Up Next
Join host Courtney Ammenhauser as she chats to a spectacular lineup of artists from a variety of creative disciplines as they make their way to one of the most famous performance venues in the world. Hear from effervescent Fangirls creator Yve Blake, spellbinding Dorr-e Dari actor Mahdi Mohammadi and heaps more in this playful interview series that’ll introduce you to Australia’s future arts and culture leaders.
Genre bending with contemporary cellist James Morley
Courtney Ammenhauser: The Sydney Opera House acknowledges the Gadigal People, traditional custodians of Tubowgule, the land on which the Opera House stands. We honour the long Gadigal history of gathering and storytelling and acknowledge the strength and resilience of First Nations people and communities past and present.
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James Morley: I mean, here it’s so normal to see musicians around and it’s such a part of the kind of European kind of culture that everyone is familiar somewhat with classical music. Whereas in Australia people just come up to you and they’re like, What the hell is that? Is that a saxophone? Like, why should they have to know what a cello is?
Courtney Ammenhauser: Hey, I’m Courtney Amenhauser, and this is Up Next: Your ticket to the most exciting artists and performers coming through the Sydney Opera House doors. Join me backstage where I’m going to be chatting to a spectacular line up of artists, up and comers who are making waves on one of the most iconic stages in the world. The Opera House is celebrating its first 50 years. So in every episode of this podcast, we showcase someone exciting who we think will transform the next 50 years of arts and culture. Today’s guest, Switzerland-based Australian cellist James Morley, has been described as a “new generation virtuoso.” But over on his website, he describes himself as simply “cellist/improviser/etc.” And his Instagram handle is @durrie_butts. That humility really comes through in this episode, especially when James talks about finding new ways to make classical music less elitist. While James works largely as a classical soloist and chamber musician, he frequently finds ways to bring cello music into unexpected spaces and genres. We recorded this episode via video link to Basel, Switzerland, where James carved out space in a very busy schedule ahead of a tour that will see him travel through Europe to Israel and then Australia for a performance at the Opera House in August.
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Courtney Amenhauser: Hey, James. How are you doing?
James Morley: Hi, Courtney. I’m good. How are you?
Courtney Ammenhauser: I’m good. Thank you so much for joining me on the podcast today.
James Morley: Pleasure. Thanks for having me.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Was it love at first sight with the cello?
James Morley: Actually, no. So I was quite young when I started. Well, not too young, but I was about, I think, six. I actually would say that I kind of hated it for a few years. I didn’t necessarily have an interest in music. I think also because my mum’s a music teacher, so there was kind of this parenting style when it came to approaching playing an instrument. And by the way, I actually am happy that it was the way it was now at this point in hindsight, because I wouldn’t be doing this now, actually. And then, yeah, I remember practising and, you know, kind of reluctantly practising, this piece from the first solo cello suite by Bach, when I actually liked it. I think anyone who doesn’t know this piece by name knows it by ear.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Can you play it for us?
James Morley: Yes, I can.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Why, thank you.
James Morley: And then we take an awkward moment to set up [James plays Bach on his cello].
Courtney Ammenhauser: My jaw’s on the floor.
James Morley: No, no, no. I mean, believe me, it sounded way shitier than that at the time.
Courtney Ammenhauser: What does it mean to be an improvisational cellist? Because it’s not just freestyling on stage, right?
James Morley: I think people kind of think of improvising as literally just making it up on the spot, which there is definitely an element of this kind of spontaneity. But you do have to prepare, practice, figure out what your sound is. Otherwise, you know, you kind of revert to your instincts. And so if you've done a lot of work on a particular thing, those traits are going to come out in that moment. I mean, you have to be a great listener. You have to be able to engage with other people on the stage and not just be caught up in your own little world. I mean, it helps to know the instrument really well. So the fact that I’ve been playing for so long means that I should know it pretty well by now. So, yeah, preparation is big. So improvising, I would say.
Courtney Ammenhauser: So you’re in Switzerland now and you’re studying contemporary musical performance for classical music. What does that mean? How do you explain it to people in a pub?
James Morley: [Laughs] I mean, it’s kind of more this sort of art music kind of thing. Kind of contemporary art, sort of a lot of interdisciplinary sort of interaction. And it can be a bit academic, which is not really for me, but there’s that side of things as well. Really technical, really interesting, experimental, this kind of thing.
