Homophonic!

Homophonic

Homophonic Rating

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3

This year, ‘Homophonic!’ celebrates their 16th annual performance at Midsumma. Directed and presented by double bass player Miranda Hill, ‘Homophonic!’ features new music by queer composers and embraces the playful, shiny disco ball side to the classical music scene. I was devastated I couldn’t make it last time, so consider this review a year in the making.

Storytelling was without a doubt the heart of ‘Homophonic!’ I noticed, as Hill reverently introduced each composer and the stories behind their work. Backed by a strings quartet, percussion and the voices of the Consort of Melbourne, the program reflected on the many diverse facets of the queer experience. Lyle Chan’s AIDS memorial quartet and Caroline Shaw’s ‘To The Hands’ were particularly memorable examples in their haunting, near-tangible beauty. At times, ‘Homophonic!’ felt more like a conversation between composer, musician and audience; a mutual understanding beyond what language alone can describe. It was visceral, and nothing short of an amazing experience.

 

 

‘Homophonic!’ played with a blend of mediums from classical to contemporary, disco, performance art and spoken word. ‘i ain’t reading all that / i’m happy for you tho / or sorry that happened‘, composed by Connor D’Netto and written by Alex Creece, was a brilliant foray into poetry: hilarious, ineffable and heartbreakingly real. The Consort of Melbourne serving as a conduit for the barrage of inner thoughts projected onto the theatre wall was genius, and as their voices overlapped in crescendos and cacophonies, I remember thinking, ‘Oh, so thiiiis is poetry. I finally get it!’. ‘All lesbians are jellicle’ is a line that will literally never leave my consciousness now.

I’m no classical aficionado by any means, so I brought a date who is, but we ended up having so much fun the technicalities I was so worried about didn’t matter. While the performers were incredibly skilled, and I could go on and on about that, it was their enjoyment of the craft that struck a chord—they were having just as much fun as us. Carving out space for experimental, passionate and proud queer art is a form of protest as much as it is play and ‘Homophonic!’ balances that responsibility with grace.

Music is inherently political. To create art on stolen land, as queer people, as activists, it’s impossible to blithely remove this context from our practices (even so-called ‘apolitical’ art is an intentional, if telling, choice). ‘Homophonic!’ celebrates the intertwinement of art and self in a new form that welcomes a wider audience through the golden gates of classical music—which, by the way, has always been queer.

To book tickets to Homophonic, please visit https://www.theatreworks.org.au/2026/homophonic.

Photographer: Darren Gill

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Seeing My Heart In Jack’s Hand

Dead Mum

Dead Mum Rating

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Dead Mum is the true experience of writer/performer Jack Francis West, whose mother died when he was 19 years old. In this cabaret, Jack explains both earnestly and with a great deal of dry humour how he managed and reacted to his mother’s death, and how it still impacts him today. Jack is joined on stage by a talented band, Riley Richardson (music director/guitarist), Eve Pilkington (drummer), Lucy Cleminson (cellist/bassist) and Teige Cordiner (pianist). Throughout the show the band not only provided their musical talents, but added to the humour and atmosphere of the performance. The band successfully curated a vibe of warmth and safety for Jack to share how he is feeling, whilst occasionally being called out for being camp.

The show began with Jack walking around taking selfies with audience members and his mums’ urn. It was a world building moment, defining the nature of the show. There were people everywhere, too many people for the space. And of course, I was eager to get my selfie with Jack and his mum Kate. Jack was charismatic and endearing, warm and friendly, as he moved through the crowd.

Immediately the first song Jack sang was silly, breaking the tension that had been built by the presence of an urn and a clear mourning setting. The mourner’s flowers around the room set the tone which the song swiftly broke. Jack conducted some dry crowd work, which had me cackling. Jack sang with depth, and picked music that was true to the themes of the show, whilst embodying something I know well, the musical theatre girlie life. I was consistently switching between cackling and tears, as I imagine Jack intended.

Jack acknowledged that trauma has changed who he is. Most evidently his dry sense of humour, which so perfectly matches my own, is a direct results of his mum’s early death. Jack tells the audience about the moment his mum died, describing the toxic relationship he was in at the time in great detail. The notes I took during the show just contain ‘ahahahah’ which isn’t very helpful but is a good description of how I felt and experienced the show. Jack put little throw away lines peppered in, and he got me laughing loudly and often.

 

 

The physicality of the show contributed to the atmosphere building and vibe generating. Throughout the show there was some minimal blocking, that was not quite choreography. It felt like thoughtful movement, it was considerate and funny. The blocking added to Jack’s humour and acted as an additional tool to bring the audience closer into Jack’s stories.

Jack recognised that “humour makes uncomfortable things better, but if you do it too much can disappear into it.” Although Jack often made a joke when things became too sincere, he recognised and feared that he might lose himself in the protective shielding. Jack noted, he wouldn’t be the same person without his grief. He would be stupider and more blissful. Having lost my aunt at a young age, having lost my cousin, and watching how my friendship group was wrecked when our friend took his own life, Jack’s grief was so visceral and real to me. Jack said “time doesn’t heal all wounds, it turns them into scars,” and particularly when my cousin died I found myself struggling to focus and work, even after several months of healing and processing. It was difficult to admit, but grief is not linear and I didn’t understand how that felt until I was stuck in the middle of it.

Jack saw into my soul, the grief I had experienced in my life, and the way that theatre had healed some of those scars for me, I could see Jack was holding up a mirror to those experiences and feelings. Or maybe more accurately, Jack placed his heart in his hand for the audience to see, and I found something that so similarly mirrored my own grief and healing process that I was torn apart, and in tears as Jack sang the final song. Obviously, I knew all the words, and I was silently singing the song back to Jack.

