Above – Campbell Parsons. Cover – James Smithers, Campbell Parsons and Jane Angharad. Photos – Phil Erbacher

Media vita in morte sumus.

Rita Kalnejais’ Babyteeth is about coping with the chaos of life, the curve balls and kicks out of bounds, those outrageous slings and arrows, swings and roundabouts, cast before us over a lifetime and how dealing with them not always goes as planned, that no one strategy is necessarily the ready made solution.

Rachel Thomas plays Milla, a fifteen year old living with an aggressive terminal disease. She’s the only child of psychiatrist, Henry, portrayed by James Smithers and Anna, former classical pianist, played by Jane Angharad.

On the face of it, the family follows a so called normal structure in their middle class suburban street, each of them coping with the shadow of death that they try to relegate to the space where the elephant lives in the room. Mum’s on pills, anxious and wanting to cocoon her daughter in cotton wool. Dad’s shooting up, shouldering the idea of assisted dying.

Enter Moses, biblical of name but certainly not saintly. He may be an opportunist junkie, but he becomes Milla’s addiction. Potentially as destructive as the disease riddling her body, Moses is a lot more fun, an iconoclastic life force injecting Milla with a lust for life that spits in the face of the Grim Reaper, releasing a devil may care awakening. An unlikely saviour.

Sideshow attractions are provided by Esha Jessy’s pesky pregnant neighbour with maternal instincts towards Henry (she has a dog of the same name) and Philip D’Ambrosio’s tough love Latvian music teacher, who sees Milla as a lost cause but determined to rescue Anna.

For Milla, euthanasia is not wasted on the young and she is determined to die – just as soon as she’s had sex.

Directed by Kim Hardwick with lighting by Topaz Marlay-Cole and distinctive sound design by Michael HuxleyBabyteeth bites into a tough subject with plenty of food for thought to chew on.

Event details

Whitebox Theatre presents
Babyteeth
by Rita Kalnejais

Director Kim Hardwick

Venue: KXT Bakehouse on Broadway | 181 Broadway, Ultimo NSW
Dates: 23 July – 2 August 2025
Tickets: $50 – $40
Bookings: www.kingsxtheatre.com

Most read Sydney reviews

  • Dancing at Lughnasa | New Theatre
    Dancing at Lughnasa | New Theatre
    A gifted embroider of words, Friel combines soft lyricism and hard meaning in his play, a tragical comical historical pastoral on a spree and spoiling for a spirited spar.
  • Stage Kiss | New Theatre
    Stage Kiss | New Theatre
    There’s a palpable playfulness to these performances, disciplined, drilled and delightful. There’s fire, bite and fun and lots of kissing.
  • The First Murder | Pinchgut Opera
    The First Murder | Pinchgut Opera
    In the care of Pinchgut Opera’s director, Erin Helyard, this music, formulaic as it indeed is in some respects, sprang off the page into an experience rich in emotions.
  • My Brilliant Career | Sydney Theatre Company
    My Brilliant Career | Sydney Theatre Company
    Based on an Australian literature classic, My Brilliant Career is destined to become an Australian theatrical classic.
  • Sistren | Griffin Theatre Company
    Sistren | Griffin Theatre Company
    Iolanthe and Janet Anderson work in cosmic, comedic accord, characterisation charismatic, timing impeccable, delivery precise, together a tour de force that ascends the cliché.

More from this author