The Stage Show
The Stage Show
ABC
In-depth conversations with the world's top directors, performers and writers for the stage.
Best of The Stage Show
The Stage Show with Michael Cathcart has wound up after eight years on air. In this highlights of 2025 episode: Playwright Andrea James researched a story from the 1840s, in which colonial newspapers suggested that a 'white woman' – maybe the survivor of a shipwreck – had been taken captive by Gunaikurnai people in what is now eastern Victoria.  Andrea interrogates the legend in a riveting play called The Black Woman of Gippsland. First broadcast April 29, 2025. Jason Arrow is known to many as the titular character in Hamilton where he had an extraordinary run both in Australia and internationally. In April 2025 he put his breeches and coat tails away and donned a 1950s dapper suit for the character of Nicely-Nicely Johnson in Opera Australia’s Guys and Dolls on Sydney Harbour. He sings for us the showstopper Sit Down, You're Rockin' the Boat! First broadcast April 1, 2025. Damien Warren-Smith is the comedian behind Garry Starr, the (increasingly nude) clown who has toured highly successful shows like Garry Starr Performs Everything, Greece Lightning and Classic Penguins, which won rave reviews at the Edinburgh Fringe and won him an award at the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. Garry may be a buffoon, but Damien takes clowning very seriously. First broadcast March 11, 2025.
Jan 12
54 min
Best of The Stage Show: Pamela Rabe + a kid's point of view on stage
It’s one of those roles which great actors have on their to-do list: Winnie in the play Happy Days by Samuel Beckett.  Winnie starts the play buried up to her waist in dirt. In Act 2 she’s buried up to her neck! Acclaimed actor Pamela Rabe tell us what makes this such an iconic play and how she approached it as both co-director and star of Happy Days for the Sydney Theatre Company in 2025. In the play POV (Point of View), 11-year-old Bub directs a pair of adult actors on stage, to re-enact scenes from her life. There's a catch: it's the first time the actors have seen the script, and Bub is filming them for a documentary. This innovative work by collective re:group is all about how a kid experiences the mental illness of a parent. We chat to young actors Mabelle Rose and Edie Whitehead, who play Bub, and director Solomon Thomas. What if Celine Dion wasn't just the torch-bearing soundtrack to Titanic — but the main character? That's the premise of a hilarious musical parody called Titanique, which originated off Broadway and in 2025 proved very popular here in Australia. A cast of 11 joins The Stage Show, led by powerhouse Marney McQueen. First broadcast May 27, 2025.
Jan 5
54 min
Best of The Stage Show: How Anais Mitchell wrote Hadestown
The myth of Orpheus and Eurydice is retold in the hit folk musical  Hadestown. It's won Tonys, Grammys and is now in Australia. We speak to the singer-songwriter Anais Mitchell, who wrote Hadestown as a concept album, before touring it around in an old bus and then turning it into a remarkable stage show with the Broadway director Rachael Chavkin. First broadcast March 18. Back stage... The make up artist. Meet the veteran head of WHAM (that's wardrobe, hair and make-up) Fiona Cooper-Sutherland as she transforms Christine Anu into Hermes, the silver god for Hadestown. First broadcast May 20. How would you create a play that a four year old could understand? How about a four month old? Sally Chance and Stephen Noonan do just that, carefully creating works of theatre for the very early years. Stephen's the Boy & the Ball is on as part of the Dream Big children's festival in South Australia. Composer of The Thing That Matters: Heather Frahn. First broadcast April 15.
Dec 29, 2025
54 min
Best of The Stage Show: Stephen Rea + the soul of Butoh
More highlights from The Stage Show. We meet Irish screen and theatre actor Stephen Rea, who talks about meeting Samuel Beckett early in his career. Rea so wanted to perform Beckett's play Krapp's Last Tape, he had the foresight to record his youthful self reading it. In his  production at Adelaide Festival, the audience got to hear those recordings. We head Back Stage to the hat maker's studio! In fiction there are lots of characters who are famous for their hats. Robin Hood. Sherlock Holmes.  Lady Bracknell (she needs a ridiculous hat). In our new series Back Stage, Michael meets theatre milliner Phillip Rhodes, who reveals how hats bring a character to life.  Butoh is a dance form that started in Japan in the 1950s and was called 'the dance of darkness'. Dancers often wear white body paint and explore raw psychological states. But it can also be outrageous and funny, as veteran performer Yumi Umiumare tells us about her own life practising Butoh. Yumi's latest show was Butoh Bar: Out of Order II for Asia TOPA. First broadcast March 4 2025.
