Review: Traffic Light Party (KXT on Broadway)

Venue: KXT on Broadway (Ultimo NSW), Jan 28 – Feb 7, 2026
Playwright: Izzy Azzopardi
Director:
Brea Macey
Cast: Izzy Azzopardi, Renée Billing, Meg Denman, Grace Easterby, Caitlin Green, Isaac Harley, Travis Howard, Caleb Jamieson, Jordy Stewart
Images by Jade Bell

Theatre review
A group of young adults, only just emerging from adolescence, gather at a party where colour-coded clothing signals their relationship status. Izzy Azzopardi’s Traffic Light Party examines the ways we begin to conceptualise romantic connection at the earliest stages of adulthood. Newly confronting the world as independent individuals, they navigate a landscape shaped by inherited assumptions, prescribed values, and imagined futures. The work suggests that genuine understanding of love cannot be taught or pre-empted; it can only be earned by moving through the many surprises, missteps, and revelations that inevitably accompany the first real encounters with intimacy and desire.

Azzopardi’s writing is marked by an unmistakable honesty, and while it is evident that considerable thought underpins the text, not all of its ideas fully cohere into sophistication or depth. Direction by Brea Macey, however, provides meaningful elevation, infusing the work with admirable kineticism and a consistently striking visual language. Holly Nesbitt’s lighting design brings further dynamism, drawing on the story’s central motif to play expansively with colour and with ideas of transformation. The nine-strong cast performs with total commitment, their buoyant energy commanding attention in every moment, whether dramatic or comic.

The heart wants what the heart wants, yet it is often the very force that leads us into our deepest trouble. There is, perhaps, dignity in enduring profound heartache when it is born of genuine longing. But to suffer those same wounds as the cost of obedience — of contorting oneself to fit expectations or to follow rules that were never meant to serve you — is a lesson most eventually recognise as a particularly hollow kind of folly.