Wednesday, 10 December 2025

She Slayed: A drag murder mystery too fabulous to miss | Midsumma Festival | Victorian Pride Centre

After a sold-out run at the 2024 Melbourne International Comedy Festival, She Slayed: A Drag Murder Mystery returns for a Midsumma Festival season, bringing its blend of hilarious antics and over-the-top musical numbers back to Melbourne. We sat down with Cabaret Queen Dolly Diamond to talk about the cast, the chaos, and what makes performing this drag murder mystery so irresistibly entertaining.

She Slayed was initially staged in March 2024, so a return season to Midsumma has been much anticipated. While the ensemble looked like they were having the time of their lives on stage, Diamond confirms that spark wasn’t just for show. "I definitely feel like I’ve reached that point of my life where I only want to do the shows where I know I’m going to have fun," she says. "This show is exactly that, and the cast is made up of friends I’ve known for quite a few years. That is such a privileged position to be in and I’m grateful for that."

Monday, 8 December 2025

Gay drama Afterglow is set to leave audiences hot and steamy | Midsumma Festival | Chapel Off Chapel

Afterglow has travelled a long way since its off-Broadway debut, gathering a devoted following as it moved from New York to London and beyond. Now the intimate queer drama about a married gay couple who open their relationship up to a third, lands in Australia, carrying nearly a decade of evolution in its wake and a creator who has grown alongside it. Sitting down with writer and director S. Asher Gelman, it becomes clear that the play’s longevity has only sharpened its focus and questions, and stretched out the emotional terrain it explores.

The conversation with Gelman naturally begins with how his relationship to the story has shifted over time and what this new chapter might reveal. "Afterglow is inspired by my first experience with open relationships and polyamory (though back then, I never would have described my situation as “polyamory")," he tells me. "Since writing the play nine years ago, my understanding of open relationships and polyamory has significantly evolved. I am fortunate enough to share my life with my husband Mati (on whom the character of Alex is based) and my partner Stefano (on whom no characters are based, but has deepened my insight into Darius’ position in the play). The three of us operate as a single family unit, so the exploration of the role of family and community has expanded. Whenever we do this play, we get the chance to go deeper and uncover more layers, and I’m keen to get back in the room with these incredibly talented individuals to continue that process."

Ghostware review | The Motley Bauhaus

The reach of AI into everyday life is becoming both alarmingly blatant and quietly ingenious. We’ve grown used to fabricated videos, fake news and dodgy deepfaked interviews cluttering our feeds. In Cat Finch and Rose Bishop’s Ghostware, that same technology is recast as something at once unsettling and strangely tender, giving the audience room to consider death, grief and the stubborn persistence of love through AI.

Jordan Barr steps into the role of Gertrude, with sharp comedic timing and genuine emotional depth, letting us feel every wobble in her world as she continues to live in the shadow of her sister’s death. Then the impossible happens, she gets a phone call from her sister, or at least an AI imitation of her. These so-called GriefBots let the bereaved cling to their loved ones, whether out of guilt, longing or plain old affection. But when the AI version of Beatrice starts spruiking discounted Ray-Bans and cut-price therapy sessions, Gertrude sets out to have the GriefBot shut down, only to discover that getting rid of it is far tougher than she ever expected.

Thursday, 4 December 2025

Jessie Ngaio Smith is prescribing connection, ritual and reflection in Magical Prescriptions | Midsumma Festival | Meat Market

In Magical Prescriptions, Jessie Ngaio Smith becomes a doctor of a different kind, offering ten-minute, one-on-one appointments where she listens, honours silences, and responds with a personalised artwork. Drawing on her own journey of chronic pain, misdiagnosis and dehumanisation in the medical system, Ngaio Smith uses the project to explore connection, intuition and ritual. We sat down with her to talk about where this unusual work began, what it asks of her and why she believes our systems of care need to be reimagined from the ground up.

Ngaio Smith’s experiences in the medical system, along with her time in the aged care and disability support sector, pushed her to look for the humanity that hides in a classic doctor’s appointment. "I was thinking about the strange, sad absurdity of us trying to source support and healing within the tight confines of a 15-minute bulk billed doctor’s appointment. I was also studying for my Certificate in Aged Care and Disability Support which was depressing and it forced me to recognise how broken and under resourced our systems of care are," she tells me. "I wondered to myself if art might offer something which feels so lacking in a doctor’s appointment; a connection that is wilder and weirder. It has been my experience that we are suffering, and it can be incredibly difficult to find someone who will actually listen and sit with the discomfort of witnessing suffering."

Sunday, 30 November 2025

Nihilistic Optimism on Trampolines review | Theatre Works

It was on a dreary November night that we took our seats for Nihilistic Optimism on Trampolines, a loose reimagining of the origin of Frankenstein. Rather than setting it during the year without a summer in Switzerland, when Mary Shelley conceived her famous tale, this production places us in a contemporary trampoline play centre, Trampoline World. Here, the employees are each tasked by their supervisor with writing a ghost story.

The characters are named after people who spent time with Mary at the villa, so we have our Byron and Percy and Claire and John all present. Gabrielle Ward is committed as the protagonist, displaying her gradual obsession with completing the story and uncovering the more unsettling impulses behind creation. Eleanor Golding also leaves a mark as Byron, a senior supervisor at Trampoline World. He isn’t particularly integral or complex, but Golding brings an authenticity to him that elevates his scenes and makes him interesting to watch.

Monday, 24 November 2025

Motley Bauhaus expands its family with the new Motley Spielhaus

The Motley Bauhaus is expanding its bubbling creative empire, and the newest addition arrives with a splash of colour, a glass of wine and a courtyard full of people who would rather be making things than scrolling through them. Scale Up is the official launch of The Motley Spielhaus, a small blackbox theatre and gallery/wine bar. The official launch will take place Saturday 29 November running from 12 to 6pm, and it has all the makings of a breezy summer afternoon with a side of art and community spirit.

Across the day, four artists, Blinkerfluid, Stella Tavener, Boxedin and Jason Cavanagh, will be turning blank walls into permanent murals in the Spielhaus courtyard, with bold urban edge next to soft abstraction next to cheeky still life next to theatrical surrealism. It will be an aesthetic feast as audiences will be able to watch these varying styles unfold simultaneously side-by-side.

Wednesday, 19 November 2025

Proud review | The Motley Bauhaus

James Watson's Proud follows Jack, a nineteen-year-old suburban kid who finds himself edging into the world of online right-wing politics, pushed along by a mix of grief, confusion and the kind of hunger for belonging that certain corners of the internet know how to exploit a little too well. The play tracks how family tension, old wounds and casual racism can set the stage for something far darker, and Watson clearly understands how easily that spiral can happen.

It is an engaging story, and one that captures the mood of how disillusionment and a need for purpose can make young men vulnerable to that pull in a believable and alarming way. I do think it would have been a bolder decision for Watson to actually name the cultural background of George's wife. Leaving it vague reads less as universality and more as hesitancy, which softens the impact of what the play is trying to interrogate.