ANGLESEA PERFORMING ARTS PRESENTS
THE BLEEDING TREE
22-25 FEB
65 MINS (NO INTERMISSION)
-
WEDS 22 FEB, 7.30PM
THURS 23 FEB, 7.30PM
FRI 24 FEB, 7.30PM
SAT 25 FEB, 7.30PM
-
General Admission $25.00
Concession $20.00
Blak Tix $15.00
Companion Card Ticket free
-
Platform Arts is wheelchair-accessible via our Gheringhap St entrance. Unlocked, accessible bathrooms are available on both ground and first floors.
For accessibility enquiries, please directly contact us at hello@platformarts.org.au
Please note, Platform Arts is a dry venue.
-
This presentation contains references to family violence and sexual abuse, and contains some loud/high-pitched noises.
If this raises feelings of distress or anxiety for you please contact:
Lifeline: 13 11 14
Orange Door: 1800 312 820
1800 RESPECT
Shining a light on domestic violence, Angus Cerini’s award-winning play The Bleeding Tree is theatre at its most powerful.
In a dirt-dry town in rural Australia, a shot shatters the still night. A mother and her daughters have just welcomed home the man of the house - with a crack in the shins and a bullet in the neck. The only issue now is disposing of the body.
Triggered into thrilling motion by an act of revenge, The Bleeding Tree is rude, rhythmical and irreverently funny. Anglesea Performing Arts is honoured to bring this story to life under the masterful direction of Iris Walshe-Howling, with an original and haunting score performed live by Kirstin Honey.
“I first saw this play in Sydney and fell in love with its powerful, raw beauty and brave reversal of gender violence. It attracted and repelled me simultaneously but the gut-wrenching imagery created by Angus Cerini’s incisive poetic use of the Australian vernacular hit me straight in the guts. It challenged all my values as this gruesome, carnal act perpetrated by the three women unfolded, permeating all my senses scene by scene. This piece of theatre is a contrapuntal response to the actual horrific family violence scenarios we are accustomed to confronting each day in our media, which still challenge the survival of women all over the world.”
Iris Walshe-Howling, Director
-
Lina Libroaperto
Julie Fryman
Stacey Carmichael
-
Written by Angus Cerini
Directed by Iris Walshe-Howling
Original Music by Kirstin Honey
-
Presented by Anglesea Performing Arts