Courtney Ammenhauser: And how is what you’re doing in Switzerland different to what you could learn if you’d stayed in Australia?
James Morley: Well, the thing is, in Europe, there’s just way more funding for just art and music in general. And in Switzerland especially, there’s so much money. And so they have so many grant foundations, even really small random ones. So you can just apply for money and, it’s hard to get it, it’s much easier than in Australia because the funding and appreciation for it exists. And so Basel, where I am, really is an amazing place I find for contemporary music. So much interesting stuff and variety of opinions here. You go to concerts and it’s really acceptable to say, Oh, I didn’t like that. And then you just get to talk openly about it with people and discuss the music and it’s all part of it. So I think that’s really cool.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah, cool. I’m keen to hear a bit more about that interdisciplinary side to your course.
James Morley: It entails many different things: commissions, so brand new music, constantly collaborating with composers and electronic musicians. I’m learning much more about electronics now, which I never knew almost anything about before. So for me to do something I’m doing now, it wasn’t an option to stay, actually. So yeah, for me, I’m glad that I’m doing this at the moment with my life being here. I mean, that’s probably partially why I’m more interested in contemporary music stuff, because I think relevance is important and I always look for ways to help it be more accessible.
Courtney Ammenhauser: I feel not wanting to take yourself too seriously is touted as a virtue in Australia, and in a way it keeps us grounded. But it can also fall into the tall poppy syndrome, which is kind of toxic. Is that something you think about as someone who’s moved to Europe for your art?
James Morley: Yeah, I think in Australia it’s much more obvious to me that we have this kind of anti-elitist kind of attitude, which I kind of get. I mean, I find this world of music often more accessible than classical music, sometimes, to be honest. Because classical music, I mean, I’ve always had, you know, friends outside of classical music, and a lot of them have a lot of fear about going to see a classical music performance because they’re like, Oh, I wouldn’t fit in because everyone there is rich and old and it’s in a concert hall and I don’t have the right clothes and I can’t afford and blah, blah, blah.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah.
James Morley: And actually [contemporary music students] do performances in places that make more sense to be doing a performance, and it makes sense to people who want to go and experience it.
Courtney Ammenhauser: You went to a concert series in Melbourne called Play On. That was pretty different from most classical music performances. Can you tell me about it?
James Morley: Yeah, it’s a really cool series where I think they wouldn’t even announce the program before the performance. You would basically expect a sort of classical act or set and then something more experimental, maybe a contemporary music set and then a DJ set at the end. But these performances would be in carparks and places like this. But then it’s appealing to trendy young people because they have the bar and the lights and everything’s kind of beautiful and really vibey. The average age is, you know, 30. And so when you have people going to watch a classical music performance in an environment that makes them feel comfortable, then they love it.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Did going to Play On make you think about new ways to present classical music?
James Morley: Of course. I mean, I just see it so often painted in this kind of really formal and a little bit snobby looking kind of way and, you know, there are so many classical musicians my age. And, you know, they still seem to want to go for the suits and this and that instead of just feeling more relaxed if you just dress like a normal person or something. I mean, I’m fine with people dressing like that, but there’s this feeling that it’s necessary, it’s obligatory. If you’re performing classical music, just dress how you want. That’s a good place to start. If people didn’t feel compelled to maybe dress a certain way when they go to watch a performance. And also, just if tickets were cheaper. I mean, in Australia, if the government subsidises this a bit more, I mean, there’s student rush and things this, but generally it’s not so available or they don’t advertise it so that people don’t really know that this is an option or whatever. And so I just think the presentation of it is really crucial and no matter how much we try to avoid it, presentation is extremely crucial in this kind of thing.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Is music programming something you’d like to do?
James Morley: Yes. Um, and I’ve done a bit of it before. I worked at a venue in Melbourne called Tempo Rubato. Really amazing place, actually. So I programmed a bunch of concerts there and I really enjoyed this. I would like to do more in this kind of world actually in future. So I do have my brain kind of mulling over some ideas at the moment. In fact, there are things I’d like to do in Australia, um, in terms of this kind of programming, curating things. So yeah, this does interest me.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Watch this space, hey?
James Morley: Watch this space.
Courtney Ammenhauser: I heard that you did an experimental performance all about Arnold Schwarzenegger. Can you please explain that to me?
