<?xml version="1.0"?>
		<rss version="2.0">
			<channel>
				<title>Adelaide Festival Centre</title>
				<link>http://www.adelaidefestivalcentre.com.au/</link>
				<description>Theatre - Next 10 Channel</description>
			<item>
				<guid>http://www.adelaidefestivalcentre.com.au/?cat=3355&amp;id=183655</guid>
				<title>The Glass Menagerie</title>
				<link>http://www.adelaidefestivalcentre.com.au/?cat=3355&amp;id=183655</link>
				<dates>04/05/2012 - 26/05/2012</dates>
				<category>Theatre</category>
				<description>On Sale 07 November 2011   By Tennessee Williams   Set in St. Louis in the 1930’s, The Glass Menagerie is a “memory play” about the Wingfield family: Tom, who is torn between his obligation to his family and his desire to break away from the suffocating embrace of his mother Amanda and his shy and crippled sister Laura, whose memory he will never escape.    Abandoned by her husband, Amanda Wingfield comforts herself with recollections of her earlier, more gracious life in the American Deep South, when she was pursued by ‘gentlemen callers’. Now she fights to provide a better life for her grown children, while they struggle for a future that seems unlikely ever to fulfill their mother’s hopes and dreams. But a change in fortune suddenly seems possible with the arrival of a handsome and mysterious young visitor who arrives without warning. &amp;lt;em&amp;gt;The Glass Menagerie, Tennessee William's evocation of loneliness and lost love, is one of his most powerful and moving plays; an unforgettable American classic.    Director: Adam Cook  Lighting Designer: Mark Pennington  Cast Includes: Kate Cheel, Nic English, Anthony Gooley, Deidre Rubenstein    Access Performance:   Tuesday 15 May 6.30pm   Vision Impaired / Audio Described (with pre-show discussion from 5.30pm) Saturday 26 May 2.00pm   Vision Impaired / Audio Described Wednesday 23 May 11.00am   Captioned</description>
			</item>
			<item>
				<guid>http://www.adelaidefestivalcentre.com.au/?cat=3355&amp;id=183656</guid>
				<title>War Mother</title>
				<link>http://www.adelaidefestivalcentre.com.au/?cat=3355&amp;id=183656</link>
				<dates>30/05/2012 - 02/06/2012</dates>
				<category>Theatre</category>
				<description>On Sale 07 November 2011  Education Program Press Conference by Harold Pinter A Mother by Franca Rame and Dario Fo Switch by Marjolijn van Heemstra Song of a German Mother – Bertold Brecht  One Actor.  Two Nobel Laureates.  Three plays, and a fresh new voice from the world of Dutch theatre.  Featuring mothers, explosives, a Minister of Culture, a hint of humour, some hard cold facts and a terrifying but all too familiar world.  War Mother is sixty minutes of intense scrutiny of humankind, motherhood, our relationship with power, the State, war, terrorism and repression. With a pinch of Brecht thrown in for good measure.  Director: Catherine Fitzgerald Cast includes: Eileen Darley Lighting Designer: David Gadsden Composer: Catherine Oates</description>
			</item>
			<item>
				<guid>http://www.adelaidefestivalcentre.com.au/?cat=3355&amp;id=183657</guid>
				<title>Pinocchio</title>
				<link>http://www.adelaidefestivalcentre.com.au/?cat=3355&amp;id=183657</link>
				<dates>08/07/2012 - 28/07/2012</dates>
				<category>Theatre</category>
				<description>On Sale 07 November 2011   Windmill Theatre and State Theatre Company of South Australia – Pinocchio  Once there was a lonely man with lots of love to give. He wanted a child so much that he carved himself a beautiful little boy. But the boy wanted the world and the latest designer sandshoes. He wanted fame, celebrity and to walk on the wild side. He was lured by temptation and the love of a blue girl. This woodenhead wanted more than his father could possibly give, and so he ran away to get it. This is his story…  &amp;nbsp;  Based on the classic tale by Carlo Collodi and boldly retold as a witty, gothic, rocking, family music theatre spectacular, Pinocchio is a contemporary celebration of the ‘whatever’ generation.  