Helpmann award winner Michael Griffiths and acclaimed cabaret darling Amelia Ryan celebrate the songbooks of Aussie icons Olivia Newton-John and Peter Allen for one night only. Backed by a three piece band featuring Adelaide's finest musicians, revisit all of their sing-a-long classics from Rio to Tenterfield, all the way to Xanadu and beyond.
When the lights go out, the Seance begins, providing a creepy, sensory journey into the supernatural. Without your sight, your imagination takes over.
Luth Wolff entertains the tiny tots in this wonderful circus act designed just for them.
Fans of the original 80s teen flick will not disappoint in this musical update, which features all of the violent fun with an added streak of heavy satire and irony.
Josh Belperio is a writer, performer and multidisciplinary musical artist, well known in Adelaide. Having survived a serious cycling accident, he has used this terrifying episode to create a cabaret show and share how being near to death has brought about a fresh perspective on life.
The JustAss League presents a slice of DC Comic’s raunchy nightlife in Club Gotham: Villains of Vaudeville. In the privacy of the intimate Nexus Arts theatre, villains and heroes battle in sequinned costumes.
A hilariously interactive party you wouldn't want to miss and we are all invited!
Matson is a mild-mannered comic who can still deliver big laughs as well as any of the more gritty in-your-face comedians. But his is a nice, pleasant persona
If you only head to one show with an agenda this Fringe, this is probably the one you want. Glittery Clittery is a dazzling, hilarious musical extravaganza about the patriarchy.
OK, so Bassanio’s been killed – unlawfully killed, at that. The Chief Inspector is grilling that loudmouth drunk, Gratiano. Used to be a bit of a bovver-boy in his day; kick you as soon as look at you. Indignant, Gratiano asks the cop, “Do I look like a murderer?”
A self-confessed goodie two shoes suddenly finds himself working for a “not so legitimate business man.”
Multi award winning comedian and “television star” Tessa Waters returns for her eighth year at the Adelaide fringe with her show Volcano.
Turning is the first concert in the Fringe series of music at St Mary Magdalene’s church - there are two more to come.
Ink Pot Arts Inc presents Jo-Anne Sarre’s 1999 play which has been cleverly adapted for child performers. Sarre is the founding artistic director of this not for profit group, based in Mt Barker, which provides opportunities in dance, music and drama to both adults and children.
This is a show like no other that (quite literally) takes the audience on a twisting ride through the streets and alleys of Adelaide in a performance that defies the normality of theatre.
Putting the fun back in dating. Speed dating ferris wheel. Kissing Booth
After a hugely successful year at Adelaide Fringe in 2017, Paul Dabek has returned with all his best jokes and magic for another season of hilarity.
Megan Doherty does beautiful singing of interesting songs in an elegant venue, with a theme of creativity, sensitivity to one’s muse, and how performers stay both brave and vulnerable.
Alfie Ordinary offers a bitter twist to his highly enjoyable sequined romp through his young life at Madame LeCoq's Preparatory School for Fabulous Boys.
This is not stand-up comedy but more a humorous, but deeply telling account of who JC Clapham is at this point in time and how he got to this point