2 Macquarie Street, Bennelong Point, Sydney
A LIST ENTERTAINMENT
presents
THE KRANSKY SISTERS
with their new show THREE BAGS FULL
The Kransky Sisters are back from their tour of the wilds of Europe with Three Bags Full.
Don't miss the award-winning trio Mourne, Eve and the youngest sister Dawn as they travel the long and winding road to the Sydney Opera House. In this new simmering mix of music, song and story, these three curios and dysfunctional siblings, with their naive take on the world, will share with you their experiences of their recent journey to Europe, where shoes are made of wood and cars drive on the wrong side of the road.
Equipped with their trusty tambourines, tuba, musical-saw, kitchen pots, toilet brush and a 1960's reed keyboard, The Kransky Sisters will share their own peculiar renditions of songs from The Bee Gees to Plastic Bertrand and Devo to AC/DC. The Kranksy Sisters will boil up their own special pot of porridge that is sure to have you glued to your seat!
The combination of their strange behaviour, blinkered outlooks, superbly droll comic dialogue and alluring and downright hilarious home-spun musical versions of popular songs, make a curious visit to your weird old aunt look like a holiday.
Winners of the Bank Of Scotland Herald Angel Award, The Melbourne Age Critics' Award, Australian Green Room Award for Best Cabaret Ensemble, Barry Award Nomination and the prestigious Australian Live Entertainment Mo Award, these talented women have combined their eclectic comedic talents and musical expertise to create a disturbing believable trio.
THE CRITICS
"A musical act like no other. If Dame Edna ever retired to the Outback and procreated, the result might be something like the Kransky's" The Scotsman, Edinburgh 2006
"Like the acid fuelled imagination of Hunter S Thompson at a Country Women's Association meeting, this unstuck comic creation is bizarre and precious...These women are the comedic equivalent of Star Trek. So complete and meticulous is their creation, you can almost image a future of Kransky conventions" The Age