Based on the books by Carlo Collodi  Directed and created by Rosemary Myers with  Writer: Julianne O’Brien Designer: Jonathon Oxlade Composer/Musical Director: Jethro Woodward Video Designer: Chris More Lighting Designer: Geoff Cobham Movement: Carol Wellman Kelly  Starring: Danielle Catanzariti, Jude Henshall, Derek Lynch, Nathan O’Keefe, Geoff Revell and Alirio Zavarce Access Performance:  Tuesday 17 July 6.30pm   Vision Impaired / Audio Described (with pre-show discussion from 5.30pm) Saturday 21 July 2.00pm   Vision Impaired / Audio Described Wednesday 18 July 11.00am   Captioned   *Pratt Family Pass:&amp;nbsp;  2 Adults + 2 Children or 1 Adult + 3 Children (Children aged 2–16 years).</description>
			</item>
			<item>
				<guid>http://www.adelaidefestivalcentre.com.au/?cat=3355&amp;id=183658</guid>
				<title>Top Girls</title>
				<link>http://www.adelaidefestivalcentre.com.au/?cat=3355&amp;id=183658</link>
				<dates>17/08/2012 - 08/09/2012</dates>
				<category>Theatre</category>
				<description>On Sale 07 November 2011  By Caryl Churchill   Set in Margaret Thatcher’s England in the early 1980s, where power dressing and giant shoulder pads were the all the fashion, Caryl Churchill’s stark and unflinching portrayal of the sacrifices women make to get to the top is still stingingly relevant.   Marlene is an ambitious career woman who has just been appointed head of the Top Girls Employment Agency. This aesthetically daring, politically provocative play tells the story of the firm and Marlene’s rise to power. An insightful commentary on bourgeois feminism, this bold and ingenious work offers one of theatre's most honest portraits of what it means to be a woman in the modern world.  Top Girls examines the complex challenges working women face in the contemporary business world and society at large. We celebrate Marlene’s success, yet as she climbs the corporate ladder and breaks through the glass ceiling, she leaves her sisters behind. In doing so, the play asks, can we applaud her values? The shoulder-pads may have gone on the rubbish heap, but Churchill’s masterpiece continues to resonate.   Director: Catherine Fitzgerald  Designer: Mary Moore Cast includes: Eileen Darley, Antje Guenther, Ulli Birvé, Sally Hildyard,&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Carissa Lee, Ksenja Logos, Lia Reutens Composer: Catherine Oates Access Performance: Tuesday 28 Aug 6.30pm   Vision Impaired / Audio Described (with pre-show discussion from 5.30pm)    Saturday 1 Sep 2.00pm   Vision Impaired / Audio Described Wednesday 5 Sep 11.00am   Captioned</description>
			</item>
			<item>
				<guid>http://www.adelaidefestivalcentre.com.au/?cat=3355&amp;id=183659</guid>
				<title>These Premises are Alarmed - BLASTED</title>
				<link>http://www.adelaidefestivalcentre.com.au/?cat=3355&amp;id=183659</link>
				<dates>05/10/2012 - 13/10/2012</dates>
				<category>Theatre</category>
				<description>On Sale 07 November 2011   By Sarah Kane.   It’s a rare event when theatre makes the headlines but Blasted, Sarah Kane’s first play, did just that. Hugely controversial when it premiered at London’s Royal Court Theatre in 1995, it was hailed as a landmark of modern theatre, an astonishingly visceral play of harrowing power that achieved notoriety very quickly by being lambasted in the Daily Mail as “a disgusting feast of filth”.   It starts in a Leeds hotel room, to which sickly, gin-soaked local news journalist Ian takes his young lover, the naïve, epileptic Cate for the night. He’s racist, homophobic, and armed. They circle each other in a battle of wills when suddenly an armed soldier enters the room and ignites an explosive set of events that lead to scenes of rape, torture and cannibalism. Kane takes audiences through a nightmarish journey that serves as a vicious reminder that violence outside will always find a way in.  Blasted is not for the faint-hearted but it is for the reflective mind.   Director: Netta Yashchin  Lighting Designer: Mark Pennington  Designer: Wendy Todd Cast: Patrick Graham, Anni Lindner, Mark Saturno Composer: Stuart Day</description>
