This End of the Financial Year, Milk Crate Theatre is aiming to raise $15,000 to support our production and workshop fund.
Milk Crate Theatre is where every story can find a stage. We believe every person deserves to be truly seen and heard, and that these stories belong on Australian stages.
Working within a Theory of Change model, our transformative practices lead to real positive societal change. We amplify the under-represented voices of people with complex lived experiences, through the power of performance and utilising genuinely inclusive and collaborative material making.
Our programs harness the power of creative practice to support Collaborative Artists to build confidence, skills, and connections; facilitating increases in self-reliance, empowering aspirations, and providing a gateway for future social/economic engagement. Our performance works provide a powerful tool to challenge perceptions and through the sharing of our work, we break down barriers, encourage inclusion, and increase opportunities for people with lived experiences to thrive.
A donation to Milk Crate Theatre directly invests in the transformative power of the arts to create positive social change. Your support, regardless of its size, champions a society that values creativity, empathy, and inclusivity.
Donate now and ensure MCT is the place where every story finds a stage!
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In all that we do, we acknowledge that the foundations of Milk Crate Theatre are on Gadigal land of the Eora Nation and that wherever we create, we walk in the footprints of the ancestors that were here before us. We pay respects to the tradition of storytelling of the First Peoples, practiced by the earth’s longest living culture and pay homage to this. We embrace those stories of the past and continue to share stories of the now. We pay respect to Elders past, present and to walk side by side, hand in hand for a healing future. Sovereignty was never ceded, and we acknowledge those who have nurtured and respected the land for generations before us. (Co-written with Peta-Joy Williams, a Wiradjuri woman and artist, and Jessica Pantano)