
It is clever, affecting, sometimes humorous and ultimately heartbreaking. K.I.J.E. is well-written, well-directed, well-acted and well worth seeing.

Matt Byrne Media presents a refreshing and well-crafted rendition of this adults-only puppet parody. Mischievous it may be, but part of the appeal is its wayward honesty.

ATM15, Australia’s smoothest 16 piece big band blended sexy soul with dirty bass and silky vocals in a toe tapping affair that had me shedding my winter woolies and hitting the dance floor.

Conveying the iconic words of Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet to a modern audience is no easy feat

Brisbane audiences won’t feel they’ve been left out in the cold this winter after witnessing the passion, fire and intensity that exudes from Doctor Zhivago.

Innocence is like a Decoder puzzle. You’re given a few letters then expected to be able to work out the rest. There are symbolic set pieces, symbolic actions, symbolic phrases – a semiotic web for the audience to clumsily wade through.

Watching Livermore and Hayes perform is like being greeted by old friends, the pair exude such genuine affection for each other it is easy to see them interact as mother and son.