Review: 3 Billion Seconds (KXT on Broadway)

Venue: KXT on Broadway (Ultimo NSW), Apr 17 – May 2, 2026
Playwright: Maud Dromgoole
Director: Dominique Purdue
Cast: Izabella Louk, Victor Y Z Xu
Images by Phil Erbacher

Theatre review
Daisy and Michael’s environmental conscientiousness is so absolute that the prospect of procreation could only ever encroach upon their lives by sheer accident. In Maud Dromgoole’s 3 Billion Seconds, we observe the couple’s increasingly frantic—and disquieting—efforts to assimilate their impending parenthood into their meticulously carbon-neutral existence. The play’s conceptual architecture is formidable, wielding acerbic indictments against the prevailing hypocrisies that pervade contemporary ecological discourse. Yet the production’s dark humour is rendered overly solemn under Dominique Purdue’s direction, which privileges the grotesque over the comic, perhaps sacrificing levity for its own ideological earnestness. Nevertheless, Purdue’s instinct for theatrical spectacle and visual dynamism remains incontrovertible, yielding a staging of considerable visual excitement.

Mia MacCormick’s set design proves astute in its deployment of a sandpit as the production’s locus, a choice that amplifies the piece’s kinetic energy whilst furnishing a tactile materiality that resonates poignantly with its ecological preoccupations. Caity Cowan’s lighting design operates with commendable dynamism, demonstrating both laudable ambition and considerable intricacy. Cameron Smith’s soundscape ensures the audience remains oriented through the production’s rapid-fire succession of scene transitions.

Performers Izabella Louk and Victor Y Z Xu are unquestionably committed to the material, maintaining an admirable focus throughout; yet a shortage of interpretive nuance and a certain intellectual superficiality in their characterisations ultimately diminish the production’s capacity to captivate, even if the narrative’s ethical through-line remains unimpeachably intact.

Those who elect to bear children will invariably marshal a multiplicity of justifications, just as those arguing against can advance an equally formidable array of objections. Ultimately, the principle of bodily autonomy must remain inviolable. Our collective opposition ought to be directed not toward individual choice but toward the billion-dollar industrial complexes that profit immeasurably from a discourse that displaces culpability onto private citizens—entities infinitely more complicit in our present environmental cataclysm than any single parent could ever be.

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Review: These Youths Be Protesting (KXT on Broadway)

Venue: KXT on Broadway (Ultimo NSW), Apr 4 -19, 2025
Playwright: Izabella Louk
Director:
Izabella Louk
Cast: Hamish Alexander, Karrine Kanaan, Rachel Thomas, Mây Trần
Images by Karla Elbourne

Theatre review
An initiative originally intended as a simple recycling program at a high school, unexpectedly escalates into a social media controversy, involving mining corporations and political figures. The four teenagers in Izabella Louk’s These Youths Be Protesting have little in common, but circumstances demand that they partner up and fight, should they wish to have a say in their own future.

There is considerable wit in Louk’s writing, and coupled with an irrepressible effervescence derived from her own direction of the work, These Youths Be Protesting proves to be an engaging experience, as well as an inspiring call to action regarding our current state of environmental degradation.

Actors Karrine Kanaan and Mây Trần bring gravity to the piece, while Hamish Alexander and Rachel Thomas are remembered for their endearing humour. They play distinct characters, but achieve commendable cohesiveness. Energetic and committed, the cast keeps us attentive and convinced of the important, but uncontroversial, message of conservation activism.

Dramatic intensity is further enhanced by Marc Simonini’s thoughtful music compositions, while Caitlyn Cowan’s lights deliver a sense of visual theatricality, to this story of an unusual school week. Set design by Paris Bell does wonders with recycled cardboard, introducing valuable vibrancy with its bold colour palette.

No matter the epoch, it is in our nature to fight for survival. For many though, complacency can set in, along with weariness and disillusionment, but we can always rely on the fervour of youthful angst and indignation, to be new guiding lights at every step of our evolution.

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