How Very Melbourne: Heathers the Musical Has Finally Arrived
I have never seen the 1989 film. Not once. I walked into the Playhouse at Arts Centre Melbourne on 10 April as the rare person in the room who had not grown up with Westerberg High already living rent-free in their head. The audience around me, many dressed as their favourite characters, scrunchies in hand, quoting lyrics before the first note played, made it very clear I was in the minority. What I could not have known was that by the end of the night, I would leave with the film at the top of my watch list. That is what a great piece of theatre does. It does not just entertain you. It sends you somewhere.
From Cult Classic to Cultural Mirror: The Story Behind Heathers the Musical
Heathers the Musical is based on Daniel Waters’s 1989 cult film starring Winona Ryder and Christian Slater, a black comedy that was too dark for mainstream audiences and too sharp to be ignored. It was the kind of film passed along in hushed recommendation, rewound for a particularly perfect line, and remembered long after everything else from that era faded.
By the time Kevin Murphy (Desperate Housewives) and Laurence O’Keefe (Legally Blonde the Musical) adapted it for the stage, Heathers had earned genuine cultural staying power. The musical premiered in Los Angeles in 2013, debuted in New York in 2014, and has since clocked three West End seasons, multiple sold-out UK and Ireland tours, the 2019 WhatsOnStage Award for Best New Musical, and a global streaming release via The Roku Channel. Most recently it broke records at New York’s New World Stages, opening in June 2025 with the biggest advance sale in the venue’s history. The Australian season is not the arrival of a hopeful new show. It is the arrival of one that has already proved itself everywhere else.
The score is something else entirely. WhatsOnStage called it “brilliant lyrics which can only be fully appreciated through repeated listens.” Time Out said the songs “burrow into your brain long after curtain call.” Candy Store, Seventeen, My Dead Gay Son — they are not earworms. They occupy you completely.
Heathers the Musical Australian Cast 2026
I came in without a frame of reference and left completely convinced by everyone on that stage. What struck me most was something I rarely encounter in a musical: everyone could sing. Genuinely, brilliantly, startlingly well. Most shows have two or three leads carrying the vocal weight while the ensemble holds the line. Not here. Every voice landed.
Emma Caporaso leads as Veronica Sawyer in her mainstage debut. Those who followed G-Nat!on on The Voice Australia already know what she is capable of, and here she channels every bit of it into a character who carries the show’s entire emotional arc. Conor Beaumont as J.D., most recently seen in American Psycho at Chapel Off Chapel, is dangerously charismatic in exactly the way the role demands. Calista Nelmes as Heather Chandler is magnetic, drawing on stage credits across RENT, Jesus Christ Superstar and Jersey Boys. Amélia Rojas (Chicago) and Abigail Sharp complete the iconic trio with precision and real depth. Award-winning performer Mel O’Brien, one half of the beloved Mel & Sam and a standout in FANGIRLS, brought the kind of warmth and comedic intelligence that made the audience feel everything a little harder whenever she was on stage.
The stagecraft and choreography by Gary Lloyd were equally impressive. Not a single moment felt unintentional. Design by David Shields, lighting by Ben Cracknell and sound by Dan Samson worked together seamlessly throughout. WhatsOnStage praised the New York production for “perfect sound balance” in a rock musical, and Melbourne’s production holds that standard. Director Andy Fickman, who helmed the original New York run, returns to this world with total command of every element. Yes, it is a long show. I did not feel it once.
The 1989 Film That Became a 2026 Reckoning
Here is where Heathers becomes something more than a night out. The show goes to dark places: bullying, narcissism, the seductive pull of the charming emotional manipulator, childhood trauma, the romanticisation of violence, and at its most confronting, youth suicide. These are not background themes. They are the story.
In Australia, suicide remains the leading cause of death for young people aged 15 to 44, with the ABS recording 3,307 deaths by suicide in 2024 alone. For Australians aged 15-24 specifically, suicide has consistently ranked as the leading cause of death. Globally, the World Health Organisation reports that suicide is the third leading cause of death among people aged 15-29. These numbers represent real people, many of whom were living their own version of Westerberg High.
What makes Heathers remarkable is that it does not look away from any of this, and yet the audience laughed loudly, gasped, cheered, and left buzzing. That is great storytelling doing what it is supposed to do: taking you into the darkness and showing you something true, so you carry it back into the light with you. The crowd on opening night did not hold back. The cheering was long and genuine. The conversations spilling out into the foyer were the kind you have when a show has genuinely moved you.
More Than a Red Scrunchie: The Message Heathers Leaves With You
I arrived never having seen the 1989 film and left wanting to watch it immediately. But more than that, I left thinking about the red scrunchie differently than I ever had. Because what Heathers is really asking, underneath all the wit and the bangers and the beautiful chaos, is a question I think about in my work every single day: what do we sacrifice of ourselves in order to belong?
The show made me think about the people in our lives who charm their way into our trust and slowly dismantle our sense of self. About the cost of conformity. About how many of us learned, too early, to make ourselves smaller just to survive a room. About the quiet courage it takes to choose kindness when cruelty is being rewarded all around you. Empathy is always the solution. You can stand up against bullying. There are real consequences to conformity. You can choose to be a decent, caring person even in the most challenging environment.
Heathers the Musical wraps all of that in one of the sharpest, funniest and most emotionally alive evenings of theatre Melbourne will see this year, and it sends you home with your own version of the red scrunchie as a reminder of what you are choosing not to be.
Heathers the Musical Melbourne: Tickets, Dates and Venue
Venue: Playhouse, Arts Centre Melbourne, 100 St Kilda Road (across the Yarra from Flinders Street Station)
Season: 8 April — 3 May 2026
Tickets: via Ticketmaster and Ticketek
Getting there: Tram along St Kilda Road, or a short walk across Princes Bridge from the CBD
Parking: Arts Centre Melbourne has its own car park on site
Heathers the Musical Australian Tour 2026 Dates and Venues
| City | Dates | Venue |
| Melbourne | From 8 April 2026 | Playhouse, Arts Centre Melbourne |
| Adelaide | From 16 July 2026 | Her Majesty’s Theatre |
| Gold Coast | From 30 July 2026 | Home of the Arts |
| Canberra | From 14 August 2026 | Canberra Theatre Centre |
| Sydney | From 2 September 2026 | Roslyn Packer Theatre / Coliseum Theatre |
| Perth | From 30 September 2026 | Regal Theatre |
FAQ
What is Heathers the Musical about?
Who is in the Australian cast?
Is it suitable for children?
The show contains coarse language, dark themes including bullying and suicide, and adult humour. Recommended for ages 15 and above.
Where is it playing in Melbourne?
The Playhouse, Arts Centre Melbourne, 100 St Kilda Road, from 8 April to 3 May 2026.
Disclaimer: Glamorazzi representatives Roslyn Foo and Sebnem Gencer attended the opening night of Heathers the Musical at Playhouse, Arts Centre Melbourne on 10 April 2026, invited by Good Humans PR. All opinions are entirely our own.






