★★★★1/2
Adelaide Fringe. Ayers House. 27 Feb 2026
Wiesenthal is based on the life and work of Simon Wiesenthal, a Jewish Holocaust survivor who became internationally famous for doggedly hunting down and bringing to justice nearly 1,100 Nazi war criminals. (This was only about 5% of the number he ‘had on his books’).
The play is set in his office on his last day at work before going into retirement. He invites one last group of students into his office (we the audience) and recounts his life’s work in tracking down history's most infamous and despised murderers.
Wiesenthal was written by American playwright Tom Dugan who has been nominated for the New York Drama Desk Award, New York Outer Critics Circle Award, Los Angeles Ovation Award, and has won the Los Angeles Drama Critics Circle Award for Wiesenthal.
Christopher C Gibbs plays Wiesenthal to perfection. He is an experienced actor who has clearly studied his subject, and he provides us with a compelling visualisation of Wiesenthal’s passion and humanity and of the conviction and drive that compelled him to do what he did for so long. Gibbs addresses the audience throughout—in some sense there is no ‘fourth wall’ at all—and we feel totally involved in his every move and every word. Even when a stage prop fails, and Gibbs wryly confesses it to the audience and momentarily takes us ‘out of the moment’, it’s still Wiesenthal talking to us. Gibbs has command and class.
The story of Simon Wiesenthal’s work is well known, and the action of the play follows him as he vividly recounts details how various Nazis were tracked down and apprehended, and the nature of their vile crimes. This reviewer has recently completed reading a ‘new’ history of the Holocaust (prompted by having seen the excellent film Nuremberg featuring Russell Crowe as Hermann Göring) and thought that he couldn’t be shocked any more, but Dugan’s detailed and biting text, coupled with Gibb’s exquisite storytelling and polished characterisation, shocks you all over again. The audience is outraged into extended disbelieving silence.
Why tell the story of the Holocaust again? As Wiesenthal says, because we must never forget. Because, as Churchill once said, “Those that fail to learn from history are doomed to repeat it.” Because, it is human nature to largely remain fixed in our behaviours and the direction of humanity’s moral compass needs to be constantly questioned.
Wiesenthal lived in dangerous times. So do we.
This is gripping theatre that matters.
Kym Clayton
When: 27 Feb to 8 Mar
Where: Ayers House
Bookings: adelaidefringe.com.au
★★1/2
Adelaide Fringe. South Australian Maritime Museum. 26 Feb 2026
PYRATES! is a chamber musical about… well, pirates… and being performed aboard a ketch inside the SA Maritime Museum creates atmosphere that the show seriously needs. AI-generated images pertinent to the show’s narrative were projected on the ship’s sails.
According to the shows’ publicity material, the action follows the “true(ish)” story of English mariner John Husk who finds himself set upon by pirates and subsequently pressed into their service. John subsequently enters a love tryst which results in tension and swashbuckling belligerence before a resolution emerges.
There are only three in the cast, including Jassy Husk (a descendant of John Husk) who is also the principal creative behind the show. She co-wrote the music, arrangements, and the script. The show has toured the Perth and Sydney Fringes with varying actors playing the other roles. Local opera singer Adam Goodburn was billed to perform in the Adelaide production but was replaced for an unstated reason on opening night.
The cast are clearly all trained singers, and apart from the (uncredited) male cast member, they projected clearly in the cavernous and echoey space. The musical accompaniment is enjoyable, but because of the appalling acoustics in the performance space, much of its nuance is lost, as is the clarity in the speaking and singing voices. Because the work is almost completely sung-through, the audience relies on the clarity of the singing to understand the narrative. Sadly, it was not possible.
This would be an enjoyable show if performed in a venue that assists rather than thwarts sound production.
Kym Clayton
When: 26 Feb to 28 Feb
Where: South Australian Maritime Museum
Bookings: adelaidefringe.com.au
Adelaide Festival. Festival Theatre. 27 Feb 2026
Forty years ago, Adelaide Festival director Anthony Steel was under the gun with controversial apprehension erupting about Shakespeare's Richard III being performed in the Georgian language by the Rusteveli Theatre Compay from Tbilisi.
But when Ramaz Chkhikvadze strode the stage, Adelaide recognised it was seeing one of the greatest living actors of his time and Shakespeare was still Shakespeare in Georgian. And it was wonderful.
