What's On

December,
2026
December 2026
Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun
30 1 Tuesday, 1 December 2026 2 Wednesday, 2 December 2026 3 Thursday, 3 December 2026 4 Friday, 4 December 2026 5 Saturday, 5 December 2026 6 Sunday, 6 December 2026
7 Monday, 7 December 2026 8 Tuesday, 8 December 2026 9 Wednesday, 9 December 2026 10 Thursday, 10 December 2026 11 Friday, 11 December 2026 12 Saturday, 12 December 2026 13 Sunday, 13 December 2026
14 Monday, 14 December 2026 15 Tuesday, 15 December 2026 16 Wednesday, 16 December 2026 17 Thursday, 17 December 2026 18 Friday, 18 December 2026 19 Saturday, 19 December 2026 20 Sunday, 20 December 2026
21 Monday, 21 December 2026 22 Tuesday, 22 December 2026 23 Wednesday, 23 December 2026 24 Thursday, 24 December 2026 25 Friday, 25 December 2026 26 Saturday, 26 December 2026 27 Sunday, 27 December 2026
28 Monday, 28 December 2026 29 Tuesday, 29 December 2026 30 Wednesday, 30 December 2026 31 Thursday, 31 December 2026 1 2 3

Most read Sydney reviews

Most read reviews

  • The Rock Orchestra by Candlelight
    The Rock Orchestra by Candlelight
    Even the instruments are custom-cool, bare down to the bones like the skeletal relics of orchestras of the underworld. 
  • The Book of Mormon
    The Book of Mormon
     It’s been almost 15 years since The Book of Mormon premiered on Broadway and even longer since Joseph Smith ‘discovered’ the golden plates that provided the inspiration for the show. 
  • A Mirror | Belvoir
    A Mirror | Belvoir
    Steeped in meta-theatricality, A Mirror prompts us to reflect on the status of storytelling, of its place in creating a culture, its manipulation into myth, its power to prick and to prod.
  • My Brilliant Career | Melbourne Theatre Company
    My Brilliant Career | Melbourne Theatre Company
     Step aside The Boy from Oz, there’s a new contender for the title of ‘The Great Australian Musical’.
  • Mary said what she said | 2026 Adelaide Festival
    Mary said what she said | 2026 Adelaide Festival
    Going from that show to Mary said what she said was like going from a Mozart piano concerto to one of the more repetitive pieces by Philip Glass.