James Morley: I don’t know if I can explain it, to be honest! I mean, it was something of a composition by this composer, a Belgian guy called Stefan Prince. So there was a small ensemble of us as electric guitar, someone on electronics, cello, double bass, harp, saxophone and drum kit. It was basically all improvised. We rehearsed a decent amount and, as I was talking about before, you really prepare by rehearsing improvised stuff. And so we really had a plan, it’s structured improvising, but there was a video, it just kind of used clips from movies of Arnold Schwarzenegger. There’s an interview on one of those late night shows that gets featured; some advertisement for something that he’s in. And it all just kind of highlights the absurdity of this guy. But I think one of the kind of musical focuses of the of the performance was you had some of these really sort of beautiful moments, these kind of almost choral kind of lively chords with some really hectic, I don’t know, loud something over the top. And so it was really kind of a lot of juxtaposition, I suppose. And so, yeah, not mooth. I guess it was meant to be a very big humorous element in this, in this piece, but also kind of.
Courtney Ammenhauser: And are they representing the multitudes of Arnold, as in, he’s been a bodybuilder, an actor, a governor?
James Morley: I guess you could say that. I’m not really someone who’s into, um, you know, you get sort of people who say, yeah, with this piece of music really, you need to tell a story or whatever. And it’s, well, if there’s no lyrics or nothing that’s telling me story stories, why? How am I supposed to convey that? It’s kind of a silly thing to me. I know it’s a kind of satire piece, this whole thing, and you do have, yeah, a lot of this sort of thing going on over here, I think. I don’t know.
Courtney Ammenhauser: I imagine as someone trying to take cello beyond classical repertoire, you want to be inspired by the world around you. What inspires you beyond music?
James Morley: I think when we’re so caught up in this musical world that we care so much about each other’s opinions and everything that we get really trapped in this kind of feedback loop of what’s actually important in this world. And if you kind of break that cycle for yourself and just experience other people, then you just kind of remember what their values are and what living means to them and what’s important to them. And I live with fashion designers, mostly people who have such a different kind of focus in life, but also this attention to aesthetics and stuff. And I mean, I go to the river here every day and just remember this is the closest thing I have to the ocean right now. Yeah, the Rhine River runs through Basel. It’s amazing. It’s so beautiful. And so, yeah, I think these big kind of natural forces in the world, as stupid and whatever as it sounds, these things are important to me.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Totally. I don’t think that sounds stupid at all. I agree.
James Morley: Okay. Thanks for validating.
Courtney Ammenhauser: You’ve got your first solo show coming up at the Opera House. You tell me what to expect.
James Morley: We’re going to hear a nice mixture of things. We have a brand new commissioned work by Josephine Mackin, who’s a great composer based in Sydney, and I performed this work with Jane Sheldon, who is an incredible soprano, singer, based between Australia and the States. So I’m so excited to work with her. Also, I play some solo pieces, a piece by another Australian composer, Brett Dean, which is just really hard. So that’s kind of taking up some brain space at the moment, but it’s quite cool. It’s quite a spectacular kind of piece. So I think, yep, we got some balance going on in the program. And then also a piece that Louisa Lim wrote for me a couple of years ago. She is one of my favourite ever composers. She’s Australian, she’s big overseas. She’s one of the big names of contemporary music composition. She’s amazing. And I was so lucky that she wrote me a piece two years ago. So I’ll bring this one out again. You get to hear me sing a bit so I know I don’t have my sexy radio voice today because I’m a bit sick, but if you want to hear these dulcet tones, that’s the opportunity. And then I also play with Erin Helyard, who is one of my favourite musicians in Australia. He’s, you know, a favourite of the opera House, I believe he runs Pinchgut Opera and he’s one of the best early music keyboard players. So, you know, piano fortepiano harpsichord. In this case we play a Beethoven sonata. So he will be on Fortepiano, which is kind of an earlier version of piano and I find often more beautiful than piano. And I really love this instrument. So it’s really nice that we can make this come together. And so, yeah, we play this beautiful Beethoven sonata. So, you know, it sounds this is a very varied program, as you can tell. We’ve got Beethoven and then we have brand new music.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah, sounds like a really nice marrying of the two worlds.
James Morley: Yes. Yeah, I think so.
Courtney Ammenhauser: James, ont this podcast is all about looking ahead and trying to spot who’s going to make it. Who do you think is going to make it big in the next decade?
