Written and performed by Mandela Mathia
Directed by Jessica Arthur
Belvoir Street production at The Q, Queanbeyan May 2
Reviewed by Len Power
A young man surviving a childhood in war-torn South Sudan and becoming an actor in Australia sounds like an impossible dream, but that young man, Mandela Mathia, tells all in his compelling and moving one man show.
Mandela Mathia grew up in South Sudan. He barely knew his father who died in the war there and lost his mother who drowned during a search for food. He and his older brother survived and, with a second foster mother, left South Sudan for Egypt. Eventually – and luckily – they made their way to Australia. Against all the odds as a young refugee, he pursued a dream to become an actor and succeeded.

Mandela Mathia

Yacou Mbaye
Director, Jessica Arthur, has created a fine production around Mathia. Her sensitive staging heightens moments of drama as well as making the show entertaining. Set and costume designer, Keerthi Subramanyam, lighting designer Kate Baldwin and sound designer and composer Brendan Boney have all contributed very effectively to give this show its unique look and sound.
At the end of the show, Mathia proudly announces that he is now as much Australian as South Sudanese. His story of resilience, self-acceptance, perseverance and hope is moving and uplifting.
Photos by Brett Boardman
This review was first published by Canberra CityNews digital edition on 3 May 2026.
Len Power's reviews are also broadcast on Artsound FM 92.7 in the ‘Arts Cafe’ and ‘Arts About’ programs.
