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Articles

  • Ludovico Di Ubaldo and Dayana Hardy Acuna in Melanie Lane’s Slow Haunt. Photo by Bradbury Photography A male dancer holds a female dancer -she is in a full split and he has one hand under her extended leg and the other under her shoulders Warm your heart with the arts this June
    What to SEE

    Warm your heart with the arts this June

    17 May 2023

    As the days get shorter and the nights get colder, it’s the perfect time to head indoors and enjoy all the arts on offer at Perth’s theatres, galleries and museums. Need some ideas? Our June gig guide is here to help.

    Reading time • 10 minutesMulti-arts
  • Reading time • 5 minutesMulti-arts
  • Two actors, Caitlin Beresford-Ord and Andrew Hale, stand behind music stands, a microphone between them. In the background are paintings, they are in the Orangery art gallery. They appear to be mid-performance. Gender bender is timely
    Reviews

    Gender bender is timely

    19 April 2021

    Lit Live’s production of Dan Rebellato’s new radio play You & Me feels timely, even if the script leaves some questions unanswered, writes Kim Kirkman.

    Reading time • 4 minutesTheatre
  • A woman stands at a podim, her arms posed as if asking a question. She has short dark curly hair and wears bright pink earrings and a bright pink top under a black sleeveless jacket. Stories that mustn’t remain untold
    Reviews

    Stories that mustn’t remain untold

    20 January 2021

    The righteous anger of earlier productions of The Vagina Monologues has strengthened and deepened, Jan Hallam finds, and the themes of women’s oppression and fear are still disappointingly relevant.

    Reading time • 4 minutesFringe World Festival
  • Sarah Mcneill A blonde woman in a red scoop necked t-shirt is holding open a book and laughing. Behind her is a bookcase, loaded with books. The return of the Vagina Monologues
    The Festival Sessions

    The return of the Vagina Monologues

    13 January 2021

    The Vagina Monologues debuted in 1996 but in the #MeToo era, this collection of stories – based on over 200 interviews with women from around the world – feels more relevant than ever, says Sarah McNeill. She’s the producer of the 2021 Fringe World version of the work, which celebrates sexuality, genitalia, body image and, of course, the vagina.

    Reading time • 5 minutesFringe World Festival

Cleaver Street Studio

Cleaver Street Studio

 

Cleaver Street Studio