Shooting Hedda Gabler
Seymour Centre and Secret House present
Venue: Seymour Centre
Address: Cnr City Road &, Cleveland St, Chippendale NSW 2008
Date: 5 June – 27 June
Time: Tuesdays 6:30pm, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday 7:30pm, 2pm Saturday matinees
Ticket: $41-$59
Buy / Ticket: https://www.seymourcentre.com/event/shooting-hedda-gabler/
Web: https://www.seymourcentre.com/event/shooting-hedda-gabler/
EMail: boxoffice@seymour.sydney.edu.au
Call: 02 7255 1561
Address: Cnr City Road &, Cleveland St, Chippendale NSW 2008
Date: 5 June – 27 June
Time: Tuesdays 6:30pm, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday 7:30pm, 2pm Saturday matinees
Ticket: $41-$59
Buy / Ticket: https://www.seymourcentre.com/event/shooting-hedda-gabler/
Web: https://www.seymourcentre.com/event/shooting-hedda-gabler/
EMail: boxoffice@seymour.sydney.edu.au
Call: 02 7255 1561
Request Image Contact: kabuku@kabukupr.com.au
Seymour Centre and Secret House present the Australian premiere of Shooting Hedda Gabler by Nina Segal—a darkly unsettling, wickedly funny examination of ambition, manipulation and coercive control.
When offered the lead part in a Norwegian film adaptation of Hedda Gabler, an actress seizes the opportunity to escape her past and gain some artistic credibility. But on an isolated film set in Norway, under the watchful eye of Henrik - a charismatic, obsessive, and dangerously controlling director - reality and fiction are blurred. As the atmosphere becomes increasingly volatile and claustrophobic, paranoia takes hold, power games intensify, and Henrik becomes fixated on ending the film with a bang.
Following their sold-out, award-winning season of Albion, Secret House return to Seymour Centre with another bold contemporary reimagining of a celebrated classic. Shooting Hedda Gabler has electrified audiences and critics alike, praised for its razor-sharp writing, savage wit, and fearless modern lens on Ibsen’s iconic work.
This daring production invites you to look closer. Nothing is what it seems.
When offered the lead part in a Norwegian film adaptation of Hedda Gabler, an actress seizes the opportunity to escape her past and gain some artistic credibility. But on an isolated film set in Norway, under the watchful eye of Henrik - a charismatic, obsessive, and dangerously controlling director - reality and fiction are blurred. As the atmosphere becomes increasingly volatile and claustrophobic, paranoia takes hold, power games intensify, and Henrik becomes fixated on ending the film with a bang.
Following their sold-out, award-winning season of Albion, Secret House return to Seymour Centre with another bold contemporary reimagining of a celebrated classic. Shooting Hedda Gabler has electrified audiences and critics alike, praised for its razor-sharp writing, savage wit, and fearless modern lens on Ibsen’s iconic work.
This daring production invites you to look closer. Nothing is what it seems.