Dec 22, 2025
54 min
Best of The Stage Show: Robyn Nevin and Patricia Cornelius
In 2025 Australian theatre legend Robyn Nevin directed And Then There Were None, a classic murder mystery by Agatha Christie. She talks to Michael about the darkness in Christie's stories, her view on changing acting styles and how Robyn finds her 'inner clown'.  Playwright Patricia Cornelius explains why she had five actors playing the world's most famous hacker — Wikileaks founder Julian Assange, in her 2025 play TRUTH. She's joined by director Susie Dee. And you’ll discover a ballet about the great Russian dancer Vaslav Nijinsky. Michael speaks to Australian Ballet principal artist Callum Linnane, who first danced the part nine years ago in the ballet Nijinsky. First broadcast Feb 11.
Dec 15, 2025
54 min
Farewell friends: Denise Scott, Bernadette Robinson and Love Actually? the musical
Michael Cathcart and the team farewell you from The Stage Show. In front of a studio audience, Michael interviews the remarkable Denise Scott, who's about to tour her new comedy show Tickety Boo; songstress Bernadette Robinson (with pianist Mark Jones) gives us a taste of the grand dames who sang at Carnegie Hall. Theatre director and actor Rachael Maza reflects on her 18 years at the helm of the groundbreaking Ilbijerri Theatre Company. And singer and pianist Ian Andrew brings it home with the parody musical Love Actually? .
Dec 8, 2025
54 min
A look back at Michael Cathcart's 25 years on air
For 25 years Michael Cathcart has been presenting arts and culture shows on Radio National, bringing listeners stories and conversations with writers, performers, musicians, poets and playwrights, from across Australia and the world. On our second-final ever Stage Show, Michael revisits some of his most memorable interviews. From authors Salman Rushdie and Esther Freud, to playing the organ at the Melbourne Town Hall, Philip Glass, Genevive Lacey, Audra McDonald, a special performance of Macbeth in Noongar language. And an encounter with horse riding mother-and-daughter Gladys and Quitta Docking, on the road for Bush Telegraph.
Dec 1, 2025
1 hr 1 min
West End's Alfie Boe + Meow Meow puts on The Red Shoes
Cabaret star Meow Meow interprets Hans Christian Andersen's fairy tales in inimitable style. Returning with her brilliant show The Red Shoes, about a girl possessed by a pair of vivid red shoes that won't stop dancing. Meow Meow explains why the story resonated with Andersen and discusses some of her favourite female performers from the era of the Weimar republic. The Glass Menagerie is perhaps one of the most visceral and intimate plays from Tennessee Williams and is about to open in Adelaide at State Theatre Company of South Australia. Prepare for the full intense pantheon of emotions; failed aspirations, family dysfunction and unreliable memories all set in a claustrophobic, dingy St Louis apartment during the 1930’s depression. Ksenja Logos and Laurence Boxhall join us. West End star Alfie Boe is the voice that for many years has been synonymous --for international audiences-- with the character Jean Valjean in Les Miserables. An operatic tenor who is a true crossover artist, finding massive popularity for his interpretations of musical theatre standards and pop music. He is touring Australia next year.
Nov 24, 2025
48 min
Three moods of William Shakespeare hit our stages
On this episode it’s all about Shakespeare. A comedy. A tragedy. And a tale of utter savagery. The many moods of William Shakespeare – starting in a happy place with actors Alison Bell and Faysal Bazzi, and Shakespeare specialist Mark Wilson, who directs them in a tale of love and mischief – Much Ado About Nothing at the Melbourne Theatre Company. Original music excerpted is by composer and sound Designer Joe Paradise Lui. Then the Prague Shakespeare Company teams up with local company Th' Unguarded Duncan to offer a Japanese-horror influenced Titus Andronicus at Melbourne's Theatre Works. Original music excerpted is by Max Hopkins. And we finish with a new production of King Lear with villainous sisters Goneril and Reagan, played by Charlotte Friels and Jana Zvedeniuk — who assure us that they're really not so bad. The True History of the Life and Death of King Lear & His Three Daughters is on at Belvoir St Theatre in Sydney. Want more of the Bard? Don't miss Wherefore, Shakespeare? The Stage Show's special podcast series.
Nov 17, 2025
54 min
Danielle de Niese's journey to the heart of Carmen
Danielle de Niese started life in suburban Melbourne, appearing on Young Talent Time at the age of nine before pursuing singing in the US. She is now a star soprano, performing many of opera's most famous roles and married into a famous opera-loving family — with  their own opera house! She's back in Australia to perform the character Opera Australia are billing as “the most dangerous women in opera” — Carmen.  In the musical play Cowbois, a sleepy wild west town populated by women whose husbands have left for the gold rush, is interrupted by a ​charming bandit who sparks a ‘gender revolution’. Written for actors across the gender spectrum, Cowbois' Australian production has added a whole new set of songs, and we're joined by Clay Crighton, Jules Billington, Zachary Alexander and Nelson Fannon to perform one of them. Athol Fugard wrote influential plays about the injustices of South Africa’s racist Apartheid system on everyday people, for decades. Fugard died this year and fellow playwright and scholar Anthony Akerman tells Michael about his work and impact. First broadcast April 2025.
Nov 10, 2025
53 min
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