Reviewed by: On Your Markus

Review by Markus Hamence | 12 March 2026

Amity Dry’s The Perfect Life finally lands at the 2026 Adelaide Fringe and quite like a beautifully honest conversation set to music – the kind that starts with laughter over a glass of wine and ends somewhere deeper, where the real stories live.

Dry has crafted a contemporary musical that slices through the glossy idea of a flawless life and replaces it with something far more relatable. On paper, the characters seem to have it all – careers, relationships, families, the dream ticking along exactly as planned. But as the story unfolds, the cracks begin to show, and that’s where the show finds its heart. Behind every curated snapshot sits a far more complex reality.

What makes The Perfect Life resonate is its authenticity. Dry writes from a place that feels lived-in rather than imagined, and the music carries that same emotional honesty. The songs swing between sharp humour and quiet vulnerability, capturing the emotional rollercoaster of adulthood with surprising precision. One moment the audience is laughing at the absurdity of modern life, the next there’s a reflective silence as a lyric lands a little too close to home.

Amity is joined on stage with perfection. Dee Farnell is Bec, Chloe Zuel as Jess and Kerrie Anne Greenland in the role of Kate. Fine actors that know their craft and hold their space on stage and equally support each other.

The cast bring warmth and personality to the stage, creating a believable circle of women navigating the beautiful chaos of life together. Their chemistry feels natural, almost like you’re eavesdropping on real friendships – the kind built on shared experiences, late-night chats and unwavering support when life throws its inevitable curveballs.

The staging keeps the focus where it belongs: on the stories and the music (a brilliant live band). It allows the emotional weight of the material to breathe, giving each moment space to land with the audience.

What’s refreshing about The Perfect Life is that it never tries to offer a neat solution to life’s challenges. Instead, it embraces the imperfections – the messy, unpredictable moments that shape who we are. It’s a musical that acknowledges that happiness isn’t about achieving some flawless end goal; it’s about finding strength, humour and connection along the way.

By the time the final song lands, the message is clear: perfection was never the point.

In a festival known for big laughs and bold spectacle, The Perfect Life stands out for its sincerity. It’s thoughtful, relatable and quietly powerful – a musical that reminds us that the most meaningful stories are often the ones closest to home.

Get to this one my friends. Congratulations to Amity, Dee, Chloe and Kerrie on exceptional artistry on stage at the Arts Theatre.