Review: Fourteen (shake & stir theatre co, QPAC & Brisbane Festival)
Despite some curious omissions, this stage adaptation of Shannon Molloy's memoir features outstanding performances that deliver magnificent moments of emotion and humour.
Despite some curious omissions, this stage adaptation of Shannon Molloy's memoir features outstanding performances that deliver magnificent moments of emotion and humour.
The audience goes crackers for the stunning male soprano from Caracas.
This sold-out concert perfectly captured the vibrancy of the Australian landscape and featured the world premiere of Emergence by composer Deborah Cheetham.
Led by Zubin Mehta, this joyous concert reminds us how important it is to celebrate our world-class artists abroad, and to welcome them with open arms when they return.
Elena Kats-Chernin's first opera casts a welcome light on Ovid's mythic representation of same-sex attraction, but this revival would have been better served by a less-is-more approach.
Sarah Giles' production is very successful in bringing a fresh perspective to such a well-known work.
Helena Dix dazzles in this bel canto rarity, given a clever House of Gucci makeover.
It feels fitting The Phantom of the Opera should haunt the Sydney Opera House – and this new version of the iconic musical has plenty of thrills.
Conducted by Benjamin Northey, this evocative program of film soundtracks by Westlake, Korngold and Strauss proves beyond a doubt the need for music in one's life.
A story and a production that distresses and discomforts, enrages and subdues. Prepare to ache and then reflect long afterwards.
This Mozart showcase with Neal Peres Da Costa and members of the Young Mannheim Symphonists was a masterful and exuberant snapshot of the composer's oeuvre.
From the jubilant opening of Glinka’s Ruslan and Ludmila Overture to the majesty of Tchaikovsky’s Fourth Symphony, this was the TSO at its finest.
The Australian soprano's long-delayed home tour was worth the wait.