Review: Gravy (Merak & KXT on Broadway)
A very wet but completely watertight staging of a new short play, made with exceptional care and skill.
A very wet but completely watertight staging of a new short play, made with exceptional care and skill.
A student party with a strict dress code exposes the chaos, contradictions and heartbreaks of today's dating culture.
Bristling with theatre scene in-jokes, a new adaptation of Anton Chekhov's classic pecks at the established order.
Simon Stephens' portrait of working-class English life gets a sharp Australian premiere.
Spanning Generations X to Z, this Bridge proves too flimsy to carry us all the way across.
David Harrower's powerful play depicts an arousal of dormant feelings that are uncomfortable for an audience to witness, let alone understand.
Given the title and the content, giving this a star rating seems as crazy an exercise as the show itself.
A queer rom-com in cosplay, where love gets lost in the blur between virtual and real.
You won’t see a more agile 90 minutes of solo acting this year – or an indie production more deserving of a return season.
Brevity is on its side but German playwright David Gieselmann’s frantic comedy is a test for its cast and for its audiences.
Joanna Erskine’s engaging drama hinges on a theory you don't have to believe in to enjoy.
What kind of men are raised in single-sex Catholic schools, asks All Boys – and what does that mean for the rest of the world?
Almost $8m will go towards the support of 131 organisations and individual projects across New South Wales.