On Stage: The events you need to see in May 2021
What’s happening on stage this month? We’ve put together a list of the most exciting events taking place in May 2021.
What’s happening on stage this month? We’ve put together a list of the most exciting events taking place in May 2021.
Everyone should have equal opportunities to access and participate in the arts, says Morwenna Collett, who discusses the value of being inclusive, a roadmap for how to get there, some Australian examples and an international case study.
Lynden Barber turns to France in his latest column, spotlighting the fourth season of Call My Agent! and the film My Donkey, My Lover & I.
The violinist and Musica Viva FutureMaker chats to Limelight ahead of his tour with Konstantin Shamray and the ANAM Orchestra.
Sydney Conservatorium partners with The Women’s Club in Sydney to host a series of recitals highlighting female composers and performers.
Cameron Lam's latest playlist explores the range and expressive qualities of the clarinet family.
The composer explains how a fragment from Puccini became the starting point for her tribute to the late Supreme Court Justice, commissioned for the Canberra Symphony Orchestra's Australian Series.
A year after a terrifying bout of the coronavirus, with blood clots in her lungs, the Australian soprano has finally recovered and is about to play Vitellia in La Clemenza di Tito for Canberra's new National Opera.
Australian tenor Jonathon Welch, famous for his work with the Choir of Hard Knocks, tells us about his cabaret show featuring the life and songs of Harry Secombe.
Sydney Philharmonia Choirs celebrates the long road back to live performance.
A year after COVID-19 shut down live music, co-director Adele Schonhardt discusses how an idea to stream concerts for a few weeks in lockdown has become Australia’s fastest growing national arts company.
The lead producer of Hamilton charts his career, which includes Rent, In the Heights and Baz Luhrmann's La Bohème on Broadway, and explains why he sees Hamilton as "an enlightened business".
The arts consultant and Churchill Fellow, who originally trained as a flute player, explains how she found a career in diversity, access and inclusion and what Australian arts organisations can learn from their counterparts in the US and the UK.