Jack’s vulnerability felt real and raw. He has had time and distance from his mum’s death, but he described what grief looks like with time, that it’s still a powerful feeling, and that he sees his mum everywhere. His realisation and understanding of his own grief wrecked me, and reduced me to a blubbering mess. My drive home from the theatre consisted of creating a playlist of the songs Jack sang, and revisiting those songs, windows rolled down, very loudly.

To book tickets to Dead Mum, please visit https://www.theatreworks.org.au/2026/dead-mum.

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Campfire Unleashed

Campfire Unleashed

Campfire Unleashed Rating

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Campfire is a warm, expressive, and impressive act of acrobatics and physicality. The audience follows two friends, Louis (Green) and Griffin (Hooper), as they hike through the bush. They have strange interactions with an aberration (Naz Turner) who is up to some mischief. This dance piece is bursting with expression and athleticism. A whole narrative, character development and plot, is conveyed solely through dance. Campfire unleashed is filled with rich creative dance, with the three dancers using their powerful bodies to effectively tell the story of two friends and the mysterious person in the bush. All the dancers were able to move around the stage gracefully with ease, no language was needed, as the dancers articulated themselves with their bodies.

 

 

The show starts with Turner mysteriously dancing around the stage. It felt like he was a spirit welcoming the audience, acknowledging the bush and land the show is set on. Once turner creeps off stage, Louis and Griffin greet each other warmly with exaggerated chest bumps, and quickly get to hiking. The audience then gets to watch as both boys try to set up camp with whimsical athleticism. Shockingly, somehow, the boys end up having to share a sleeping bag! Louis and Griffin remain consistently and dramatically expressive throughout the whole ordeal, expressing their wild personalities through their movements and interactions with each other. Louis, Griffin, and the aberration then each have their solo dance numbers, highlight specific skills of each dancer in impressive and unique ways. Each dancer utilised new forms of dance, surprising the audience with their different movements.

Throughout the performance each dancer exhibits a great deal of control in their movements. The physicality and countenance of each performer builds drama and tension through every movement. Each dancer is afforded their own moment to creatively express their characters thoughts and feelings, be it fear, terror, or elated excitement. Although there are serious moments of anxiety pepper throughout the show, overall Campfire Unleashed remained light hearted and silly. Even more impressively, the silly characters remained sexy, given the visibly powerful bodies of all three dancers. The creative and modern dancing was sown together in ways that I didn’t expect, forming an experience both astounding and delightful.

To book tickets to Campfire Unleashed, please visit https://www.theatreworks.org.au/2026/campfire-unleashed.

Photographer: Aaron Walker

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TWO

TWO

TWO Rating

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Melbourne’s queer theatre scene is growing bolder and more joyful with every passing year. However, with widespread acceptance and marketability, there is always a risk of falling into complacency. As a trans playwright, I’m well aware of this ‘tolerance trap’, so I was excited to see a new play with a protagonist as grey in their morality as they are in their gender presentation. Add themes of queer family dynamics and the societal treatment of AFAB bodies into the mix, and you have a recipe for a fascinating comedy. The execution of Two, directed and written by Artemis Muñoz, however, left much to be desired in terms of the writing, set design, and performances.

Two’s protagonist, Kit (Sienna Macalister), is polyamorous, non-binary and newly pregnant. Excited as they are to be a parent, they quickly grow sick of people’s questions about their baby’s gender/sex/genitals. During a particularly tense get-together, they lie to their mother (Rebecca Morton) and announce that they are having twins, a boy and a girl. This temporarily fields uncomfortable conversations with Kit’s family, but strains relations with their partners (Vasi Devi and Marz Cooper) and creates further issues once the (singular) child is born. Will Kit’s family, chosen and biological, survive the fallout?

When creating such an esoteric plotline, there’s a tricky balance between getting your themes across and not lecturing your audience. Unfortunately, I felt that Two fell off the latter side of that tightrope, especially when it came to Kit’s frustration with their mother. It often felt as if the script was insisting that we dislike the mother through prolonged rants from Kit, instead of letting the audience infer ways in which her microaggressions impacted her child. This didactic writing extended to other scenes that fell into a predictable pattern: someone makes an offensive comment, Kit calls them out, they double down, Kit gives them a scolding.

 

 

The staging also didn’t help with character connection because the space felt too wide. By using various side set pieces along with an expanding central frame, the actors felt so physically distant from the audience that it was hard to connect with their intimate scenes. The blocking often seemed stiff and aimless, with characters stuck standing around in scenes they didn’t fully belong in and a lack of opportunities for the actors to make eye contact with each other. A more closed-off stage and further opportunities to sit in moments of silence would have made it easier to connect with characters who are, on paper, fascinating.

Two still has moments where it lives up to the premise’s promise, especially after Kit’s child is born. The scene where Kit gives birth was a visceral showcase of Macalister’s acting, using a luminous ball as a stand-in for the baby was a beautiful symbolic choice, and there was a greater sense of emotional weight as certain character arcs wrapped up. The play’s penultimate scene with Kit and their mother was one of the only times when the mother felt fully sympathetic. It truly seemed that she didn’t fully understand the weight of her actions and that she had the potential to do better. It also brought home a more complex message about ‘cutting off’ loved ones: it isn’t easy on anyone and it’s never anybody’s first choice, but it can still promote the possibility of change.

Two is a play with many interesting things to say that needs further confidence in saying them. The writing comes across as lecturing at points, which could be mitigated by further drafting and less nervousness in the performances. I also think a smaller, more intimate venue would benefit the cast and audience. I would be interested in seeing a future production, and if the premise of the show resonates with you then you may enjoy it in its current form, but it could reach many more people with further polish.

To book tickets to TWO, please visit https://www.theatreworks.org.au/2025/two.

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