Hamlet presented by Barking Gecko Theatre Company and WAAPA
Presented by Barking Gecko Theatre Company and Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts.
By William Shakespeare.
Directed by John Sheedy.
Murder. Betrayal. Love. Politics. Revenge.
Hamlet is Shakespeare's most performed play. It is estimated that every minute of the day, it is being staged somewhere around the world. In 2013, we introduce the first production in our Shakespeare Series as part of our collaboration with the Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts.
Director John Sheedy, working with the next breed of emerging talent from WAAPA, will offer a fresh, contemporary interpretation of Shakespeare's most famous protagonist.
The Play's the thing. Wherein I will catch the conscience of the King
- Hamlet, Act 2, Scene 2
Suitable for ages 13+
Subiaco Arts Centre
Sat 16 March - Fri 22 March 2013
Book at Ticketek
ticketek.com.au
1300 795 012
TOP 10 SUBIACO (PERTH) Attractions (Things to Do & See)
Best places to visit in Subiaco, a suburb of Perth, located north-west of Kings Park. Subiaco is one of best destinations in Western Australia.
Things to do in Subiaco (Perth) is to visit some good places such as Regal Theatre, Subiaco Farmers Market, Western Australia Medical Museum, Mueller Park, Subiaco Museum, Perth Centre of Photography, Markets on Rokeby, Gallery 360, The Cat Cafe Purrth and Barking Gecko Theatre Company.
There is many more tourist attractions in Subiaco, just exploring this beautiful suburb in Perth. More information about what to do or where to go in Perth is on other videos about Perth in this channel.
The Witches by Roald Dahl
Barking Gecko Theatre Company presents
The Griffin Theatre Company production of
THE WITCHES
By Roald Dahl
Adapted for the stage by David Wood
Re-imagined by Lucas Jervies
Performer Guy Edmonds
Perth Season Performer Scott Sheridan
Season: 31 March - 12 April, 2015.
Subiaco Arts Centre, Western Australia
Get tickets at
This Girl Laughs, This Girl Cries, This Girl Does Nothing
Book Through BOCS Ticketing
Three girls. Three pathways. One destination.
Three sisters are abandoned in the middle of a forest by their father. Facing an uncertain future, one decides to walk one way around the world, one decides to walk the other way and one decides to stay right where she is.
After 20 years having crossed oceans, toppled lighthouses and conquered armies -- the two wanderers find themselves back at the same place in the woods, where the third sister waits...
One of Australia's most exciting playwrights, Finegan Kruckemeyer, has created a modern day fairytale that will thrill, delight and surprise audiences of all ages. Winner of the 2010 Rodney Seaborn Award, This Girl Laughs, This Girl Cries, This Girl Does Nothing, is an epic tale about the search for happiness, self and a place to call home.
Suitable for ages 6+
Written by Finegan Kruckemeyer and Directed by Noel Jordan
Tue 10 -- Sat 21 July 2012, Subiaco Arts Centre
Presented by Barking Gecko Theatre Company, Casula Powerhouse Arts Centre and Q Theatre Company, in association with Healthway, Smarter Than Smoking.
Angela Betzien Interview
Angela Betzien is a multi award winning writer and a founding member of RealTV. Angela received the Queensland Theatre Company/Comalco Young Playwrights award first when she was 16 and then three years running in 1994, 1995, and 1996. She also won the Queensland Theatre Company/Courier Mail George Landen Dann Award in 1998 for Queensland Playwriting.
Hoods, commissioned by Sydney Opera House: Ed and Regional Arts Victoria, is Angelas most successful play to date. The play premiered at the Sydney Opera House in 2006, has toured extensively in Australia and been seen by over forty thousand school children. In 2007 Hoods was included as part of the Come Out Festival for Young People and won an Australian Writers Guild Award for Theatre for Young Audiences as well as the inaugural Richard Wherrett Prize for Excellence in Playwriting, Australias richest playwriting award. Hoods, enjoyed a return season in 2008 as part of the ASSITEJ International Festival for Young People being performed at the Sydney Opera House and Brisbane Powerhouse and was nominated for a Helpmann Award for Childrens Theatre. In 2009, Hoods was produced by Barking Gecko at Subiaco Arts Centre followed by a tour of Western Australian schools and regional centres.
Angela was commissioned by Queensland Arts Council to write Children of the Black Skirt, produced by Real TV, which toured Queensland and Victorian schools for three years from 2003 to 2005. The play was also included as part of the Come Out Youth Arts Festival in Adelaide in 2005 and was the winner of the 2005 Drama Victoria Award for Best Performance by a Theatre Company for Secondary Schools. Her numerous other plays have had professional and independent productions including Playboy of the Working Class and The Orphanage Project (Queensland Theatre Company) The Kingswood Kids (La Boite Theatre) The Suitcase (Real TV & Stage X) and Princess of Suburbia (Real TV). In 2008, Angelas play Girl Who Cried Wolf, commissioned by Sydney Opera House:Ed and Arena Theatre premiered as part of the ASSITEJ International Festival for Young People at Sydney Opera House and Melbourne Arts Centre.
Angela was recently commissioned by Australian Theatre for Young People (ATYP) and Camp Quality to write an educational play for school students, The Teenage Alchemist. She is currently in development on several exciting projects including War Crimes, a joint commission with Sydney Opera House: Ed, Regional Arts Victoria and Real TV. Perths Black Swan Theatre Company commissioned Angela to write an adaptation of her play Motel, now called The Dark Room, which recently premiered as part of their 2009 Hotbed Ensemble season. Angela is currently writing a libretto based on her play The Orphanage Project.
APAN Spring Intensive 2012-Inter/Senior Marko Hip Hop Going In Group 2
Active Living 101
Over 80 people attended the Active Living 101: Activating People and Places Seminar on Wednesday 4 April 2012.
Speakers included the Commissioner of Police, Karl O'Callaghan, Charles Johnson, President of the Planning Institute of Australia (WA Branch) and Allan Tranter, Managing Director of Creating Communities.
The key messages presented were about active living and the importance of activating people and places for the health and wellbeing of our community.