The growing prominence of immersive experiences in Australian theatre festivals
Australian theatre festivals are changing shape. The proscenium arch still matters, but it no longer defines the edges of performance. Across major festivals and smaller regional events, audiences are increasingly invited to move, touch, listen closely, and sometimes even become part of the work itself.
This shift is not simply about novelty. Immersive and participatory theatre reflects bigger changes in how people want to spend their cultural time. After years of digital saturation, live performance is being reimagined as something embodied and social, where presence is not optional but central.
Audience habits beyond the theatre
Audience behaviour outside the arts offers useful context for why immersive works resonate. People are accustomed to choosing how and when they engage with entertainment, whether through streaming platforms, interactive games, or location-based experiences that sit outside traditional cultural venues. Passive consumption is no longer the default.
That mindset shapes expectations for live performance, too. When audiences can customise leisure time across multiple digital and physical spaces, theatre must compete for attention alongside nightlife, gaming, and online platforms. Some explore alternatives such as late-night experiences, interactive exhibitions, or even digital leisure options like sites as part of a broader landscape of choice. Immersive theatre answers this competition by offering something screens cannot: shared, embodied presence.
Accessibility plays a crucial role here. Participatory works often reduce barriers to entry by removing formal seating, complex narratives, or high ticket prices. For festivals seeking to broaden their audiences, such models are increasingly attractive.
From proscenium to participation
Traditional theatre architecture was built around a clear divide between stage and seat. Immersive festival programming deliberately dissolves that boundary, replacing fixed sightlines with environments audiences enter and explore. This approach has found a natural home in festivals, which already encourage movement between venues and modes of engagement.
Large-scale events demonstrate how the appetite for this work has grown. In 2025, Illuminate Adelaide attracted 1.3 million attendees, many drawn by installations and performances that merged light, sound, and audience interaction across the city. Theatre, in this context, sits alongside visual art and music rather than apart from them.
Companies specialising in immersive formats have also benefited from this festival ecosystem. DARKFIELD’s audio-driven experiences, staged inside shipping containers, exemplify how tightly controlled environments can produce intense audience focus, with its shows reaching more than 700,000 participants globally according to reporting by Melbourning. Festivals provide the foot traffic and curiosity these works need to thrive.
Programming challenges for producers
While immersive work offers clear benefits, it also presents practical challenges for festival programmers. These productions often require bespoke sites, complex technical setups, and longer bump-in periods than conventional shows. A shipping container, a heritage building, or a public square is rarely a plug-and-play venue.
Risk management adds another layer. Audience movement, sensory intensity, and one-on-one encounters demand careful planning around access, safety, and consent. For producers, this means balancing creative ambition with duty of care, especially when festivals operate at scale.
Regional expansion complicates and enriches the picture. Immersive programming is no longer confined to capital cities, with festivals embedding work into towns and landscapes that shape the audience experience. The OpenField Arts festival in Berry, for example, transformed streets and heritage sites into performance spaces. Such approaches deepen local engagement but require strong community collaboration.
Balancing spectacle with substance
Immersion alone does not guarantee impact. As festivals programme more participatory work, questions arise about depth, dramaturgy, and artistic rigour. Spectacle can attract audiences, but it must be matched with clear intent and thoughtful design.
The most successful immersive works use participation to sharpen meaning rather than distract from it. Sensory engagement becomes a tool for empathy, particularly in work designed for children, families, or neurodiverse audiences. This matters because festivals shape public perceptions of what theatre can be, not just what it looks like.
For Australian theatre festivals, the challenge is not whether to include immersive experiences, but how to integrate them responsibly. When done well, they expand who feels welcome, how stories are told, and where performance can happen. The result is a festival landscape that feels less like a series of shows and more like a living cultural environment.

