"The Iliad" was written by Homer around 2,700 years ago, and tells of events during the Trojan war- of grand battles, of great heroes, of gods, fates, of violations of the natural order of things and moments of petty hatred and of grace. Lisa Peterson and Denis O'Hare's adaptation brings this material brilliantly alive, using a single actor and a musician to tell the tale. In Damien Ryan's production, it's stripped to the bone in an industrial-looking, apparently bare stage by Charles Davis - David Wehnam begins the show by rolling up a roller door at the back of the stage and dragging in a Mother-Courage-like wagon covered in odds and ends, before using various of those odds and ends to tell the story (including musician Helen Svoboda who accompanies on varoius instruments, largely a double-bass though not always conventionally so).
That Guy who Watches Canberra Theatre
Thursday, 21 May 2026
An Illiad, Sydney Theatre Company, Wharf Theatre, 17 Apr-21 Jun
Saturday, 2 May 2026
Lose to Win, Belvoir St Theatre, The Q, 2 May (and other locations from Tralragon to Brisbane until the end of June)
(Image by Phil Erbacher from the Old Fitz run in 2022)
Mandela Mathia's one-man show tells the story of his youth in South Sudan and the refugee experience that brought him to Australia, about how those experiences have formed him and about how his experience as a South Sudanese refugee has been problematised by reactionary forces within Australia for their own political goals. It's an engaging story which Mathia tells alongside the musician Malin Sylla who drums and plays other instruments throughout - opening the show with a drum solo of power and rhythm, it binds the show together and makes what could be a personal travelogue into a rich aural experience.
Director Jessica Arthur ensures it's a strong visual experience too, with the help of a set design by Keerthi Subramanyam and a quite stunning lighting design from Kate Baldwin. Mathia uses pieces of luggage and small props from the luggage in telling the story, opening up a story that makes him more complicated than just a simple victim of outside circumstances, but also an active part of his own personal narrative. Mathia is an engaging teller of his own story - able to bring the various figures in his story to life, and very much taking us along the way of a deeeply complicated childhood without ever playing for sympathy or making things overly traumatic. It's a very friendly show, and richly deserves to be shared far and wide. If it tours near you, I recommend catching it.
Wednesday, 22 April 2026
Constellations, Free Rain Theatre, ACT Hub, 16-25 Apr
Photo credit: Janelle McMenamin
Nick Payne's two hander has quite the credentials - from its opening at London's Royal Court with Rafe Spall and Sally Hawkins in 2012 to a Broadway run with Jake Gyllenhall and Ruth Wilson to a filmed covid version in 2021 with four different pairings, including Peter Capaldi and Zoe Wanamaker and a gender shift to pair Russell Tovey and Omari Douglas. It's a tight play exploring a relationship between two people over the course of a number of years - one a beekeeper, one a theoretical physicist - but told in short scenes which play out in variations, reflecting the physicist's belief in multiversal theory. We're also shown fairly quickly where this relationship is heading, with a brutal decline hitting the physicist in her early 40s leading to tragic loss.
Kelly Somes production plays this in the round, on a platform with three chairs, and keeps the protagonists constantly in motion around one another, connecting and disconnecting in moments, and playing the variations quick and smooth. Lucy Goleby and James O'Connell take the challenges and joys inherent in these roles and absolutely own them - bouncing dialogue between them in skilful rallies, finding different spins on repeated lines and rich depths under the words (the way Goleby says the word "Delicious" at one point is luxuriously wonderful). The variations between their essential personas are played with split-second timing, and these are performances that work just as well whether they're directly in front of you or on the opposite side of the platform, as they cycle around and play to all four audience quadrants very effectively.
Aidan Bavinton's lighting design does a lot of work to separate moments and locations, from tight spots to more general washes, and does it very well. Neville Pye and Kelly Somes' sound design delivers sharp blips of sound to separate moments and get us from instant-to-instant in a way that fits perfectly with the material.
This is a polished gem of a show, with all facets shining and reflecting, and something you can delve into over 80 minutes. It's as much a journey of the heart as of the mind, and it's a demonstration of two performers locking in to a text with passion, joy and fervour. Powerful work.
Saturday, 18 April 2026
Gutenberg! The Musical!, Hayes Theatre Company, Hayes Theatre, 10 Apr-10 May
This goofy two hander is a tribute to enthusiasm, energy and love, as two barely-knowledgable men launch into an unlikely backers audition of their very-loosely-based-on-fact musical about Johannes Gutenberg (as in, it features him inventing a printing press in a vagely middle-ages German town, beyond that, everything else is made up). Stephen Anderson and Ryan Gonzalez are a delightful pair, Anderson as the one who thinks he knows slightly more, and Gonzalez as the slightly more vulnerable one - but you take them both to your hearts immediately as they attempt to do a mega-musical with a wide cast of characters with little more than a pianist, some hats with characters names on them and some cardboard boxes.
Friday, 17 April 2026
Sistren, Griffin Presents A Green Door Theatre Company Production in association with Belvoir Street Theatre, Belvoir Downstairs, 9 Apr-3 May
"Sistren" is an exploration of the bond between two schoolgirls - one trans, one afro-carribean. It's a hypermodern play about how the two experience and process the culture around them with a mix of private jokes and mutual protection, and about how their two cultures bring them into conflict. Iolanthe's script is achingly contemporary and immaculately referenced down to fashion, phrases and who's been cancelled this week. There's interesting engagement with how intersectionality really works in practice and how the concerns of a trans girl and a bio girl are not entirely the same, about some of the modern contradictions of adolescence and the way social media can help people find a community as easily as it can set communities against one another.
Drive your plow over the bones of the dead, Belvoir St Theatre, Upstairs Theatre, 28 Mar-10 May
Belvoir's big adaptation of Olga Tokarczuk's novel is an epic, at over three hours with two intermissions. It's an ambitious work - I'm not sure that all the ambitions are realised but there's a lot that this is going into - a murder mystery about an elderly Polish woman believing that the town's animals are beginning to rise up against humans, looking at small town relationships, corruptions, science, astrology and some literary allusions.
Thursday, 16 April 2026
The River, Sydney Theatre Company, Drama Theatre, Sydney Opera House, 8 Apr-16 Mar
Jez Butterworth's 80 minute play is an enigmatic story of a man, some women and the cabin where he brings them to fish for sea trout during a brief season when they're spawning back up the river near his cabin. Over the course of the evening, we see romantic banter, a fish is scaled, gutted and cooked, and the connection between coaxing a fish and coaxing a partner are explored. Butterworth's writing and Margaret Thanos's direction scrape against something disconcerting about parnership but ultimately there's not quite enough here to feel like a full theatrical meal - it's a little too keen on remaining mysterious.






