METRO: Travelling The Rails Of Grief

REVIEW BY JESSICA FANWONG EDITED BY CHARLOTTE FRASER Presented by APK Productions as part of Melbourne Fringe Festival 2025, Todd Kingston’s haunting new postmodern play, METRO is a raw urban surrealist meditation on memory, grief and mental health. Set on a Melbournian train carriage (with brief dips into a parallel surrealist dreamscape), the show draws an analogy between a train ride and grief. Each of … Continue reading METRO: Travelling The Rails Of Grief

Quelched! The Price of Building a Phallic Empire

REVIEWED BY JESSICA FANWONG EDITED BY CHARLOTTE FRASER Presented as part of the Melbourne Fringe Festival 2025, the University of Melbourne Musical Theatre Association (UMMTA) presented a delightfully absurdist new work (slash dating app with the quirkiest app sound) Quelched! Written by Conor Boussiotas and directed by James Pringle, this Fringe run is the full-show debut of Quelched! following its development session at UMMTA’s Sitzprobe … Continue reading Quelched! The Price of Building a Phallic Empire

Mr. Inkleigh: An Urban Portrait Of Surveillance, Paranoia, And Existential Anxiety

REVIEW BY ZENA WANG EDITED BY RACHEL THORNBY In contemporary theatre, exploring how to present the complexity of social structures through everyday narratives is an extremely challenging task. Mr. Inkleigh, written by Ben Jamieson-Hoare and directed by Katherine Bragagnolo, is precisely such a work — it uses an ordinary apartment building as a vehicle to weave a modern parable about loneliness, surveillance, paranoia, and the … Continue reading Mr. Inkleigh: An Urban Portrait Of Surveillance, Paranoia, And Existential Anxiety

For Love Nor Money Avenges the Arts

Reviewed by: Emma Parfitt For Love Nor Money, a new play by Angus Cameron, made its world debut at this year’s Melbourne FringeFestival. Touted as a sexy, queer dark comedy, I was expecting the raunchy humour of the show – but more surprising was the raw tragedy that underpinned it. For Love Nor Money follows millennial artists Mel (Clarisse Bonello) and Liam (Alexander Lloyd) as … Continue reading For Love Nor Money Avenges the Arts

Club Rats and Thursgays: Sidonie de la Cœur and Sam Weldon’s Triumphant Doghouse

Picture this: you’re trapped in your favourite least favourite club on queer night. It’s the sort of place where everyone knows everyone—perhaps a bit too well. You’re either imagining the nightmare I had last night, or the set-up for Doghouse. Continue reading Club Rats and Thursgays: Sidonie de la Cœur and Sam Weldon’s Triumphant Doghouse

Our Father: Portrait of a Family in Crisis

Playing as part of Melbourne Fringe Festival, Our Father is a considerably dour effort that takes the Royal Commission into Institutional Child Abuse and turns it into a very human drama. Structured mostly as a series of police interviews of the family of an accused man, there is a simplicity to the narrative that brings the characters and their experiences to the forefront. The mother, in a desperate turn by Sandy Morrison, is a well-meaning denial-case; the daughter, played with aloofness by the writer, Lucy Holz, is too detached to let herself see the repercussions of her father’s actions; and the son, in a melodramatic performance by Will Hall, is angst-ridden and standoffish in his it-should-have-been-me complex. The family is divided and in crisis, brought together only by the police officer, played with warmth by Benji Groenewgan. Continue reading Our Father: Portrait of a Family in Crisis