Gia Ophelia by Grace Wilson.
Directed and produced by Jo Bradley. Performer Annie Stafford. Sound Design and Composer: Otto Zagala. Lighting Design: Holly Nesbitt. Costume Design: Geita
Goarin. Set Design Jo Bradley. Production Stage Manager: Rhiley Winnett.
Assistant Producer: Laila Chesterman. JB Theatre Company. Associate Producers:
Canberra Youth Theatre. Photographer Philip Erbacher. Courtyard Theatre.
Canberra Theatre Centre. July 8-11 2026. Bookings: Canberra Ticketing on 6275
2700
Reviewed by Peter Wilkins
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| Annie Stafford is Gia in Gia Ophelia |
Grace Wilson’s Gia Ophelia is an actor’s confessional, revealing the most intimate, soul-searching aspirations of one actor’s life and passion. It is 13 years since Gia played Ophelia in a school production. Nobody came, and now at 29 she is longing to play the part and reveal to audiences Shakespeare’s true intent in the creation of this tragic heroine. Playwright Wilson paints a funny, raw and intensely moving portrait of a woman, obsessed by the role of Ophelia and torn between the dream of a career in theatre and the expectations to be a wife and mother forced on her by her partner Dan’s family and Dan himself. Gia’s chance to escape the life of a waitress comes with the opportunity to take part in a training residency, culminating in a performance of Hamlet. It is the perfect opportunity to finally play the role she has longed for.
Gia Ophelia is a triumph for the writer, director and performer of JB Theatre Company. Wilson imbues the text with the authentic awareness of someone who has experienced the highs and lows of seeking to make a career in the industry. It is real, depicting a woman torn between hope and despair. Comedy and tragedy, those two faces of drama, interconnect in a one woman play that has the audience laughing at the absurd drama exercises at the training residency and then feeling the aching pain of rejection when Gia’s world collapses around her. Wilson’s writing reflects the rewards that come with a close relationship between writer and director. Director and former member of Canberra Youth Theatre, Jo Bradley intuitively captures Gia’s turmoil, carefully orchestrating performer Annie Stafford’s physical and emotional response to her changing circumstance. Following on from a highly successful and sold-out season at the 2025 Sydney Fringe Festival the production is tightly directed by Bradley, while eliciting a fresh spontaneity from Stafford’s performance in the Courtyard Studio of the Canberra Theatre Centre.
As Gia, Stafford gives a remarkable performance traversing the difficult emotional terrain of a woman obsessed, buoyed by hoped, dashed by disillusion, tormented by choice, possessed of a secret that threatens to destroy her stability and burdened with the expectations that can’t be met and the sacrifice and loss that that entails. Only the final scene of the 80-minute monologue appears drawn out as the play draws to a heart wrenching conclusion, with Gia cradling a rolled-up blanket in her arms as the child she knows she can never have. Wilson leaves us with no happy ending. We can only be left, like Gia, to hope that she will rise from the mattress in the basement to let the Ophelia inside her free.
What we are witnessing in JB Theatre Company’s Gia Ophelia is the emergence of three promising talents that give hope for the future of theatre in the country. If Gia Ophelia is any indication we can look forward to more outstanding work by writer Grace Wilson, director/producer Jo Bradley and actor Annie Stafford. Remember these names and the company. They have so much more to offer Australian theatre.





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