James Morley: Oh my God. That is the impossible question. I mean, I don’t even think about this sort of question because… Who’s going to make it big? I don’t know. I mean, everyone is kind of obsessed with making it, actually. And, I’ve been having this discussion a lot with one of my best friends here is someone that’s always, Oh, I want to be famous and he’s kind of joking, but I know he’s not. He’s like I want to be famous all the time. And whenever you tell him about something cool that you have coming up, he kind of gets to be, Oh, I wish that was me. And, you know, he’s really happy for you or whatever, but he’s kind of a bit sort of, obsessed. And so there are some people who are a bit like this. And I also think I look at him and I go, well, you kind of have made it as well many ways, you’re doing amazing things. But the thing is for us, there is no that’s why you can’t have an end goal with all of this being a musician or an artist. If you think that there is a point where you’ve made it that’s just completely wrong. And I realised this a long time ago, which I’m really glad I did, because I think some people still have this idea that there’s a point where it’s all just, Yep, now I am a god of music. It’s like, No, you can’t do that. Like , it’s a constant. It’s a lifelong process, which is a beautiful thing, and I wish to respect that. And so, yeah, saying that anyone is going to make it, of course the names get bigger and people get more attention and more Instagram followers or whatever it is required to become considered, you know, famous. But yeah, I think anyone who’s a good musician is valid in their own right. No matter how many people come to their performances, how many people buy the albums? I mean, if you like someone’s music, then you should enjoy it and not rely on other people’s opinions and reviews about them to decide to inform, you know, your choice to appreciate them.
Courtney Ammenhauser: I love that last line and I agree wholeheartedly. What a place to leave it on. Thank you so much for joining us today, James.
James Morley: You’re welcome. Thanks for having me.
Courtney Ammenhauser: That was cellist James Morley. You can see James Morley and friends in a performance called Beethoven and Beyond on August six at the Opera House, a program that includes a new work commissioned by James and the chance to hear contemporary and classical musicians find common ground in Beethoven’s third cello Sonata.
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I’m Courtney Amenhauser and this has been up next, a podcast from the Sydney Opera House.
From Audiocraft the show is produced by Marcus Costello.
From Sydney Opera House, the Head of Digital Programming is Stuart Buchanan, and the Digital Programming Coordinator is Georgia D'Souza.
The Up Next theme Music is by Milan Ring. Subscribe wherever you listen to podcasts.
Dancing in Digital Dimensions: Next gen choreography with Harrison Hall
Courtney Ammenhauser: The Sydney Opera House acknowledges the Gadigal People, traditional custodians of Tubowgule, the land on which the Opera House stands. We honour the long Gadigal history of gathering and storytelling and acknowledge the strength and resilience of First Nations people and communities past and present.
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Harrison Hall: I think the power of dance is in its sensations, is in its feelings, its ideas and its imagery. So it’s okay to not understand. Just being okay, to sit and experience those things and maybe be open to where that will take you thinking, there’s a gateway there.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Hey, I’m Courtney Ammenhauser, and this is Up Next -- your ticket to the most exciting artists and performers coming through the Sydney Opera House doors. Join me backstage where I’m going to be chatting to a spectacular lineup of artists; up and comers who are making waves on one of the most iconic stages in the world. The Opera House is celebrating its first 50 years. So, in every episode of this podcast, we showcase someone exciting who we think will transform the next 50 years of arts and culture.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Harrison Hall is a dancer and choreographer but I think it’s fair to say his work is a bit strange, which is a compliment, because he pushes the boundary of what those artforms mean. Think: drones filming dancers in motion capture body suits. Think: live performance transposed into video game avatars for people watching on the other side of the world. Think: dancers that don’t all look like ballerinas. On July 13, a showcase of Harrison’s work will feature in the Opera House’s Digital Festival Outlines, alongside a lineup of artists and technologists who are rethinking the future of performance. Harrison will present screenings of two performances and discuss his approach to experimental dance. Speaking of which, that’s what this episode of Up Next is all about. Let’s get into it.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Harrison, I want to start our chat back at the beginning. When you were a kid, because you had a lot of energy to burn, right?
Harrison Hall: Yep.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Your mum thought maybe a trampoline will fix it. Maybe that’ll, you know, get it out.
