Lightscape | Brisbane Festival

Lightscape | Brisbane Festival

Lightscape has taken over public spaces in cities around the world, including Sydney, for more than 10 years. And it is now our turn to experience the global phenomenon during this year’s BrisFest. There’s a lot of publicity about it and many grammable moments that you’ve probably seen in your feeds which has drawn the masses for the length of the festival, but the question I keep asking myself is, is it worth the cost of admission?

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Eternity | Circa
circus, review Catherine Lawrence circus, review Catherine Lawrence

Eternity | Circa

I can see why Circa’s Eternity has been the elusive golden ticket of the festival: a sold-out world premiere production by internationally renowned local superstars, promising a site-specific work that brings acrobatic excellence and contemporary spiritual music to Brisbane’s St John's Cathedral.

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Zagazig | Curtain World
theatre, review Nadia Jade theatre, review Nadia Jade

Zagazig | Curtain World

Zagazig is a beautiful daydream made manifest, I hope it rises again and again, and for all that it will likely get tighter and have better funding in the future, and possible more rehearsals, actual stage hands, and all that other periphery, this beautiful cacophony of original handmade nonsense will always have a soft spot in my heart.

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Yuldea | Bangarra Dance Theatre
dance, review Nadia Jade dance, review Nadia Jade

Yuldea | Bangarra Dance Theatre

Ultimately I felt it was a kind of accounting. There is no want, no ask from the audience of many peoples, each with their own reason for coming to witness. There is just the accounting. The storytelling. The truth telling.

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ITEM | Dance Masala's Nakhre Crew
review, dance Ranjini Ganapathy review, dance Ranjini Ganapathy

ITEM | Dance Masala's Nakhre Crew

The all-female Nakhre crew comprising main performers Andrea Lam, Angela Nair, Ashwin Singh, Janaki Gerard, and Mugdha Khatavkar brought so much vivacity into their respective art-making that their personalities really shone through as the piece unfolded itself in a tight, well-paced composition which spanned an hour.

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Capricorn | Aidan Rowlingson
review, theatre Virag Dombay review, theatre Virag Dombay

Capricorn | Aidan Rowlingson

The first forty-five minutes of the play was some of the most powerful theatre I’ve seen as Dow and Latrise were engaging in an tennis match of absurd proportions about their inner frustrations with themselves and each other, with Llewy-Allan providing comedic quips to add more bounce.

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