At 21, the Wharf Revue has finally left home.
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The satirical revue was, for its first 20 years, presented by the Sydney Theatre Company.
But its creators and performers - Jonathan Biggins, Drew Forsythe and Phillip Scott - decided last year to go their own way.
This year's revue, subtitled Can of Worms, will be the first they've produced themselves, working with independent producer Jo Dyer.
For Canberrans, the big news is that for the first time, the long-running satirical revue will have its premiere here.
Because of COVID restrictions, it will also be on in the Canberra Theatre rather than the smaller Playhouse, with audience capacity yet to be determined.
While Forsythe loves the intimacy and design of the Playhouse, he's not complaining.
He's no stranger to the Canberra Theatre, having performed in shows there over five decades.
"The first show I did there was Oedipus back in 1970."
He was part of the chorus in a production that starred Ron Hadrick and Ruth Cracknell.
Forsythe came to Canberra in a production of David Williamson's Emerald City in the 1980s and in the Jon English-Simon Gallaher Gilbert and Sullivan productions in the 1990s.
As for the departure from the STC, Forsythe says there was no ill will involved - they simply thought it was time to try doing things differently.
They've had a long association with Dyer, who produced the Revue at the STC for more than a decade and also produced The Gospel According to Paul, Biggins' one-man Paul Keating show.
But the three men have decades of combined show business experience on which to draw. They're joined on stage this year by frequent revue participant Mandy Bishop.
And, of course, the Wharf Revue is an established brand now.
The Wharfies have been at it a long time, and politics is the gift that just keeps on giving when it comes to creating satire.
Some old favourites will be back.
Forsythe says that "Donald Trump returns, of course" - did he ever really leave? - and his successor as US president, Joe Biden, will talk about the crises confronting the US.
Media mogul Rupert Murdoch has a meeting with Mephistopheles - "They're old acquaintances who've had dealings with one another."
Queen Elizabeth II will make a speech with regard to her upcoming Platinum Jubilee and the things that might have taken the glow off it somewhat for the royal family - trouble with Harry and Meghan, the Palace Papers, The Crown.
"In the last couple of years they've had their problems," Forsythe says delicately.
Closer to home, New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinta Ardern joins in via video conference and there will be plenty of Aussie politicians celebrated, or at least featured, in skit and song.
There'll be a medley about Prime Minister Scott Morrison, a chorus line of premiers singing to the tune of The Muppet Show theme song, and a Wizard of Oz-themed skit in which Dorothy goes to the Emerald City not to go home, but to try to buy one.
As well as working on the revue with his colleagues online, Forsythe spent lockdown writing a play of his own. The Last Man Standing is about an old man who's the lone holdout in his neighbourhood, refusing to sell his house to developers.
"It just got a producer - Christine Dunstan."
Maybe that show will be the next time Forsythe is seen on the Canberra stage.