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    visual arts program

    Explore " visual arts program" with insightful episodes like "Beginners’ Call – Episode 9: Neridah Waters, Co-Founder Amanda Dell and Bryony Walters, Dancers Common People Dance Eisteddfod", "Beginners’ Call – Episode 6: Andrea James, Writer & Director Sunshine Super Girl", "Beginners’ Call – Episode 5: Anna Yen, Writer Slow Boat", "Beginners’ Call – Episode 4: David Morton, Writer & Director Holding Achilles" and "Beginners’ Call – Episode 2: Virginia Antonipillai, Mammalian Diving Reflex Creative Producer, Nightwalks with Teenagers" from podcasts like ""Beginners’ Call", "Beginners’ Call", "Beginners’ Call", "Beginners’ Call" and "Beginners’ Call"" and more!

    Episodes (6)

    Beginners’ Call – Episode 9: Neridah Waters, Co-Founder Amanda Dell and Bryony Walters, Dancers Common People Dance Eisteddfod

    Beginners’ Call – Episode 9: Neridah Waters, Co-Founder Amanda Dell and Bryony Walters, Dancers Common People Dance Eisteddfod

    “There’s something really transcendent about dancing so badly that you break through that shell of having to take yourself seriously and you can just exist in your body in this really beautiful, joyful way.”


    Whether you’re a Rock Eisteddfod reject or a retired dancer, there is joy and exhilaration to be found in unencumbered shimmying and shaking.


    The all-ages, all-abilities Common People Dance Eisteddfod brings the moves, the laughs and the ‘80s and ‘90s bangers when the leotard-clad juggernaut returns to Brisbane Festival for its fourth blockbuster year.


    “Common People Dance Eisteddfod’s main point of difference to a normal eisteddfod is the teams can cheat, they can bribe the judges, they can also sabotage the other teams.”


    An antidote to the ‘No Lights, No Lycra’ dance movement, Common People Dance Eisteddfod is an exercise in brash dance moves, bold costumes, big performances and body positivity.


    In this episode, Common People Dance Project co-founder, choreographer and theatre maker Neridah Waters is joined by dance devotees and sequinned warriors, Amanda Dell and Bryony Walters.


    They speak with humour and heart about the power of the dance project to boost body confidence, self-expression and personal empowerment and how making a conscious decision to be brave and try something new can prove life-changing.


    “I have seen people’s attitudes to their bodies change, I have seen what they wear in everyday life change because they are just proud of themselves and they are like, ‘look at me, I’m amazing’.”


    On the eve of yet another over-the-top dance battle between amateur hot-steppers from the North, South, East and West of Brisbane and the Sunshine Coast, the trio body roll and fist-pump their way through competition tactics, dirty tricks and the optimum ratio of props per dancer (spoiler alert: it’s three).


    “As adults, we forget to play and have fun. In Australia, in dance and sport, you’re told by some teacher at some point you don’t have the right physique or the right body to be a dancer or a cricket player and it really crushes that teenager at that point and they never do it again in their life.”


    Brisbane Festival returns to fill the city with three weeks of wonder, delight and celebration from 2 – 24 September 2022. For information and tickets, visit brisbanefestival.com.au 


    Beginners’ Call records on Turrbal and Yugerra country in Meanjin, Brisbane. Brisbane Festival recognises the integral role Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples play in our creative, artistic and celebration spaces and pays respect to Elders past, present and emerging.


    Podcast Curator: Louise Bezzina (Brisbane Festival)

    Podcast Guests: Neridah Waters, Amanda Dell and Bryony Walters (Common People Dance Eisteddfod)

    Podcast Host: Adam Brunes (Aruga) 

    Podcast Producer: Gilberto Castillo (The Podcast Boss

    Beginners’ Call – Episode 6: Andrea James, Writer & Director Sunshine Super Girl

    Beginners’ Call – Episode 6: Andrea James, Writer & Director Sunshine Super Girl

    “My dad grew up on a dirt-floor shack, and why didn’t he become a number-one tennis player?”

    Before Ash Barty lifted the trophy at Wimbledon, there was Evonne Goolagong. 


    As a young, self-confessed ‘tennis geek’, theatre maker Andrea James remembers being captivated by Wiradjuri tennis legend Evonne Goolagong, the greatest Aboriginal tennis player that Australia has ever produced.  


    “I remember very strongly as a young Aboriginal girl growing up in regional Victoria the sight of this Aboriginal woman on the screen… I had never seen that before.” 


    Andrea had long been fond of Evonne but when her now-husband gifted her a copy of Goolagong’s autobiography during courting, her tennis obsession became an Evonne-obsession. 


    “I could not put the book down… I just thought, ‘Why hasn’t this story been told in this way before?’” 