Anthony Steel was in the opening night audience for Chekhov’s The Cherry Orchard in Korean and perchance he was having a shadow of À la recherche du temps perdu (remembrance of things past). I was.
Surely the shrill breakneck torrents of Korean delivery could not be compatible with the dark European passions of Chekhov’s characters?
And how very strange they turn out to be in the 2026 Festival’s centrepiece presentation of Simon Stone’s The Cherry Orchard from the Korean LG Art Centre.
Indeed, the audience struggles to keep pace with the rapid-fire and often strident cadences emanating from the actors as they banter and bicker and party through the final days of the family’s home - no longer a Russian rural property but a modern Seoul world. They are voluble characters with potent politics to convey in mighty highbrow speeches as well as family purposes and cross-purposes. Identifying the actors whilst also reading the surtitles is almost an acrobatic attention battle.
But, as with the phenomenon in Georgian, the might of the actors and the emotional complexity of the play unhinge the language barrier and it is Chekov which arises from this seemingly contrary context.
And at the grand denouement, acclaim is in the air, and the audience rises to its feet.
One has loved and hated Doyoung Song, the mother, played by multi-award-winning actress Doyen Jeon, as she conflicts and resolves with her children. One has disdained and pitied Hyunsook Kang, her adopted daughter, as played by the wonderful Moon Choi, albeit both performers’ voices sometimes invoke angry chickens. Korean and English tonals seem at times so vastly different; less so among the men of whom Haesoo Park shows his matinee idol qualities in portraying Doosik Hwang, the chauffeur’s son who has risen to the heights of wealth and success to supersede his former superiors. He performs one scene smoking a victory cigarette which is a triumph just in itself.
The set by Saul Kim is almost Ikea on steroids, an A-frame modern architectural wonder steepled in stairs up and down which the actors scamper with enviable ease and alacrity. An upstairs bedroom reveals private scenes of love and generational restlessness while the broad downstairs open plan accommodates the highs and lows of family life. Sliding glass doors are wielded as action uses the stage at large, the characters seeming tiny on its scale, sometimes even perched on the peak. Indeed, Stone plays the blocking with ever-gratifying aesthetic impact.
There’s soundscape, too, of course, mirroring the highs and lows of the narrative and a fascinating black “snowfall” which coats the stage as the moods collide.
It is a handsome, uneasy work, daring a la Stone, and for lovers of Chekhov, both puzzling and demanding,
Therein, of course, it sits as a classic Festival piece, to be implanted in the city’s arts memory.
Meanwhile, Festival Centre CEO Kate Gould’s new foodie policy is being met with astonishment by patrons unready to meet the clever quickie snacks on sale with or without pre-order around the foyer. And then there are those thrilled to find fine dining up and running in the new Angry Penguin restaurant.
It is all a hub happening with a verve and vigour it has not seen in many a year.
Samela Harris
When: 27 Feb to 1 Mar
Where: Festival Theatre
Bookings: ticketek.com.au
★★★★1/2
Adelaide Fringe. Presented by Holden Street Theatres. Thebarton Theatre. 21 Feb 2026
Holden Street Theatres’ Adelaide International Comedy Gala is the hottest ticket for comedy in the Adelaide Fringe. And you’ll have to wait a whole year because it’s only on for one night and 1892 people at Thebarton Theatre saw it and probably you didn’t. $30 for ten comedians over three-and-a-half hours would have to be the best deal in the Fringe.
Host Eddie Bannon’s banter with audience members only went so far and he wisely cut back when the top acts were on a roll.
First cab off the rank was South Australia’s Tilly Harrison. She thrice announced she was polyamorous and said that it can lead to a lot of questions, but it didn’t lead to much humour on Saturday night. The audience didn’t care for her schtick much judging by the applause. However, I asked a 12-year-old who probably shouldn’t have been there what was his favourite comedian after seeing the first six and he said Tilly Harrison. So maybe I’m having trouble stepping over the generation gap. Maybe I’m Pollyanna when faced with polyamory. Maybe I’m jealous. And to be clear, I did not bring the 12-year old, I met her at the bar. With her mother, silly!
The show really started with Sydney’s Daniel Muggleton bedizened in a metallic red tracksuit - good trademark. Third up was Aussie bloke James Donald Forbes McCann who’s made it big in the States and lives in Austin, Texas. He kept the momentum going by saddling the horrors of the 20th century on women getting the vote. Yes, he takes chances. His earlier shows had titles like Wolf Creek The Musical and The Sound of Nazis. The interval was abuzz with speculation because the line-up is not really final until it happens.