Harrison Hall: Yeah. She threw me on a trampoline and then the next stage was she took me to martial arts and she was like, “This would be a great bit of discipline,” you know? And next door to the martial arts place, there was a dance school. And I just loved kind of leaving that martial arts place, and I’d just be like, peering through the windows and, yeah, getting drawn to music and dance. And then, yeah, then I got sucked up into that world.
Courtney Ammenhauser: So what was the first type of dance that you started doing?
Harrison Hall: So, I was doing a lot of funk and then, you know, a bit of like, tap as well. You know, the classic kind of forms that you do in a rural town, I guess. And then, yeah, the teachers, as usual, this is quite a common thing in dance, they’ll say, “Oh, this is great, you’re getting rhythm, you’re getting movement, but you need technique.”
Courtney Ammenhauser: And what does that mean?
Harrison Hall: That means ballet.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Ballet, baby!
Harrison Hall: Yeah, yeah. So then I was on the ballet train.
Courtney Ammenhauser: You then went on to a performing arts high school, and then you kept studying ballet as well.
Harrison Hall: Yeah. I got into this performing arts high school and this was VCAS, this really amazing school in Melbourne where it’s half-day dance half-day school, so yeah, really great for dancers. And it’s quite broad. And then I got wrapped into, you know, a big ballet school – I went to the Australian Ballet School – which is, you know, an amazing but intense place. And I think in that time, I think in my second year, third year, I was already starting to contact contemporary companies and start to think or start to question what more could I experience in this dance journey.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Totally.
Harrison Hall: I think it’s pretty clear that ballet is the pursuit of perfection. It’s an amazing form but for a lot of people like myself and many other people – only a very few select people are close to this ideal and have what seems to be a fulfilling and rewarding time in that industry. So yeah, I thought I don’t really see myself in this. And then secondly I started to have more chats with people who were in ballet and I really worried that, you know, the creative things I was interested in or the open more abstract ideas or narratives that I was seeing in my world weren’t really represented in that form. I think it was pretty clear that ballet is the pursuit of perfection. And, you know, it’s an amazing thing and it captures what, you know, a whole lot of people think is valuable in the same way that Usain Bolt may have, you know, by being faster, harder, stronger, you know, by running in a 100 metres sprint. But yeah, I think for me, I was ready for something new, something more.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah.
Harrison Hall: I grew my hair. I went in, basically attached myself to this Butoh performer, Yumi Umiumare. She became my mentor. We toured Japan and I just did like a whole lot of weird shit, honestly, for like a year and a bit. And then, you know, started to find where I kind of sat more in the middle of those.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah. Can you run me through some of the experimental ways you’ve put on a dance performance?
Harrison Hall: Yeah. So I’ve made a parkour and bike show for dance. I’ve made an underground rave style dance that featured the Gabber dance to, like, obviously rave music. I’ve spent a lot of time in the kind of like 3D animation world, you know, like very kind of dismantled experiences of yeah, dancing, music, performance and integrative technology. We’ll have dancers with motion capture who are being streamed into a live online game while there’s a band elsewhere that’s being streamed into that space and an online game. I’ve made performances with people with different abilities, people with wheelchairs and yeah, move them on crazy journeys through theatres. I’ve made shows that had live bands from Taiwan join and motion capture dances and projection and a whole lot of technologies. Yeah, a lot of stuff.
Courtney Ammenhauser: So good.
Harrison Hall: And also some of the most amazing and profound experiences I’ve had working with people have been people who live with disability. And I remember there was a blind dancer who wanted to understand the movement more. So he came and put his hands on me and we kind of went for a ride and we danced and moved together. And just to watch the kind of elation and, that reciprocity, that feeling that we kind of shared together was like, yeah, incredible. Like, those are the memories that I’ll really, like, hold onto in my career I think. Particularly around technology, actually, people living with disabilities have more experience and expertise than, you know, than I have actually. I did this work running machine with a bunch of amazing creatives from Australia and Japan and Hiwa Kazuhiko, they’re an amazing performer who experiences life through a wheelchair. And yeah, we kind of started to really just collaborate and think about how these types of understandings of works could actually feed into the experiences for all audiences. I did a bit of research recently and we’re working with a person that’s vision impaired and you know, I try to explain them, “Oh yeah, so my works like, you know, making motion capture and doing dancing“ and like, like highly visual things and then, you know. Essentially it was like, “Oh, but how can people with vision impairment access this work?“ So we’re actually going into a bit of research where we’re now working out ways that we can send motion capture dancers information into software and it can output a sound. So you can actually create these really creative, interesting ways and think about reconceptualise the way that you make art or the kinds of experiences that are possible from those, yeah, those experiences.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Amazing. I’m keen to talk to you about BONANZA!
