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Join us for a journey through the absurd and the profound with Tom Stoppard's masterpiece, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead.
This brilliantly witty play turns the spotlight on two bewildered minor characters from Shakespeare's 'Hamlet,' thrust into the limelight of their own exploration.
Follow the comic pair as they grapple with identity, fate, and the inscrutable whims of the universe in a world where the line between reality and illusion is wonderfully blurred. With razor-sharp dialogue and existential ponderings, Stoppard weaves a tale that's as entertaining as it is philosophical.
A theatrical delight that delivers on laughter, reflection, and a fresh perspective on one of literature's greatest works.

Cast
Rosencrantz - Gina Lawrence
Guildenstern - Tayah Gulyas
The Player - Krystie Grubba
Hamlet - Ian Fletcher
Claudius + Horatio - Mitchell Rist
Polonius + Soldier - Jacqueline Felangue
Gertrude - Sonja Petrov
Ophelia + Abassador - Kye Eade
Alfred - Angela Pezzano
Tragedians - Felicty Jean
- Geoff Hacker
Show Dates (2025):
Friday 23rd May - 8pm
Saturday 24th May - 2pm + 8pm
Sunday 25th May - 2pm
Friday 30th May - 8pm
Saturday 31st May - 2pm + 8pm
Crew
Director: Sherene B. Mitchell
Assistant Director: Nicole Madden
Set Design: Sherene B. Mitchell
Set Construction: Ian Fletcher & Jordan Ryan
Lighting Design & Operation: Matthew Bourke
Sound Design: Nicole Madden
Sound Operation: Lily Hampson
Props: Sherene B. Mitchell
Costumes: Sherene B. Mitchell
Marketing and Publicity: Tayah Gulyas
Photography: Rebecca Fletcher & Nicole Madden
Flyer and Program Design: Tayah Gulyas
Front of House Co-Ordinator: Lisa Prophet
Gallery
Reviews / Articles
2Ser 107.3
Imagine for a moment you had passed on, but were made to watch the events of those around you happen without anyone you knew ever being aware. This is the fate of Rosencrantz and Guildenstern in Tom Stoppard’s appropriately named Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead, an interpretative adaptation of Shakespeare’s Hamlet
4th Wall Review
Most of us would be familiar with (or at least have a vague recollection of) the names Rosencrantz and Guildenstern. At some point during secondary school, we would have studied Shakespeare and would remember the pair as minor characters in the play “Hamlet”. Or perhaps we studied this particular work by Tom Stoppard and developed a more in-depth understanding of the play and its titular characters.
Program