The Neighbourhood | La Boite & Multicultural Australia
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The Neighbourhood | La Boite & Multicultural Australia

Directed by La Boite’s Artistic Director Todd MacDonald, The Neighbourhood is, in my opinion, one of the most powerful forms of storytelling that I’ve witnessed both on and off the stage. Featuring seven storytellers (Amer Thabet, Naavi Karan, Matt Hsu, Aurora Liddle-Christie, Anisa Nandaula, Cieavash Arean, Nima Doostkhah), it is a devised work in which each actor shares their own stories, through music, dance, rap or song and by using the space and the set as their own creative playground.

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Tower of Babel | Baran Theatre
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Tower of Babel | Baran Theatre

Tower of Babel is the latest work created by Baran Theatre, an independent Australian-Iranian theatre company based in Brisbane whose works aim “to create social change transformational experiences for audiences”. Co-written by Nasim Khosravi and Greg Manning and directed by Nasim, Tower of Babel is a dense and ambitious piece that tells the stories of migrants and refugees who have come to Australia, what they bring with them and how this benefits our country, and what they risk to lose as they settle here.

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Giantess | Cassie Workman
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Giantess | Cassie Workman

[Giantess] is neither scandalous nor tragic, although it offers poignant memories as punctuation to the tale of a little girl, kidnapped by a troll, who will not be released until she finds all the answers, and faces up to her fears. And the answer is revealed through a beautiful show presented as a comedy, but actually a more nuanced performance with storytelling, spoken word, and a fluctuating line of parable.

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The Bluebird Mechanicals | Too Close To The Sun
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The Bluebird Mechanicals | Too Close To The Sun

The Bluebird Mechanicals may be one of the tightest, most considered and deliberate works I’ve ever seen. There isn’t an inch of the show that doesn’t feel like it’s been refined and distilled to its purest, most impactful essence. It knows exactly what it wants to say and exactly how to say it. But, the work’s choice of vocabulary and materials in articulating its ideas are so removed from the norm that, again, it can only easily be described as weird.

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The Tempest | Zen Zen Zo
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The Tempest | Zen Zen Zo

The Tempest is a play in which none of the narratives have much substance. Instead, the focus is on the complexities of being human and the consequences of our actions. On the surface, the play appears like a world of magic, love and loss, but Bradley asks us to look beneath the surface.

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La Silhouette | Sui Ensemble
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La Silhouette | Sui Ensemble

The central recurring theme of the piece seems to be compassion. This, along with the work’s larger context of appearing in a queer performance festival and explicit preoccupation with marginalised communities, is why its insensitivity and hurt is the framework of this critique.

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Magpie | Elise Grieg
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Magpie | Elise Grieg

Mordecai, played by Barb Lowing, was utterly convincing, a character we have all met at an airport, or in a busy city bistro. Blustering her way through life, with a mouth like a sailor and a welt of unresolved issues, her fractious relationship with her daughter only serves to highlight her disconnect with her former home.

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The Humours of Bandon | Fishamble
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The Humours of Bandon | Fishamble

It’s the type of work that does so much with so little that it’s easy to take the meticulous craft on display for granted. There’s something quietly brilliant in giving the protagonist everything they want halfway through a narrative, for example. And, using the obsessive nature of a character to elegantly deliver exposition and frame the audience’s understanding is exceptionally graceful writing.

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