Entertainment
Theatre
Think feminism has been and gone? It's time for a 'Revolt'
The play is the most confronting piece anyone in the cast has performed.
- by Alix Foley
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Arts
Laughing in the face of death
It's a painfully slow piece of absurd theatre, but also painfully funny.
- by Cameron Woodhead
Love review: Cornelius delivers raw tale of damaged souls from beyond the pale
It was love at first sight when Tanya saw Annie across a crowded jail.
- by Joyce Morgan
Musical invasion from the world's military coming to Sydney next year
The Royal Edinburgh Military Tattoo will play ANZ Stadium in Sydney next year.
- by Nathanael Cooper
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Theatre reviews
Rebuilding bridges between art and work
The Bridge Projects involves a unique interplay between life and art.
- by Cameron Woodhead
Theatre reviews
Award-winning Broken proves strength of its script
Winner of the 2016 Victorian Premier’s Prize for Drama, Mary Anne Butler’s Broken is a slippery and unsettling three-hander.
- by Cameron Woodhead
Theatre reviews
The difference between directing a funeral and directing theatre
In The Director , Turnbull and Thoms explore many elements of the death industry, including the smell of a crematorium, the tools of the mortuary and when to drive a tractor into a chapel.
- by Anne-Marie Peard
The Serpent's Teeth review: A lament for the living after war
This meditation on war's forgotten victims is as timeless as it is timely in a month in which we have marked the centenary of the end of the Great War.
- by Joyce Morgan
Theatre reviews
Supernatural feminist fable comes of age
Feminist parable, supernatural quest and queer coming of age story combine in this striking new play with an offbeat edge.
- by Cameron Woodhead
The Wharf Revue review: New laughs still lurk beneath the old scabs of politics
The 2018 Wharf Revue, now minus Phil Scott, can make you laugh until you cry
- by John Shand