Harrison Hall: Oh, yeah.
Courtney Ammenhauser: I was pretty mesmerised when I was watching the trailer for it on YouTube. Your head kind of is bouncing around all over the place. There’s limbs everywhere. It was also filmed by a drone, right?
Harrison Hall: Yeah. So this is a complex project, but I’ll try and explain it.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Please.
Harrison Hall: Essentially, it starts off with a video work where I’m dancing and then I’m wearing different greenscreen suits, so different parts of my body are kind of moving around. That’s the first section. Then it goes into a second section where I’m cut out. So the background is greenscreen and I’m in a digital world, and then in the next world it’s back to this original space that we filmed in, but they’re 3D avatars of me in that space doing like impossible choreography, flying around, you know, breaking limbs and doing just like a whole bunch of stuff in the form of like a K-Pop music video. So, yeah. What’s it all about? Great question.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Took the words right out of my mouth.
Harrison Hall: Yeah. For that, like, you know, that was totally like a meditation in the depths of lockdowns, a lot of people were stuck at home able to see this, you know? Like, made people think that, like, good quality artistic work could be made digitally in lockdown.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah. And you want to make art that feels real when you consume it from home. And I love that.
Harrison Hall: Yeah. Awesome. Yeah, I totally agree. So the screen is not the best place for the body, or for dance generally. It’s definitely good live, but working out how we could kind of give an audience more access to the body through this certain environment. So that was the challenge. That was the thing we chipped away at lots, if that makes sense.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Do you think about dance differently now than when you started out?
Harrison Hall: Yeah, when I first started it was a bit more self focussed, I guess. It was about needing to get good to be able to have a career. So it was very, yeah, very competition based focussed on going forward and getting better and rising and you know, competing with other people to get the role. Whereas yeah, the works that I make now are much more focussed on collaboration and working together, often hiding myself in digital material or as the choreographer so I can, you know, have other dancers rise up because these days I feel like watching myself or thinking of myself dancing as much is just like a cringe. So creative ways I hide myself in the digital.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Sneaky.
Harrison Hall: Yeah, yeah, yeah. I think the things that were interesting to me were building community and collaborating with people and yeah, working as a team to make amazing things happen.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Harrison, when you look back over your career, what do you think will make you proud?
Harrison Hall: Hmm. It’s definitely changed over the years. When I was younger, when I was like, maybe like I’d say up to like my mid, early, mid twenties, it would have been like, you know, accolades I got in terms of like, awards or whatever this is.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah.
Harrison Hall: But I think, I think, yeah, as I’ve gone on the most amazing moments that I’ve had when, you know, young people come up and say, “Wow, that was amazing. You know, I’m so inspired, I want to go and do something like this,” or, you know, yeah. For people that have come up and said, “Wow, that was really magic, I was just like in awe," or “I felt wonder.” I don’t know. I think just creating senses of wonder, making people feel like the impossible is real. I think those things and as you know, as kind of baseline as that is and all the nuance, sophisticated ways that we go, the laborious, crazy ways we go to do that, those are the kind of things that like, I aspire. And yeah, I’m sure as I get older that will increase, it’ll be more about legacy and not in that my name needs to be anywhere and more so that, you know, these types of forms will continue to grow, and these types of interests, you know, the values of dance and embodiment are still in the artistic sphere in a really strong and potent way.
Courtney Ammenhauser: They say, “Do the thing you love and you’ll never work a day in your life,” right? It’s not always true, though. And sometimes we turn to the thing that we love in our profession, and then our passion can fade away. I’m interested to know, do you like getting on a dance floor at a party?
Harrison Hall: Oh, yeah, I love that, because it’s really different to what I do on a day to day basis. But you know, realistically, as an artist working in today’s society, my job is not just dancing around in a room, closing my eyes. It is doing heaps of emails. It’s, you know, being on the phone to heaps of people, and yeah.
Courtney Ammenhauser: I think some people are afraid to see contemporary dance because they think that there’s something that they’re perhaps not getting.
Harrison Hall: Mmm.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Or they might think that there’s some kind of meaning that’s clear to more sophisticated audiences and not them, maybe. What would you say to those people?
