All These Pretty Things - Tracey Yarad at Adelaide Fringe
Photo by Rachael Brady
NEW YORK-BASED AUSSIE SINGER-SONGWRITER, TRACEY YARAD, BRINGS ‘ALL THESE PRETTY THINGS’ - an INSPIRING and evocative portrayal of one woman's capacity to come back stronger than ever - TO ADELAIDE FRINGE
What do you do when your husband runs off with your teenage goddaughter? You write some killer songs, dye your wedding dress black, and make a show.
“An emotionally raw and sometimes even humorous blend of memoir and song,” (nysmusic.com)
Photo by Andrew Perry
Tracey Yarad’s confessional and cathartic one-woman show, All These Pretty Things, is a classic illustration of when life gives you lemons, you make lemonade.
Hot off her successful Edinburgh Fringe debut (“A naturally gifted storyteller and a fine musician and singer, switching effortlessly between a folk-style, with a range to rival Joni Mitchell, to raspy blues, to power ballad.”—FringeReview), this phoenix rising from the ashes story is a powerful and inspirational testament to the human spirit, taking the audience from the fallout of a devastating divorce in Australia, to a brand-new creative life in New York City.
Photo by Charles Chessler
“I started writing these songs just to keep myself from going insane,” says Yarad, who plays both the damsel in distress and the heroine who saves the day. “I certainly didn’t imagine that it would ever be a show. It was just my healing process.” That healing process turned into, first, an album, featuring some of New York City’s A-list musicians, then an accompanying book of short stories, with illustrations by top Australian artists. And, finally, with the help of co-writer and director Tessa Souter, it evolved into All These Pretty Things—which Broadway World called ‘a beautiful alchemy. Breathtakingly honest and gorgeously sung songs on the themes of loss and abandonment, and the restorative power of music and love.”
Blessed with a soulful, incredibly beautiful instrument and a talent for composing heartfelt and evocative songs, Tracey has produced multiple projects since relocating to New York City, performing at the 55 Bar, Soapbox Gallery, the Bitter End, Birdland, among others. She has collaborated with Grammy-nominated Chilean vocal star Claudia Acuna, Grammy-winning Jon Cowherd and avant garde saxophonist Dave Binney. Her duo performance with pianist Jim Ridl, ‘Lost in Translation’ (featuring stories and songs from her seven years as a hotel singer in Japan) was flagged by the New Yorker’s award-winning journalist Steve Futterman, who wrote, “If demanding experience leads to hard-won wisdom, Yarad and Ridl will have much to impart.”
"Tracey Yarad’s talents stretch out like roots from the tree of her life, and she bears the musical gifts of grace, vulnerability, and humor like few others. “Violinist Zach Brock (Snarky Puppy).
Georgie's Bar at Woodville Town Hall
Woodville Town Hall, 74-76 Woodville Rd, Woodville, Kaurna
Sun 23 Feb: 7:00pm
Wed 26 Feb - Fri 28 Feb: 5:00pm
Sat 01 Mar - Sun 02 Mar: 3:00pm
Tue 04 Mar - Wed 05 Mar: 7:00pm
Thu 06 Mar - Fri 07 Mar: 5:00pm
https://adelaidefringe.com.au/fringetix/all-these-pretty-things-af2025