			</item>
			<item>
				<guid>http://www.adelaidefestivalcentre.com.au/?cat=3355&amp;id=183660</guid>
				<title>These Premises are Alarmed - PORNOGRAPHY</title>
				<link>http://www.adelaidefestivalcentre.com.au/?cat=3355&amp;id=183660</link>
				<dates>18/10/2012 - 27/10/2012</dates>
				<category>Theatre</category>
				<description>On Sale 07 November 2011  By Simon Stephens   It’s July 2005 and London feels like the centre of the world. Big events are happening and everyone is talking about them – Live 8, G8, the triumph of the 2012 Olympics bid for London. In schools, offices, streets, shops, parks and homes – the air is electric with promise and possibility. You can feel the sense of anticipation. In less than an hour in Central London, everything will change …   It’s a lonely trek towards oblivion on the London Underground made by a young man with ice in his heart and a pack of explosives in his rucksack. This stark and shattering play follows seven different characters who share little besides their loneliness, over the first seven days of July from Live 8 through the 2012 Olympics announcement and the ensuing terror attacks in the heart of London.   A state-of-the-nation play in the fullest sense, Pornography captures Britain as it crashes from the euphoria and promise of the 2012 Olympics announcement into the devastation of the 7/7 terrorist attacks. Simon Stephens is one of Britain’s most brilliant new playwrights.   One city, one day, seven stories. (And of course it couldn’t happen here…)   Director: Daniel Clarke Composer: Jason Sweeney  Lighting Designer: Mark Pennington Designer: Wendy Todd Cast: Matthew Crook, Carmel Johnson, Ansuya Nathan</description>
			</item>
			<item>
				<guid>http://www.adelaidefestivalcentre.com.au/?cat=3355&amp;id=183661</guid>
				<title>In the Next Room - The Vibrator Play</title>
				<link>http://www.adelaidefestivalcentre.com.au/?cat=3355&amp;id=183661</link>
				<dates>03/11/2012 - 24/11/2012</dates>
				<category>Theatre</category>
				<description>By Sarah Ruhl  If you long for a time when an ankle was breathtaking, when a well-turned calf or the touch of a hand across a teapot caused palpitations, then this 19th century costume drama is the play for you. If you’ve confined your knowledge of the Victorians to that century’s output in the genre of the novel, you’ll be forgiven for thinking that no one ever had sex, no one went to the bathroom and certainly, no one used a vibrator.  Dr Givings is an inventor who is obsessed with the new miracle of electricity. His wife, a frustrated free spirit, craves romantic love, sensuality, and excitement with her buttoned-up husband, who has more passion for science than for, well, passion. She longs to connect with him - but not electrically.  A bystander in her husband's world, the vagaries of the medical field have never held much allure for her, until now. Lonely and struggling with new motherhood, Mrs Givings seeks the companionship of her husband's patients and begins to discover the truth of what goes on in the next room.  A funny, touching and stimulating new comedy about love, longing, science and invention, In The Next Room or the Vibrator Play was nominated for both the Tony Awards and the Pulitzer Prize, and was a resounding hit when it opened on Broadway in 2009, consolidating Sarah Ruhl’s reputation as one of America’s most imaginative and effervescent contemporary playwrights.  Director: Catherine Fitzgerald Designer: Ailsa Paterson Lighting Designer: David Gadsden Composer: Catherine Oates Cast Includes: Lizzy Falkland, Katherine Fyffe, Cameron Goodall, Pamela Jikiemi, Amber McMahon, Renato Musolino and Brendan Rock Access Performance:  Tuesday 13 Nov 6.30pm Vision Impaired / Audio Described (with pre-show discussion from 5.30pm) Saturday 17 Nov 2.00pm Vision Impaired / Audio Described Wednesday 21 Nov 11.00am Captioned</description>
			</item>
			<item>
				<guid>http://www.adelaidefestivalcentre.com.au/?cat=3355&amp;id=183700</guid>