Harrison Hall: I think it’s okay to not understand. It’s okay to just sit in sensation. It’s great to just be awash with feelings, images, ideas. It can be polarising, and that’s often the artist’s point. So maybe if they put that on, you know, one day in primary school in year six as part of personal development, then maybe that stigma would be gone.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Can you give me a guide like what to watch for? Or should we be trying to connect dots or process meaning at some point?
Harrison Hall: I think the best and first thing is just remove meaning. No story. And just kind of sit. Watch. Maybe let your resistance drop. And try not to be too worried about not getting it or understanding. I think the power of dance is in its sensations, is in its feelings, its ideas and its imagery. So just being okay to sit and experience those things. And maybe be open to where that will take your thinking. There’s a gateway there. And, you know, the people I work with, we really try and bring a lot of art forms together and try and open up that accessibility bandwidth, if it makes sense. And that’s why, yeah, we’ll bring in like live music and people might not have rocked up for the dance show, right? They’ll be rocking up for the live game engine streaming that we’re doing or the music. And then what the hope is that they’ll be like, “Wow, Oh my God, dance. I’ve never seen it before, but I had all these great experiences and that was really cool.” Or is being like, “Wow, gaming, that’s sick.”
Courtney Ammenhauser: The Opera House is a classic venue for contemporary dance, but when you put on a show here, you did something this place has never seen before. Can you tell me about your show DOKU with Lu Yang?
Harrison Hall: Yeah. So it was simultaneously split between Sydney Opera House, the Utzon room, with a beautiful view over the water and the West Kowloon Space in Hong Kong. So we had a dancer in Sydney and a dancer in Hong Kong that were in a virtual game space dancing with each other. So an audience in each could experience a live dancer, but then you’re also getting this collaborative idea, this kind of like, stream dancing video game, like, hyper world. Yeah, it was, it’s pretty, pretty amazing. Pretty. Yeah. Tight visuals.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Hell yeah. That sounds so cool. And you’re about to take part in Outlines, The Opera House’s digital performance season. Can you give me a taste of what you’ll be talking about?
Harrison Hall: For Outlines I’m presenting a work, or a few things actually. It’s a bit of like a suite is a work called Maelstrom, it’s a collaboration between me and Luca Dante, and this is really like wild kind of physics simulations on these digital bodies that are like breaking them apart and melting them and creating all this, like, beautiful skin choreography, essentially. And then there’s another work in there called Flesh Cache, which is kind of like a game ride through, a fly through of the Body Crysis series of works that we’ve been doing. So that’s all, yeah, it’s a collaboration with Sam Mcgilp and NAXS in Taiwan, and it’s all the avatars and digital materials, but like in this gamified way through this performance. And then at the end is going to be a really great interview where, yeah, I’ll be chatting to Matt Cornell who’s another digital dance person and we’ll be doing some really fun, real time avatar streaming stuff. So that’s going to be really fun and probably a little bit unhinged and fruity.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Fruity, I like it.
Harrison Hall: Yeah, yeah. But no, yeah, it’s going to be great. I’m really looking forward to it.
Courtney Ammenhauser: On this podcast, we like to ask guests who they think is going to be someone really big in their field, someone that you might have your eye on, or maybe not just in your field as well, just someone who you think is a star on the rise. Is there anyone that comes to mind for you?
Harrison Hall: It depends what scale, But I mean, you know, like Bhenji Ra is an amazing performer, Vogue, Voguer in the scene that’s going to do, you know, is doing amazing things is already huge but is only going to get bigger. Taiga Kita-leong, who performed in the Sydney Opera House, is an amazing, amazing dancer that is going to blow up on so many levels. Yeah. So that’s on the, like, kind of dance space. I think, yeah, in terms of 3D animation, if you haven’t seen them already, Luca Dante and Henry Lai-Pyne are amazing, amazing 3D digital artists that I absolutely adore and think are incredible. Yeah, they’re just a few. I mean, there’s heaps. The beauty about my job is that I’m just surrounded and awestruck by, like, so many talented people, like, all the time. So, yeah, it’s kind of been blown away all the time and then having to, like, calm that down, to be functional, to work with them. That’s the issue.
Courtney Ammenhauser: You’re like “Oh my God I love your work.”
Harrison Hall: Yeah just like, Oh, God, stop.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Well, thank you for sharing those. Definitely some people to keep an eye on.