    Andrea’s powerful new work, Sunshine Super Girl, is a celebration of spirit and passion over adversity and a tribute to a woman whose sporting prowess continues to inspire a nation. 


    In this episode, Andrea reveals a shared ancestral link with the seven-time grand slam winner, why it was critical to receive Evonne’s blessing in the making of this landmark play, and the challenge of recreating global tennis tournaments for the stage. 


    Brisbane Festival returns to fill the city with three weeks of wonder, delight and celebration from 2 – 24 September 2022. For information and tickets, visit brisbanefestival.com.au 


    Beginners’ Call records on Turrbal and Yugerra country in Meanjin, Brisbane. Brisbane Festival recognises the integral role Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples play in our creative, artistic and celebration spaces and pays respect to Elders past, present and emerging.


    Podcast Curator: Louise Bezzina (Brisbane Festival)

    Podcast Guest: Andrea James (Sunshine Super Girl

    Podcast Host: Adam Brunes (Aruga

    Podcast Producer: Gilberto Castillo (The Podcast Boss

    Beginners’ Call – Episode 5: Anna Yen, Writer Slow Boat

    Beginners’ Call – Episode 5: Anna Yen, Writer Slow Boat

    “Ten years ago, I read in a book that 580 Chinese indentured labourers had been evacuated from Nauru during World War Two by the allies to Brisbane... They landed on 8 March 1942.”

    A compelling discovery about her father’s life sparked a decade-long search for answers for Chinese-Australian Anna Yen – theatre maker, performer and writer of Slow Boat, which receives its world premiere at Brisbane Festival 2022. 


    Blending vaudeville, circus, Cantonese Opera and martial arts, Slow Boat is a play within a play, inspired by the unexpected arrival in Australia of Anna’s father during WWII, along with hundreds of other Chinese men. 


    At its heart is a powerful question: How can we survive and thrive when so much is out of our control?


    In this episode, Anna retraces the serendipitous chain of events that allowed her to piece together her family’s fascinating history, reflects on the power of brotherhood, and contemplates what her arts-loving father would have thought of this remarkable new Australian work.


    “This show is actually Australian history that we don’t really know. Even though this story has a particular setting – WWII, Chinese Heritage Men, Australia – it’s actually a universal story about, when times are really, really tough, how do we treat each other?”


    Brisbane Festival returns to fill the city with three weeks of wonder, delight and celebration from 2 – 24 September 2022. For information and tickets, visit brisbanefestival.com.au 


    Beginners’ Call records on Turrbal and Yugerra country in Meanjin, Brisbane. Brisbane Festival recognises the integral role Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples play in our creative, artistic and celebration spaces and pays respect to Elders past, present and emerging.


    Podcast Curator: Louise Bezzina (Brisbane Festival)

    Podcast Guest: Anna Yen (Slow Boat

    Podcast Host: Adam Brunes (Aruga

    Podcast Producer: Gilberto Castillo (The Podcast Boss




    Beginners’ Call – Episode 4: David Morton, Writer & Director Holding Achilles

    Beginners’ Call – Episode 4: David Morton, Writer & Director Holding Achilles

    “We had said to each other, if we don’t have anything at this date, we’ll put a pin in the company until we can find the energy and the passion to drive again.” 


    Long before the global pandemic, award-winning theatre makers and global adventurers David Morton and Nicholas Paine of Dead Puppet Society were at a crossroads. Off the back of their most successful project ever – a world-first presentation of their acclaimed production The Wider Earth at London’s National History Museum – a new kind of exhaustion set in. 


    “So tired we could barely function, Nick and I left London and headed to New York to try and find some brain and soul space… We didn’t really know where we wanted to go with the company.”


    Giving themselves a strict deadline and ultimatum, the pair – both business partners and life partners – agreed that if they couldn’t land on the next creative idea with clarity and conviction, they’d put their 10-year-old company to rest. 


    We scared the living daylights out of each other just by saying that.” 


    And thus Holding Achilles was born – a refreshing take on one of the ancient world’s best-known heroes and his relationship with Patroclus, his not-so-well-known lover. 


    In this episode, Holding Achilles writer and director David Morton discusses modern storytellers’ tendency to glorify the blood and violence in Homer’s The Iliad, the oft-ignored human cost of major conflict, and his decision to never explicitly define the relationship between Achilles and Patroclus.  


    “This is not another queer tragedy. It’s a tragedy with queer characters.” 


    Brisbane Festival returns to fill the city with three weeks of wonder, delight and celebration from 2 – 24 September 2022. For information and tickets, visit brisbanefestival.com.au 


    Beginners’ Call records on Turrbal and Yugerra country in Meanjin, Brisbane. Brisbane Festival recognises the integral role Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples play in our creative, artistic and celebration spaces and pays respect to Elders past, present and emerging.


