7:30pm

If you’re in the mood for a concert that feels less like a stadium spectacle and more like a warm catch-up with an old friend who happens to be a chart-topping singer-songwriter, Pete Murray’s solo acoustic tour is the ticket. Brisbane’s Lyric Theatre was the perfect setting for this intimate and heartfelt performance, with the stage dressed simply yet elegantly in flickering candlelight (flameless, naturally), subtle haze and low golden glows that framed the performers like memories in a photo album.

Soldier Boy

By Anthony Hill, adapted from his novel. Theatre Works, St Kilda. 19 June – 5 July 2025

Soldier Boy tells the story of James (‘Jim’) Martin (Oliver Tapp), who enlists at age 14, and serves at Gallipoli, the youngest Australian to die there in 1915.  Australian audiences will have varying responses to the play.  Some – younger folks - will learn about the costly, futile Gallipoli campaign (and the play sometimes seems designed for them) for the first time.

Cats

Music by Andrew Lloyd Webber. Based on Old Possum’s Book of Practical Cats by T.S. Eliot. John Frost and David Ian for Crossroads Live. Theatre Royal Sydney. Opening Night: June 20, 2025

There was so much nostalgia in the air at the opening night of the 40th anniversary production of Cats, that it felt like the ghosts of Bob and Hazel Hawke were in the foyer.

The Prime Minister and his wife famously attended the premiere in 1985, ahead of a two-year run.

The musical felt like it had returned home to the Theatre Royal, with the stage strewn with rubbish for the Jellicle Ball and felines creeping up through the audience.

Bonnie and Clyde

Music by Frank Wildhorn, lyrics by Don Black and book by Ivan Menchell. Marie Clark Musical Theatre. Arts Theatre, Angus St Adelaide. June 20 – 28, 2025

Marie Clark Musical Theatre have a hit on their hands with their engaging  production of Bonnie and Clyde. As Mary Poppins would say, it’s “practically perfect in every way”!

With music by Frank Wildhorn, lyrics by Don Black and a book by Ivan Menchell. The world premiere took place in November 2009. Wildhorn described the music as a "non-traditional score, combining rockabilly, blues and gospel music"

Koreaboo

By Michelle Lim Davidson. Director Jessica Arthur. Griffin Theatre Company. Downstairs Belvoir St Theatre. 14 Jun – 20 July, 2025

Since the 1950s over 200,000 Korean children have been sent abroad for adoption, many of them to Australia. Michelle Lim Davison was one of them. It wasn’t until she began searching for her biological family that she realised she was one of a global community of Korean adoptees “reclaiming its past and redefining its future”.

“This play,” she explains, “is one small part of that reclamation. It was inspired by my life, but it’s not a documentary. It’s imagined from reality.”

Comedians on Stage Auditioning for Musicals

Adelaide Cabaret Festival. Banquet Room, Festival Centre. 20-21 June 2025

It’s audition time again for the Wagga Wagga Community Central Arts Festival Theatre Festival Company Festival and the now thrice divorced co-directors host a range of talent desperate to be in their next production of Cats.

Gurril Storm Bird

Written by Trevor Fourmile. Direction and Dramaturgy by Nadine McDonald-Dowd. Presented in association with Hymba Yumba Independent School for QPAC’s Out of the Box Festival. Cremorne Theatre, 18 – 21 June, 2025

Stepping into Gurril Storm Bird feels like walking into a dream woven from gum leaves, laughter, and ancient stories that still shimmer with relevance. The moment you cross the threshold into the warmly glowing Cremorne Theatre, it’s clear you’re in for more than just a play—you’re being welcomed into a living, breathing story circle. This world premiere production, adapted from Trevor Fourmile’s award-winning children’s book, is a generous, spirited piece of First Nations storytelling that envelops its audience in both tenderness and truth.

Wolfgang in the Stars

Created and directed by Yaron Lifschitz and the Circa Ensemble for QPAC’s Out of the Box Festival. Concert Hall, 18 – 22 June, 2025

Step aside, gravity! Wolfgang in the Stars is ready for lift off. Blending lashings of Mozart, a sprinkle of space dust, and a whole heap of heart, Circa’s latest production catapults audiences into an intergalactic adventure that’s as whimsical as it is wondrous. Part circus, part concert, part cosmic fever dream, this world premiere blasts off from the Concert Hall stage and soars straight into the stars, bringing joy to every earthling in its path.

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