Prima Facie | A Review by Faith Jessel

Prima Facie returns to Sydney in June 2026, bringing Suzie Miller’s acclaimed courtroom drama back to Walsh Bay for a limited season at Roslyn Packer Theatre.

I walked into the Roslyn Packer Theatre already carrying the weight of Prima Facie’s reputation. I’m not talking about the manufactured glow of marketing, or the buzz of a “big hit returning home,” but the force of writing so razor-sharp and uncompromising that it has genuinely shifted how people talk about the law, violation, and power. It’s jagged, it’s tender, and it stares straight down the barrel of the justice system and every horrible debate about consent.

Tessa is a brilliant defence barrister whose blinkered trust in the legal system is shattered by a single, traumatic night. Forced to navigate the same machinery she once wielded, she faces a brutal reality: the law does not reflect life, and it certainly does not protect the victim. Her story lies in this devastating reversal. The title Prima Facie holds a bitter irony: what appears clear “at first sight” is shredded by a rigid legal structure that prizes technicalities over human truth. Though it is unsparing, Prima Facie is never punishing; it is entirely gripping – immersive, propulsive, and fiercely theatrical in a way that pulls you in and refuses to let go.

Prima Facie

Law as wound, stage as witness

Suzie Miller didn’t write this extraordinary one woman, one act piece from a distance. She wrote it after years in a legal centre, taking statement after statement from women trying to articulate the unthinkable. She heard the same patterns on repeat: the shock, the freezing, the betrayal of their own bodies, the shame that was never theirs. And then she watched those cases walk into court and collapse – not occasionally, but relentlessly. The system wasn’t broken; it was functioning exactly as designed. That lived proximity is why Prima Facie is so brilliantly written: it transforms testimony into theatre, blending legal precision with dramatic propulsion to teach without lecturing and indict without preaching. It is incredibly watchable.

Crucially, Prima Facie isn’t interested in a smug “now it’s happened to you” lesson. It’s not a gotcha. It’s a reckoning that knows exactly how to give voice to what’s usually swallowed. It holds onto humanity and empathy without dulling a single edge, never sacrificing its humour, its irony, or its unmistakably underdog Australian flavour. Miller’s point isn’t punishment or poetic justice – it is the slow, devastating realisation of how deeply the system is stacked, how easily we accept its authority, and how urgently it needs to change.

Prima Facie

One actor, a chair, and a room held captive

Sheridan Harbridge’s performance is nothing short of astonishing – the kind of work that makes you rethink what a single actor can hold. I was already blown away by her recent turn in Amplified; at this point, it feels almost rude for one person to be this talented. It takes pure guts, stamina, and meticulous craft to carry a 90minute monologue of multiple characters and timelines on a bare black stage with nothing but a single chair, yet she makes it feel utterly alive. She moves through immense emotional range and narrative complexity with a precision that never shows its seams. She never misses a beat, never lets the momentum sag, never loosens her grip on the room. Harbridge doesn’t just hold the audience; she tightens the space around us until it feels like she’s performing directly to you – and somehow to everyone else at the same time.

When theatre becomes aftermath.

The instant standing ovation at the end wasn’t just for her – though she earned every second of it – it was for the writing she carried, the truth she delivered, the system she exposed, and the collective shock of realising we’d witnessed something rare: a performer at the absolute height of her powers telling a story that must be told. This honesty and accuracy is so stark, so undeniable, it has shaped police training in Australia and prompted revisions to jury instructions – proof that this story isn’t just resonating, it’s reforming.

This is why theatre is life – why it matters, why it endures, why it can still shake a room to its core. It lets one actor, one playwright, stand in a pool of light and change how hundreds of people understand the world, night after night. It reaches into homes, into conversations, into the private places where belief and doubt live side by side. It speaks with a single, deadly clarity that cuts, a compassion that stays, and a fury that feels earned.

Prima Facie

Tessa is all of us – all women who’ve been told that being smart, sharp, capable, and in control is enough to keep you safe. Look left. Look right. She’s the one-in-three. This is the power of Prima Facie. You must see this superb play.

Reviewed by: Faith Jessel