    Podcast Curator: Louise Bezzina (Brisbane Festival)

    Podcast Guest: David Morton (Dead Puppet Society

    Podcast Host: Adam Brunes (Aruga

    Podcast Producer: Gilberto Castillo (The Podcast Boss

    Beginners’ Call – Episode 2: Virginia Antonipillai, Mammalian Diving Reflex Creative Producer, Nightwalks with Teenagers

    Beginners’ Call – Episode 2: Virginia Antonipillai, Mammalian Diving Reflex Creative Producer, Nightwalks with Teenagers

    “It can start off very awkward, maybe a little bit uncomfortable but at the end of it you get this really beautiful experience.”


    Diving into uncomfortable situations sits at the heart of the performance experiences created by Canada’s Mammalian Diving Reflex. But what starts as difficult, awkward and even a little terrifying can give way to beautiful connections and surprising interactions, says Creative Producer Virginia Antonipillai. Rather than shy away from the challenge, Brisbane audiences are flocking to experience Mammalian Diving Reflex’s site-specific and social-specific immersive performance, Nightwalks with Teenagers, at Brisbane Festival 2022.


    “Let’s have teenagers lead us through a city and involve audience members not only as spectators to our antics but to also participate in them, resulting in a beautiful intergenerational experience.”


    In this episode, Virginia explains why no two productions are never the same, how some nights the cast will play a game of basketball with the audience and other nights, they’ll tell a spooky ghost story. She reveals how the young stars of Nightwalks with Teenagers are not professional actors and how the experience seeks to bridge gaps between teenagers and adults by positioning teenagers in a place of influence.


    “We need these sorts of activities to reinvigorate the community and get youth involved and really listen to them because they often have great ideas and are left out of big decisions; we need to involve them in life.”


    Brisbane Festival returns to fill the city with three weeks of wonder, delight and celebration from 2 – 24 September 2022. For information and tickets, visit brisbanefestival.com.au 


    Beginners’ Call records on Turrbal and Yugerra country in Meanjin, Brisbane. Brisbane Festival recognises the integral role Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples play in our creative, artistic and celebration spaces and pays respect to Elders past, present and emerging.


    Podcast Curator: Louise Bezzina (Brisbane Festival)

    Podcast Guest: Virginia Antonipillai (Mammalian Diving Reflex

    Podcast Host: Adam Brunes (Aruga

    Podcast Producer: Gilberto Castillo (The Podcast Boss

    Beginners’ Call – Episode 1: Louise Bezzina, Brisbane Festival Artistic Director

    Beginners’ Call – Episode 1: Louise Bezzina, Brisbane Festival Artistic Director

    “Like anybody who puts any creative vision out into the world, there’s that moment when your heart skips a beat: Are people going to like this? Does it resonate? Does it do all of the things it needs to?”


    Louise Bezzina knows a thing or two about creative programming. She’s produced work that required shark mitigation, always has a rain contingency and only weeks away from unveiling her inaugural Brisbane Festival program in 2020, watched as the COVID pandemic turned everything on its head. Undeterred, Louise and her team curated a reimagined Brisbane Festival, a beacon of hope in a challenging time.


    On the eve of her third Brisbane Festival, Louise reflects on the inspiration and innovation that continues to shape the 2022 program. She discusses the challenges of presenting a Festival that truly reflects the essence of Brisbane, one she defines as “dynamic optimism”.


    “You don’t want to be a cookie-cutter version of every other Festival or arts program. You need to find a way to give it a personality that feels distinctly of this place.”


    In this episode, Louise reveals how she draws on instinct, local knowledge, community and connection to program a Festival of and for its time and place. Exploring her formative tenure as Founder and Artistic Director of Bleach – The Gold Coast Festival, Louise explains the origins of her fascination with developing site-specific work and commissioning performances in non-traditional venues


    “That’s the great gift of a Festival: to push ourselves, to push artists, to push companies to make work that they couldn’t make at any other time of the year.”


    Brisbane Festival returns to fill the city with three weeks of wonder, delight and celebration from 2 – 24 September 2022. For information and tickets, visit brisbanefestival.com.au 


    Beginners’ Call records on Turrbal and Yugerra country in Meanjin, Brisbane. Brisbane Festival recognises the integral role Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples play in our creative, artistic and celebration spaces and pays respect to Elders past, present and emerging.


    Podcast Curator: Louise Bezzina (Brisbane Festival)

    Podcast Guest: Louise Bezzina (Brisbane Festival)

    Podcast Host: Adam Brunes (Aruga

    Podcast Producer: Gilberto Castillo (The Podcast Boss


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