Review: Review: The Wharf Revue: Back to Bite You (Sydney Theatre Company)
★★★★☆ The Wharf Revue offers a welcome dose of political satire and budgie-smuggling hilarity.
★★★★☆ The Wharf Revue offers a welcome dose of political satire and budgie-smuggling hilarity.
★★★★☆ Fantastic four wander the globe from Latin America to home.
★★★★☆ Bonachela’s company brings out the beast in man, and the man in the beast.
All spaced out at the orchestra when TSO and AYO play The Planets.
★★★½☆ Comedy, musical richness and social commentary mingle in this early Venetian classic.
David Hansen challenges our perceptions about the countertenor voice.
A weighty Beethoven cycle lightened by the surprise appearance of an Australian composition.
★★★★½ Aussie piano wunderkind’s chronological, conventional programme is a winner.
Gillham proved a poet, though Ashkenazy's Eroica dragged.
★★★★½ Extraordinarily powerful theatre that feels urgent and timely, yet timeless.
★★★★½ Violinist and pianist deliver robust performances in which neither voice is subordinate. Continue reading Get unlimited digital access from $4 per month Subscribe Already a subscriber? Log in
Kempf’s stunning double bill mixes Tchaikovsky with Chopin and Rachmaninov.
The staging is ingenious but the play itself is disappointingly slight.