Review: The Last Ship (Queensland Performing Arts Centre)
Heartfelt, moving and nostalgic, Sting's musical is classy entertainment that pulses with dance and music.
Heartfelt, moving and nostalgic, Sting's musical is classy entertainment that pulses with dance and music.
90 minutes spent at the summit of Australian songwriting with one of the country's finest voices – and an equally brilliant surprise guest.
The musical theatre adaptation of a 1980s cult cinema classic returns for another murderous round of high-school misfits versus mean girls and jocks.
Conductor Riccardo Minasi applies a musicological blowtorch to three favourite works of the Classical period.
More family favourites from Paul Dyer and the Brandies – this time with splendid voices.
Hammer time: Donald Runnicles carves Mahler’s mighty Tragic masterpiece.
Pamela Rabe commands Belvoir’s uneven eco-mystery, where big ideas accumulate without dramatic payoff.
Jez Butterworth’s play steers for profundity. Whether it gets there is left to you to determine.
Insightful direction and polished performances make for a fresh and memorable experience of a Bach masterpiece.
Luxury casting guarantees a thrill-a-minute concert as Verdi’s masterpiece lands west of the Divide.
A vivid picture of a working-class wedding does double duty as an unflinching portrait of post-Brexit Britain.
Accompanied by Glenn Amer, Lee Abrahmsen and Warwick Fyfe save the day with a masterclass that would do Wagner proud.
A compelling triple bill explores mortality through ritual, sculpture and ecstatic movement.