Skye Gellman’s solo show End Grain feels a little lost, says First Nations Emerging Critic …
Carissa Lee
Carissa Lee
Carissa Lee is the Inaugural Witness First Nations Emerging Critic. She is an associate editor and manages the Witness Instagram account. Born on Wemba-Wemba country, she graduated with Honours from the drama course at Flinders University Drama Centre and currently works as a professional actor on stage and screen. She completed a traineeship through the Black and Write! Program at QUT, which led to her role as the ATSI Writers Program Coordinator at the SA Writers Centre. Carissa has written for publications such as Junkee, LIP Mag, Book Riot, and Melbourne Writers Festival, and is presently completing her PhD in Indigenous Theatre.
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First Nations Emerging Critic and horror afficionado Carissa Lee gets all the goosebumps in Jakop …
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Sermsah Suri Bin Saad’s Liyan begins strongly but feels a little rushed, says First Nations …
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First Nations Emerging Critic Carissa Lee goes full glamour for Melbourne Fringe’s Kids in Fashion
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“I hope that the people who see this performance don’t think that this is just …
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‘How can we fight our colonisers, if we discriminate and exclude as they do?’ First …
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First Nations Emerging Critic Carissa Lee on Mojo Juju’s Native Tongue, a family saga of self-discovery
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First Nations Emerging Critic Carissa Lee sees Ballet Preljocaj’s gloriously gothic retelling of Snow White.
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On the pain of women: First Nations Emerging Critic Carissa Lee explores how Australian plays …
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First Nations Emerging Critic Carissa Lee is transported to a cold place in OpticNerve’s Polygraph.