Review: Girl From The North Country (GWB Entertainment, Damien Hewitt, Sydney Festival)
Using 22 Bob Dylan songs, this play with music, set in 1934 during the Great Depression, gradually draws you into its world and leaves you filled with emotion.
Using 22 Bob Dylan songs, this play with music, set in 1934 during the Great Depression, gradually draws you into its world and leaves you filled with emotion.
Sydney Festival opened last night with a dazzling performance of Ohad Naharin's Decadance performed by Sydney Dance Company, while 80 protestors gathered outside.
Small is beautiful as Mornington’s boutique festival goes online
Emotions aplenty and messages of hope as Australian Haydn Ensemble plays its first live concert in two years
The Song Company establishes a new Christmas tradition with an engaging performance of carols – some new, some old, but all beautifully performed.
Sport for Jove introduced itself to metropolitan Sydney audiences with As You Like It back in 2009, and this production retains the infectious charm of the first.
IOpera provide a well-conceived and pleasurably diverting picture of Handel’s little masterwork, showing that young blood is inspiring the future of opera in Australia.
An invigorated Queensland Ballet ends the year on a high note of enthusiastic excellence.
Duo Eclettico beautifully navigated two large-scale, highly difficult and complex works by Ross Edwards and Jane Hammond so that they seemed nearly effortless
Take some of the best bits of Love Actually and add some topical cheekiness and Christmas cheer for a jolly good time for all.
Shamray’s recital – featuring works by Debussy, Rachmanninov, Ravel and Scriabin – was a thrilling and profound experience of programming and performance.
It’s beginning to look a lot like Christmas as The King’s Singers are back live.
The MSO Chorus returns, bringing joy to the end of a diabolical year.