The Senior

Dancing through tough times

Dancing through tough times
Dancing through tough times

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Queensland Theatre's 'feel-good musical' The Sunshine Club has flung open its doors at QPAC's Playhouse.

First performed by Queensland Theatre in 1999, The Sunshine Club launched the career of artists that are now household names including Wesley Enoch, David Page, Roxanne McDonald, Stephen Page, Ursula Yovich, Wayne Blair, Elaine Crombie, Tessa Rose and Christen O'Leary.

The hit Australian musical follows Frank Doyle, an Aboriginal serviceman who spent years fighting shoulder-to-shoulder with troops from all over Australia only to find race relations hadn't changed at all when he returned home to Brisbane after World War II.

Brimming with hope and defiance Frank sets up his own ballroom, The Sunshine Club, where everyone is invited to meet, mingle and sway the night away.

Singer-songwriter and actor Marcus Corowa fills the boots of Frank Doyle. An award-winning artist of Aboriginal and South Sea Islander heritage from Bowen, Corowa recently seduced audiences as one of The Drifters in Beautiful: The Carole King Musical, with other credits including Opera Australia's Bran Nue Dae and Sydney Theatre Company's The Secret River.

Soprano and The Voice alumni Irena Lysiuk plays Rose Morris, the girl of Frank's dreams and the Reverend's daughter. A Queensland Conservatorium graduate, Lysiuk has worked extensively with Opera Queensland and The Little Red Company, recently appearing in The Marriage of Figaro and Your Song for them respectively.

Celebrated actor Roxanne McDonald is reprising her role as Aunty Faith, following a stellar career spanning more than 20 years. A descendent from the Mandandanji and Darambal tribes of Central Queensland, Aunty Rox has starred in more than 50 mainstage plays with Queensland Theatre, Sydney Theatre Company, Melbourne Theatre Company and Belvoir St Theatre, and played roles on screen in the likes of Australia Day and Harrow.

Internationally acclaimed Nunukul and Ngugi playwright and director Wesley Enoch AM directs the revival. Currently the inaugural Indigenous Chair in the Creative Industries at Queensland University of Technology, Enoch has returned to Queensland Theatre - where he was Artistic Director from 2010 to 2015 - to remount the work he was commissioned to create at just 28 years of age.

Queensland Theatre Artistic Director Lee Lewis said if we ever have needed a revival of The Sunshine Club, it was now.

"The huge heart inside this musical will burst onto the stage reminding us all that resilience is made up of generosity, community, laughter and love. This is a celebration of great talent, great ambition and the power of music and dance to bring us all together" Ms Lewis said.

Inspired by the Boathouse dances that were held in Brisbane in the late 1950s and early 1960s, The Sunshine Club is an examination of Australia's relationship with its First Nations People through humour, optimism and toe tappin' music.

The musical received wide acclaim during its initial run, with a Helpmann Award nomination for Best Choreography in a Musical, a Deadly Award for Excellence in Film or Theatrical Score and Matilda Award for book, lyrics and direction.

The Sunshine Club is QPAC and Queensland Theatre's first major co-production since the record-breaking success of the world premiere of Trent Dalton's Boy Swallows Universe, adapted for the stage by Tim McGarry, in 2021.

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