OzAsia review: Bridge of Dreams
A highlight of this year’s OzAsia Festival, the Bridge of Dreams concert is a mighty work combining Indian and big band music that swept the audience into its seductive intercultural arms.
A highlight of this year’s OzAsia Festival, the Bridge of Dreams concert is a mighty work combining Indian and big band music that swept the audience into its seductive intercultural arms.
Actor and filmmaker Maria Tran takes audiences on a high-energy dramatised tour of her martial arts career in Action Star.
SA arts and culture news in brief: New fairytale thriller to headline Windmill’s 2023 season, encore screenings added to Adelaide Film Festival line-up, curator’s picks for OzAsia’s writing and ideas program, and Carclew’s throwing a free 50th birthday party.
Twenty-first-century technology opens breathtaking new perspectives on the historic, 500km march from Robe to the Victorian goldfields endured by 16,000 Chinese miners seeking a better fortune.
The Demon explores the dark past in Australia’s colonial history, its effects on First Nations people and later on migrant minorities both Asian and Middle Eastern. This bold production is a grim journey – often compelling, but sometimes hampered by its own theatrical ambition.
Jane Hutcheon brings the silenced women of her family out from the shadows as she sheds new light on her fascinating and turbulent family history in Lost in Shanghai.
InReview recommends eight anticipated highlights of the 2022 OzAsia Festival program – including a music spectacle featuring 22 performers at Her Majesty’s Theatre, an action-packed thriller with hidden demons, a Korean fusion of magic and mime, and a Japanese-themed lunch on the riverbank.