
Presence, written by Patrick van der Werf, is an Australian fable that explores isolation, alienation, and the presence of the other that helps us define who we are.

The three act narrative ballet, Manon, begins in the bustling streets of Paris and ends in the murky swamps of Louisiana.

My throat hurts, my cheeks are aching and my sides are knotted in a permanent stitch, but I can’t complain. Laughter-related injuries are part of the territory when you get the chance to see Bill Bailey live.

Why this delicate piece succeeds is the outstanding talent of the two performers, Lisa Marie Charalambous and Chris Durling.


Frank Thring is a celebrity icon of a lost era, belonging to a time when movie stars were shimmering beacons of class and decadence and mass media figures were famous for more than just being evicted from a televised sharehouse.

Homebody/Kabul is contemporary epic theatre. Large themes, big ideas, stretch from our domestic home life to the vast unknown of the Afghanistan desert.