State Theatre’s true-to-the-book adaptation is emotional, poignant, and fiercely feminist
Wonder and the search for meaning—two things that make life beautiful, and maddening. Tim Winton’s That Eye, The Sky encapsulates this beautifully, and grounds it with small family tragedies in a wholly Australian setting. After father Sam is left incapacitated from a car crash, it is up to his family—Alice, Tegwyn, and the youngest Ort—to care for him and keep their unit together while battling their own hidden traumas.
Three straight, white brothers and their father come together at Christmas to celebrate in the “proper” straight, white way: by drinking beer, eating Chinese take-out and playing video games.
Ray Lawler wrote the iconic Summer of the Seventeenth Doll in the fifties, but that doesn’t mean the spirit has gone out of it
A genuinely moving and funny performance from start to finish, Rita Kalnejais’ Babyteeth is the confronting tale of a family struggling with the illness of their fourteen-year-old daughter.
Chris and Clair are a married couple in a time of change and it appears that they are drifting apart, but all is not what it seems.
Director, Geordie Brookman, has given himself a head start to success with his choice of this AWGIE award winning and critically acclaimed script by Andrew Bovell. Get a ticket before they all go and hurry to this remarkably fine production.
This is yet another very fine piece of work from Brink that engages and challenges and should be on your Fringe list.