Review: The Memory of Water (Ensemble Theatre)
Shelagh Stephenson’s play collected an Olivier Award for Best Comedy but don’t expect to come out with your cheeks damp solely from tears of laughter.
Shelagh Stephenson’s play collected an Olivier Award for Best Comedy but don’t expect to come out with your cheeks damp solely from tears of laughter.
A concert of exquisite new music created to tell a personal and pertinent migration story.
When three Australians appear on the same bill at one of the world’s most prestigious opera houses, it’s an occasion worthy of celebration.
Shannon Barnett's inspired site-specific work takes its audience into an unusual aural realm to spotlight sexism and abuse.
Taylor Mac's "opera-concert-song-cycle-musical-performance-art-piece-play" is all of those things – and none of them.
Spectacle, intensity and high drama abound in Shake & Stir's ambitious adaptation of Mary Shelley's classic novel.
Choose your own adventure in this immersive theatre production that entertains more through style than substance.
Aussie piano star Daniel de Borah pours some sparkling Mozart accompanied by a serving of perfectly baked Schubert.
This new take on Puccini’s classic combines visual chic and grittiness in a visually impressive and emotionally moving production.
This accessible, thought-provoking new opera about the First Fleet's arrival helps fill a gap in a history written by visitors who never left.
In this charmingly staged production, the focus is on acting rather than vocal pyrotechnics, with Nancye Hayes the jewel in the crown.
Pedigree Rachmaninov and Schubert performed by a virtuoso pianist from the very top drawer.
Sydney Philharmonia Choirs delivers a powerful and immaculate Australian premiere of one of this century’s greatest works.