Photography - Photox - Ben Appleton
That Guy who Watches Canberra Theatre
Friday, 20 February 2026
Never Closer, Off The Ledge Theatre, Courtyard Studio, Canberra Theatre, 19-28 February
Thursday, 19 February 2026
The Taming of the Shrew, Lakespeare, Lake Tuggernong Park (and other venues) , 17 Feb-1 Mar
Photo by Photox
This is my first time seeing Lakespeare in its natural environment (by a Lake) after seeing "As You Like it" in a pub and "Macbeth" in the B, and it's a delightful experience. These are, by their nature, broad, crowd-pleasing productions and this does indeed please the crowd with a broad audience-friendly production of one of Shakespeare's more problematic comedies. The gender flip in this production tries to combat the more problematic side and bring out the humour, but in essence this is still a play about marriage as a financial rather than an emotional choice, and one in which a massive amount of psychological torture is enacted on one of the lead characters to get them to submit to their partner.
Karen Vickery directs the cast to play the text fairly full-on, and, particularly in the central Petruchia/Kit plot, this succeeds. She's helped by Ylaria Rogers' performance which can fairly be described as roistering, giving the character a vast amount of confident attack on those around her. Michael Cooper as Kit gives the character a delightful sullenness which given the state of the Paduan marriage market around him is perfectly understandable, and his shock at multiple outrages hitting him is delightful. Yanina Clifton as Grumia serves laughs on a regular basis, reacting wtih just the right amount of shock and awe to keep the audience tickled.
The Bianco subplot is a bit more complicated - Shakespeare fills it with a lot of deceptions and complications and it's got to be said that Bianco himself doesn't come across as much more than a pretty something to be argued about for most of the subplot - his preferences play a remarkably small part of the material. It's strongly performed but it doesn't entirely escape feeling like empty time-filling as we get the contractual negotiations and impersonations that make up the subplot when we could be getting an insight into how Bianco is thinking and feeling. There's some great hautiness from Guiliana Baggoley as Baptista, Alice Ferguson is delightfully perskikety as Gremia, Alistair James McKenzie is indeed quite pretty and Blue Hyslop is clowny perfection as Biondello gets into a more-than-usually-ridiculous impersonation.
Costume Designer Helen Wotjas gives a great sense of Renaissance Italy with practicality for running around on a Park Lawn for two hours. Rachel Henson's millinery is also a highling with some sutiably outlandish things for the various characters to don with enthusiasm.
Lakespeare is by this point 7 plays deep in an ongoing tradition, and the tradition is nicely upheld in this production - it's a fun entry point to Shakespeare that leaves you with plenty to think about afterwards and a lot to delight about in the moment.
Dave 101 - an Introduction to Poor Life Choices, Canberra Cabaret Festival, ACT Hub, 19 and 21 Feb
(Photo - Photox - Ben Appleton)
When entering the Hub stage for Dave Collins' cabaret, one's struck by the dominant couch onstage. But it's a sign of how relaxed Collins is on the stage that he can put his feet up and still draw an audience to him in a mix of personal stories and diva classics, from the second he launches into "When you're good to Mama" til his departure from the stage, including a couple of duets with friends Kara Murphy, Louiza Blomfield and Amelia Andersson-Nickson. The structure, an autobiography from primary school to now, ties together songs about love, lust, work and vibing with friends, and Collins gives it plenty of personality and his own touch of charm-with-a-slight-side-of-ewwww.
Collins has always been a fun performer to watch, with a massive voice that rattles the walls of the ACT Hub stage, and a personality that matches. And this is distilled Dave in a one-hour format that gives him chances for plenty of big notes in a song catalogue that largely draws on music theatre and divas (from Chicago to Shrek to Jeckyl and Hyde to Judy Garland to Cry-Baby) and with plenty of laughs to go with the singing.
Matters of the Heart: A show about LOVE - with a cliche-free guarantee, Canberra Cabaret Festival, ACT Hub, 19-20 Feb 2026
(Photo by Ben Appleton - Photox)
Deborah O'Toole's cabaret show explores her twin passions - singing and art - in a show exploring the less obvious kinds of love songs - nothing about first love or love-gone-wrong, and plenty looking at the deeper parts of the heart. She draws more from the pop songbook than from the more traditionally musical-theatre-type stuff that normally hits cabaret, and intersperses it with personal commentary and with drawings on her ipad that are duplicated on two screens out the front. Accompanied by the skilled Caleb Campbell, she sings a range of emotional pieces strongly and clearly, communicating right to our hearts in ways funny, soulful and all ways full of heart.
One nitpick - the time spent at the ipad means time not directly engaging the audience, and the mix between the two feels slightly off when she'll start drawing mid-song - the joy of experiencing these songs together is to be engaged between performer and audience, and breaking the connection, however briefly, means there's a certain amount of reset that needs to happen. But O'Toole does create something beautiful out of it with personal charm and flair, and it's a fine launch for the Canberra Cabaret festival.
Saturday, 7 February 2026
Barbra: The Greatest Star, Hayes Theatre Company, Hayes Theatre, 21 Jan-14 Feb 2026
(Photography by John McRae)
Friday, 6 February 2026
Danny and the Deep Blue Sea, Nicnac Productions, Old Fitz theatre, 13 Jan-7 Feb 2026
Photography by Tony Davison
Amplified: The Exquisite Rock and Rage of Chrissy Amphlett, Jacaranda Productions, Belvoir St Theatre, 29 Jan-8 Feb (followed by Her Majestty's Theatre Ballarat, Geelong Arts cetre, Comedy Theatre Melbourne and Seymour Centre Sydney until April - further bookings pending!)
Images by Jade Ellis
Sheridan Harbridge has become a performer I'll follow anywhere. After striking supporting performances in Kill Climate Deniers, The Sugar House and Calamity Jane, she claimed centre stage as the original lead in Prima facie, before pivoting to directing such loose fun shows as 44 sex acts in one week, Dubbo Championship Wrestling and last year's Phar Lap, taking time to give a definitive Blanche DuBois downstairs at the old Fitz that I saw at first preview and therefore didn't review but just gaave a WILI to in 2023 (the rules of reviewing are simple - I don't review previews as they're not meant to be in review condition yet). Now she returns to centre stage to tell the story of one of Australia's rock godessses, writing and co-concieving a show that celebrates Chrissy Amplett in her raw, unfiltered glory, through song and stories of one woman's rise to rock supremacy and some of the many many battles that she fought along the way.
Harbridge doesn't impersonate Amplett, but she channels her power anyway, in stories both from her perspective (drawing on her autobiography and a planned one-woman-show-that-Amphett-never-quite-got-to-perform), and from those around her, the audiences, the roadies, the collaborators and the enemies she got along the way. It's a powerful tale and a strong evening, playing more than just the hits, drawing on the backcatalogue to illustrate aspects of Amphlett as well as herself in a show that's both spectacularly personal and deeply invested in sharing the work of its subject, combining with a rocking band of musical-director-and-guitarist Glenn Moorehouse, bassisst Ben Cripps, keyboardist Clarabell Limonta and drummer Dave Hatch, under Paul Jackson's almighty lighting rig that shifts moods with aplomb.
This first Belvoir season has already sold out and it looks like this is going to be seen absolutely everywhere, but you should rush to see it simply to get your soul shattered and rebuilt by the powerhouse performer that is Harbridge in a rare case of a tribute show that makes both performer and subject look bigger together.






