
Gillian doesn’t miss a beat, as she shares her story through witty and superbly crafted original songs.

After cutting its teeth in Melbourne last year, the gothic thriller Sleepyhead by WA playwright Nathaniel Moncrieff, has just enjoyed a sold out season at The Blue Room as part of the 2012 WA Fringe Festival.

Hope is the Saddest both begins and ends with a violent traffic accident that draws the same three people into each other’s eccentric worlds. It is a play about death, delusion and Dolly (Parton).

Being a one time only event, you won’t get to see it unless you have an actual working Tardis but any of the speakers are worth catching if you see their name on a line-up.

His crooning credentials have never really been in question, but I didn’t realize how… bouncy he is. He clearly has to move to the music, and it makes for a one highly entertaining, invigorating show.

Midsummer (a play with songs) is an utterly, utterly gorgeous piece of theatre. It is riotous and chaotic and hilarious and tragic and messy and beautiful (and yes, it has songs).

It’s really all about the music. No style is sacred and they poke fun at every cliché going, from the techno blasted from young hoons’ car stereos to all those songs that you think you know the lyrics to...sort of.