Monthly Archives: October, 2017

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Theatre Now Review: She Rode Horses Like The Stock Exchange

She Rode Horses Like The Stock Exchange is an entertaining, slow-boiler.  The play is set in a New England park on a large blanket...

Theatre Now Review: As You Like It [Muse Clinic]

It has been many a moon since I have sauntered up a Darlo back street in search of entertainment, hence my heightened anticipation in...

Theatre Now Review: The Red Tree: Storying the animals inside

In Australia where almost seven percent of children suffer from anxiety, The Red Tree is both timely and beautiful. A musical adaption of Shaun Tan’s...

Movie Review: Loving Vincent

I like films made about artists. It's as if the director takes their vision and ensures every frame is framed like art. To make...

Theatre Now Review: The Big Meal

Spanning generations, The Big Meal follows the lives of an American family, starting from a young couple meeting for the very first time through...

Theatre Now Review: No End Of Blame

The play begins at 8.9 on the dramatic Richter Scale. It’s the dying days of WW1 and it’s all unravelling for the Axis Powers....

Theatre Now Review: The Kitchen Sink

Failure comes in many forms and we all deal with it in different ways, we run from it, we fight it or we lash...

Theatre Now Review: Comedy For UGLY

Adelaide Thursday the 12th of October some of the biggest names in South Australian comedy got together for an intimate comedy night fundraising for the...

Theatre Now Review: Miracle City

It is the live taping of the Truswells' evangelical TV show, we enter the space as they are preparing for the show and five,...

Theatre Now Review: Monopoly

Seated around a monopoly board, a group of millennials begin to discuss the Sydney property scene, their own finances, relationships and the inequality of...

Theatre Now Review: Buyer and Cellar [Ensemble]

Alex More (Ben Gerrard) has just been fired from Disneyland and this out-of-work actor needs a job. Then the most amazing offer lands in...

Theatre Now Review: Birdland

A sloping, jagged edged floor is the sole set piece, evoking both the sense of a disintegrating stage and a raft adrift on a...