Category: Theatre
Review – Bushpig
This is exactly the sort of theatre the Fringe is for: small, crafted, ambitious, glamorous, dark, magical and profound.
Review – Raton Laveur
The most vacuous platitudes have their place, and Raton Laveur is a rich and delightful comedy experience that really will sound that triad, and definitely ought not be missed.
Review – The Dead Ones
In The Dead Ones, Margie Fischer tells in fragments a story of family, culture, work, life and loss.
Review – Wine Cabaret
Let the Songeliers serenade you with their three part vocal harmonies and regale you with tales of love, friendship and wine over wine tastings at the Rundle Street Universal Wine bar.
Review – The Unstoppable, Unsung Story of Shaky M
The ‘M’ seems to be for mime in this non-verbal show.
Review – Burlesque Beauties in Next to Nothing
All in all it was an entertaining show, but tits and ass usually is. In this case however the aforementioned tits and asses belonged to some very smokin’ hot and talented ladies.
Review – Swing Dancing Workshop
Every Monday and Thursday night of the month long Fringe Festival, the crew from The Swing Sesh, are running beginner classes in swing dancing.
Review – Champaigne Cabaret
The concept is a good one and I imagined these 3 young girl sitting around their living room excitedly plotting their Fringe show some months ago.
Review – Squidboy
Trygve Wakenshaw is Squidboy: a curious created who lives in the world of his imagination.
Review – Choir Girl
Choir Girl is intriguing. It begins with Susan sitting and singing her choir audition song. As the show proceeds we hear singing and suddenly we became aware that what we took for recorded underscoring was actually a choir.
Review – 3 Tales of Woe
A shadow puppetry performance seems like a perfect fit for the writings of Poe, Dickens and Lovecraft. They are the masters of the macabre and menacing, so silhouettes are an ideal way to guide you through their stories, without restricting the monsters of your own imagination.
Review – Kate Middleton Show Queen
In our modern world of tabloid magazines, reality TV shows and inspirational memes, it is easy to fall for the notion that we all have the chance to be movie stars or royalty.
Review – The Art of Letting Go
This refreshingly funny show was presented in a very simple style, a woman, a piano and a lot of attitude. Not the sort of attitude that gets an airing very often.
Review – A Burlesque Interlude
The opening performance of A Burlesque Interlude left much to be desired. There were obvious shortcoming from several areas, both performance and technical sides, and much room for improvement for the rest of their 5 night run.