Reviews

The Talented Mr. Ripley

By Patricia Highsmith, adapted for the stage by Joanna Murray-Smith. Sydney Theatre Company. Directed by Sarah Goodes. Ros Packer Theatre, Sydney. August 19 – September 28, 2025, then Arts Centre Melbourne from October 28.

Slick and wildly entertaining this looks like another STC hit, which is bound for the stages of the world.

First written in 1955 and made into a successful movie starring Matt Damon in 1999, the story is familiar but still disturbing.

Ripley is a con artist who is paid by rich shipping magnate Herbert Greenleaf to convince his son Dickie to return home from a luxuriant lifestyle in Italy.

There he falls in love with the trappings of wealth and is turned on by incidental touches with Greenleaf and becomes orgasmic when he slips into his clothes.

Trophy Boys

By Emmanuelle Mattana. Cremorne Theatre, Queensland Performing Arts Centre (QPAC), Brisbane. 25 to 30 August 2025

One thing we all know from experience is that teenagers do not fully consider the consequences of their actions. So, what if those teenagers were also from powerful, privileged backgrounds and following a well-known grooming ground to becoming tomorrow’s leaders via the private school debating team? Written from her own experience in the world of debating, Emmanuelle Mattana was only 20 years old when Trophy Boys was first produced.

The Machine Stops

Written & directed by Briony Dunn, adapted from the short story by E M Forster. Theatre Works, St Kilda. 22 – 30 August 2025

The warnings implicit in E M Forster’s prescient 1909 short story recur and recur in various and related forms in books, essays, on social media in our time.  AI, our surrender to technology in the name of efficiency and convenience, authoritarian control, our alienation from and destruction of Nature, etc, etc. 

La Bohème

By Puccini. Opera Austria. Joan Sutherland Theatre, Sydney Opera House. Aug 20 – Sep 20, 2025

Few opera companies live for long without a production of La Bohème on the shelf. 

 

Candlelight Concerts – Queen

Invictus Quartet. Presented by Fever. Terminus Theatre, The Goods Shed. Ballarat. Friday August 22, 2025

Candlelight Concerts are currently a craze the world over. But are they theatre?

Absolutely, if theatre is entertainment that also uplifts and informs and connects, and isn’t that what all theatre should do?

This concert featured the music of Queen, one of the greatest rock bands of all time. Perhaps the presentation was not what you’d expect. Four young and beautiful women dressed in white, carrying string quartet instruments, take the stage lit by what seems to be thousands of candles. What transpires is an hour of sublime and unexpected music.

Chapter Two

By Neil Simon. Spotlight Theatre, Gold Coast. Aug 21 – Sep 6, 2025

Spotlight’s current production is the enduring comedy by Neil Simon revolving around the pursuit of happiness verses one-night stands!

This wordy four hander takes a little while to explain who’s who but with that done, the fun begins!

Director, Clem Halpin, has assembled a strong cast with established GC actors Amy McDonald, Peter Maden and Jon Turley and introducing the delightful Elle Lyons (who travels from Brisbane for the show). 

Ordinary Days

Book, Music & Lyrics by Adam Qwon. Clovelly Fox Productions. At fortyfivedownstairs. 20 – 31 August 2025

In the last moments of Ordinary Days one character persuades another to look more closely at Cezanne’s Apples and see the beauty in the ordinary.  It’s a fitting end to this ultimately optimistic tale of four New Yorkers struggling with their ‘ordinary’ frustrations, anxieties, and the burdens of their pasts. 

Destiny

By Kirsty Marillier. Presented by Melbourne Theatre Company. Directed by Zindzi Okenyo. The Sumner, Southbank Theatre. 140 Southbank Blvd, Southbank, Melbourne 18 August – 13 September 2025.

Kirsty Marillier is a South African-born playwright and is the writer and the star of the play Destiny. Marillier explores the concept of destiny in a very pure and literal manner. Her characters are clearly unable to avoid the destiny that awaits them as they are trapped in a cycle of violence and oppression. Marillier does not focus on the political aspects and sharply diverts attention to the soul of the people who work hard to live a life of normality under very extreme circumstances. The play is set in South Africa in January 1976.

The Drawer Boy

By Michael Healey. Presented by Mockingbird Theatrics. Directed by Zac Bridgman. Belconnen Arts Centre, ACT. 21-30 August 2025

It’s 1972 and the theatre scene in Canada has reached peak hippy. An experimental theatre group sends its young actors out to work with and observe local farmers in order to create a play based on their experiences. And so it is that naïve bohemian Miles hilariously crashes into the stable world of farmers Morgan and Angus. Morgan manages the farm but also acts as carer to Angus, who has brain damage which cost him his short-term memory. In spite of his disability, Angus is able to provide useful work around the farm.

A Midsummer Night’s Dream

Written by William Shakespeare. Directed by Angus Thorburn. Produced by Queensland Shakespeare Ensemble. Pip Theatre. 15 – 30 August 2025

Queensland Shakespeare Ensemble has tackled one of the Bard’s most beloved plays with A Midsummer Night’s Dream, performed at PIP Theatre under the direction of Angus Thorburn. It’s a play that teeters between dreamscape and nightmare, and this production embraces the enchantment of fairies, the ridiculousness of the Mechanicals, the tender ache of human hearts, and the wild chaos of misplaced desire.

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