				<title>Biddies</title>
				<link>http://www.adelaidefestivalcentre.com.au/?cat=3355&amp;id=183700</link>
				<dates>14/08/2012-18/08/2012</dates>
				<category>Theatre</category>
				<description>By Don Reid Feisty and vulnerable, these biddies are everything – except old!  Five ordinarily marvellous women find themselves back in their school classroom plying their needles in a good old-fashioned session of "stitch and bitch". Their confessions are frank, their rivalries intense and their jokes outrageous. They discover a common frustration with the limitations of being female and mature in a world still largely defined by men.   Accidentally locked in the classroom with nothing but ingenuity, Adora Cream Wafers and a bucket to get them through the crisis, unknown reserves come to the fore. Released from their own constraints, they rediscover their capacity to love, forgive – and take control. If you can’t beat ‘em, join ‘em!   Men see their wives, adult children see their mothers, grandchildren see Nana, and the mature Australian woman sees herself, as some of our most beloved actresses bring this delightful new comedy to life and laughter on the stage.    You’ll laugh till you cry.   Starring  Maggie Blinco, Annie Byron, Vivienne Garrett, Julie Hudspeth, Donna Lee and Linden Wilkinson “...a heart-warming comedy....” - Sydney Morning Herald          &amp;nbsp;      Helpful links           Add to 2012 Season                                                      Subscribtion                          View the full 2012 Season</description>
			</item>
			<item>
				<guid>http://www.adelaidefestivalcentre.com.au/?cat=3355&amp;id=183744</guid>
				<title>Breath - inSPACE Development</title>
				<link>http://www.adelaidefestivalcentre.com.au/?cat=3355&amp;id=183744</link>
				<dates>06/07/2012</dates>
				<category>Theatre</category>
				<description>Rehearsal Room 2 - Meet at the Dunstan Playhouse foyer entrance Watch two performers weave a tale of life and loss in concurrent monologues backed by a live score. Sound cancelling technology will allow the audience to dial up and listen to one story at a time.  &amp;nbsp;  Writer: Kit Brookman  Director: Geordie Brookman         Be the first to experience pioneering performance freshly developed in the rehearsal room.                                Join the inSPACe:development list for updates.                             To reserve your seat email inspace@adelaidefestivalcentre.com.au                    Please indicate the show and session time in the subject line of your email.      &amp;nbsp;      Helpful links           2012 Season                            Subscribtion                          View all inSpace Development Shows</description>
			</item>
			<item>
				<guid>http://www.adelaidefestivalcentre.com.au/?cat=3355&amp;id=183746</guid>
				<title>Rabbits - inSPACE Development</title>
				<link>http://www.adelaidefestivalcentre.com.au/?cat=3355&amp;id=183746</link>
				<dates>12/10/2012</dates>
				<category>Theatre</category>
				<description>Rehearsal Room 2 - Meet at the Dunstan Playhouse foyer entrance.  Inspired by the work of virologist, Frank Fenner, a new play about population, pests and the prospect of human extinction. From the creators of Rocket Town, winner of the 2011 Adelaide Fringe inSPACE development award.  Supported by RiAus (Science Exchange)  Writer: Emily Steel  Director: Daisy Brown Actors: Dee Easton, Sam Calleja.         Be the first to experience pioneering performance freshly developed in the rehearsal room.                            Join the inSPACe:development list for updates.                        To reserve your seat email inspace@adelaidefestivalcentre.com.au                 Please indicate the show and session time in the subject line of your email.      &amp;nbsp;      Helpful links           2012 Season                       Subscribtion                          View all inSpace Development Shows</description>
			</item>
			</channel>
		</rss>
