The Almighty Sometimes Review. The Almighty Sometimes (Queensland Theatre) theatre review In an epigraph to her outstanding stage debut The Almighty Sometimes, Australian playwright Kendall Feaver cites a medical textbook on The Bipolar Child which quotes advice from a nine-year-old, outlining what should be done when a child says they are suicidal. It's produced by those folk at the Royal Exchange, who just cannot seem to put a foot wrong these.
The Almighty Sometimes trailer Melbourne Theatre Company from www.mtc.com.au
The play also introduces us to Renee (Anna's mother), Vivienne (Anna's psychiatrist of 10 years), and Oliver (Anna's. The Almighty Sometimes is at once tough and tender as it explores the bumpy terrain of what it means to live with a mental illness - from the jagged perspectives of the afflicted, but also their loved ones
The Almighty Sometimes trailer Melbourne Theatre Company
Other reviews you might enjoy: The Almighty Sometimes (Queensland Theatre) - theatre review; Anna K (Malthouse Theatre) - theatre review; Boys on the Verge of Tears (fortyfivedownstairs. Two and a half hours, including a 20-minute interval, it is a superb, insightful and nuanced production. When Anna makes a life-changing decision the people around her are forced to ask how responsible they are for her condition in this powerful Royal Exchange play about mental illness and medication
The Almighty Sometimes trailer Melbourne Theatre Company. The Almighty Sometimes may be fictitious, but it feels painfully real and is deeply rooted in a multitude of actual experiences The Almighty Sometimes review Mental illness and identity take centre stage in Kendall Feaver's acclaimed The Almighty Sometimes
Review The Almighty Sometimes at the Bille Brown Theatre. The Almighty Sometimes is a well-executed exploration of mental illness led with devastating skill by McKenna and Garner It's produced by those folk at the Royal Exchange, who just cannot seem to put a foot wrong these.