TV personality Nikki Britton kicked butt starting off the second act. Her female-focused sexualised humour was easy to get. By now, the night was hot, hot, hot. Then the crowd erupted when Will Anderson's name was announced. His rapid fire, maniacal delivery articulated the funny bone of the dairy industry, something he grew up with. The cream on the cake of the second act was David Collins and Shane Dundas tied at the navels as the Umbilical Brothers. Their physical comedy act of mime and mic effects was astounding. In their 25th year, they attract an audience of both newcomers and significant repeat business. Talk at intermission was about how beautiful the renovated Thebarton Theatre looked and who would be stepping on stage for the third act.
Confirming a pattern, the third round opened with another female comic, Georgie Carroll. The former nurse gets plenty of material from motherhood, matrimony and emergency wards. Her routine on fanny pics for the tele-doc was so funny. Peter Helliar found the funny bone with the Princess Diana Parmigiana and the Andrew food on the kid’s menu. He’s got a relaxed, natural style. Then to riotous acclaim came TV’s quiz show host, Tom Gleeson. Personally, I’m not a big fan—he’s a bit smarmy for me—especially in contrast to the preceding Helliar. Yes, being the boss of the AC at home can be funny, but really? The audience loved him. The last act should be the strongest but Venezuelan-born Ivan Aristeguieta repeated the learning English routine from his current show—a well-worn topic by our immigrant community of comedians who can be funny in their second language, which is amazing when you think about it. A lot of people haven't heard this stuff before and found it a great finish to the night.
I guarantee you the Gala gets a lot of repeat business and attracts increasingly more famous talent, so you better get your tickets early next year. Bravo!
David Grybowski
When: 21 Feb 2026
Where: Thebarton theatre
Bookings: Closed
Adelaide Festival. Slingsby Theatre Company. 22 Feb 2026
A tree once more becomes central focus in the second triptych instalment of Slingsby Theatre’s A Concise Compendium of Wonder.
Ursula Dubosarsky’s adaptation of Oscar Wilde’s The Selfish Giant is an enthralling tale in which the glorious tree of Wilde’s story takes on that significance of deep heart tied to the sense of life and hope children playing within it gain from it as we know it. The tree links them to each other, to nature, to a full life in a way an audience today knows, but doesn’t live it as societies did aeons ago.
The 1800s based work is redolent with creative means of the time. Simple ball games. Light projection screens of early pre photographic era form and shadow puppetry, wonderfully realised by Mark Oakley and Lighting Designer Chris Petridis. The cast of Nathan O’Keefe, Ren Williams and Elizabeth Hay are full of joyous gusto as they play, tell the story, and give life to puppets and unseen characters. Quincy Grant’s score is a delightfully keyboard led one of fun, much as it manages some deeper, darker moments.
The hint at what’s to come begins as you enter the space and are asked to put your hand into a memory box. Its interior is cold. These memories are given a number. Remember the cold.
Dubosarsky has written her play as a series of nine memories, each projected on a floor to ceiling scrim.
A tree is a whole world. An ecosystem. Bonding place. This is as Ada, a puppet little girl played by Elizabeth Hay knows and loves it. The girl who sits and listens to everything, hears what others cannot and befriends a little snail she names Quill after her little brother who died only hours after birth.
Director Andy Packer’s production is one in which storytelling becomes a blend of means enabled by Ailsa Paterson’s design.
Grey boxes open, light within them, revealing special props; little gardens, puppets, mini plants, a tiny version of Quill the snail, his shell lit up.
Means in which a little puppet Ada, aided by a human, gives life to a vulnerability only such a scale can give. Just as little Quill the snail does.
Against that is magnitude of the Giant. Booming voice. Thunderous presence. Terrifying tall walls of his home and the stone barrier he builds surrounding the tree he has banished the children from.
All this grace of emotional and physical scale is so gently but powerfully deployed to express a deep dilemma. Why do great truly giant forces need to covet and deny the very joy of life affirming nature and community?
How do you break through stone barriers, bring back warmth and hope. Restore connection between nature and humanity?
Ada’s brave choice to do so is a special kind of power. The smallest of humans finding a way that seems impossible. Led by a snail song, gift of nature. It is a beautiful thing to experience and ponder.
David O’Brien
When: 18 Feb to 15 Mar
Where: The Wandering Hall of Possibility
Bookings: my.adelaidefestival.com.au