The first issue of its new incarnation declared that The Theatre was 'absolutely independent of any management. No theatrical firm holds as much as a single share of its stock. There is only one way into its news columns -- by having something to say of interest to its readers'. It contained increasing profiles, interviews, and signed columns as well as regular reports on 'the whole field of amusements throughout Australasia', with detailed summaries and assessments of performances, and gossip paragraphs. It noted the rise and progress of moving pictures, but urged more Australian production. It commemorated the end of a theatrical era with the death of J.C. Williamson, and the disappearance of old-time bohemian actors in the face of advancing commercialisation. It applauded the 'Uplift of the Theatre' and bemoaned 'Our deplorable Musical Condition'. By April 1916, it was boasting a readership of 100,000.
Its stance on censorship of moving pictures was severe, urging good taste and condemning picture-show proprietors who were 'pandering to the lowest instead of the highest instincts of the community'. From early 1915, it ran a campaign against the worst films screening in Sydney, those that touched 'the high water mark in the low water direction'. In the same vein, it sought cleanliness as the best policy for vaudeville. However, in writing about the opera, it recognised that 'In art, woman, undraped and gently unashamed, is the symbol of moral and physical beauty, and the artistic eye will naturally take more delight in the realism of diaphanous draperies than in the pseudo-decorousness of tights'. It reinforced this distinction in late 1916, publishing several fine-art photographic nude studies.
Moving pictures became an increasing focus of the magazine, with an extended column, 'Reel Life in All its Varying Phases', beginning in November 1915 and becoming a full section from June 1918. This developed into 'The Australasian Picture Magazine. An Illustrated Monthly devoted to the Screen. In conjunction with The Theatre Magazine and The Player', edited and controlled by R.R.F. Hill (q.v.), with its own numbering, from Vol.1, no.4 (May 1920) to Vol.4, no.8 (January 1924).
From the August 1923 issue, the magazine changed hands, due to the illness of Mrs Fisher and the unwillingness of R.R.F. Hill (the owner/editor) to carry on alone. The new managing editor, journalist Wallace Nelson (q.v.), promised a continuous performance but with, perhaps, 'a lighter touch'.