Harrison Hall: Sure.
Courtney Ammenhauser: And thanks for coming on the podcast today Harrison. It’s been great to have you here.
Harrison Hall: Thanks for being here in this warm studio.
Courtney Ammenhauser: I know, it’s steamy.
Harrison Hall: Cheers.
Courtney Ammenhauser: That was dancer/choreographer Harrison Hall. You can catch Harrison on July 13 at Outlines the Opera Houses’ digital performance season.
I’m Courtney Ammenhauser and this has been Up Next, a podcast from the Sydney Opera House.
From Audiocraft the show is produced by Marcus Costello.
From Sydney Opera House, Head of Digital Programming is Stuart Buchanan. And the Digital Programming coordinator is Georgia D’Sousa.
The Up Next music is by Milan Ring.
Subscribe wherever you listen to podcasts.
Sacrifice, social media and side hustles with Ashli
Courtney Ammenhauser: The Sydney Opera House acknowledges the Gadigal people, traditional custodians of Tubowgule, the land on which the Opera House stands. We honour the long Gadigal history of gathering and storytelling and acknowledge the strength and resilience of First Nations people and communities past and present.
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Ashli: If I’m not careful, social media can rob me of having joy for other people. And that’s my concern. Because, like, no matter how big you are, there’s always going to be other people who are getting other amazing opportunities. And I think to be a nice human and a good friend and a good comrade in the industry you need to have that freedom to be happy for someone.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Hey, I’m Courtney Ammenhauser, and this is Up Next -- your ticket to the most exciting artists and performers coming through the Sydney Opera House doors. Join me backstage where I’m going to be chatting to a spectacular line-up of artists; up and comers who are making waves on one of the most iconic stages in the world. The Opera House is celebrating its first 50 years. So, in every episode of this podcast, we showcase someone exciting who we think will transform the next 50 years of arts and culture.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Fresh from her breakout performance at South by Southwest in Austin, Ashli’s star is on the rise. And for one unmissable night during Vivid Live, she’s going to light up the Sydney Opera House. Born in New Jersey with family roots in South America and Jamaica, Ashli’s family relocated to Sydney when she was 12. We cover a lot of territory in this chat: from how a song comes to life, the role of social media for an emerging artist, where inspiration comes from, sacrifice and hustle culture... Lots of good stuff. Let’s drop in.
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Courtney Ammenhauser: Hey, Ashli.
Ashli: Hi, Courtney.
Courtney Ammenhauser: You’ve got a show coming up at the Sydney Opera House.
Ashli: Yes.
Courtney Ammenhauser: But I heard it’s not the first time that you performed here.
Ashli: No… [giggles]
Courtney Ammenhauser: Can you please take me back to that moment?
Ashli: So I was here, somewhere in this building, this beautiful building, with a bunch of other Year 12 kids chosen to perform one of their major work songs. And I was in my red jumpsuit, desperately trying to stop my hair from frizzing. And I was like, “Oh, my gosh, I can’t believe that I’m in the Opera House right now.”
Courtney Ammenhauser: Do you still get that feeling of surreal?
Ashli: Yeah, definitely. I think it’s cool that I’ve performed here when I was 17 but I think the even cooler thing is: my mum told me that when she was around 10 she was in a kids’ choir and they performed at the Opera House. And it makes me so emotional because I love that idea of this little 10 year old girl and like, oh, one day your kid is going to have her own show here. I don’t know, that’s just so beautiful to me.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah. Imagine someone going back and telling her that. Yeah.
Ashli: Sorry, your brown daughter!? And you’re like, “What? What is that?” Yeah, actually, I’m 10. I’m 10 years old!
Courtney Ammenhauser: Going back to that moment when you were 17 and doing your first performance here, you had only lived in Australia for a few years, right?
Ashli: Yeah.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah. And you weren’t really one of those kids who were drawn to the spotlight. In fact, you kind of hid your talent a little bit. Can you tell me about that?
Ashli: I think I was shy because growing up in America, I was growing up around a lot of kids who looked like me and my family members were there and things. So I always was surrounded by kids who were like me. And so I never felt different. But then when I moved to Australia, I moved into an area where there weren’t a lot of kids that look like me. So I felt like on top of looking different to everyone else, I didn’t want to act different to everyone else.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Can you talk me through your songwriting process? Like, how does it start?
Ashli: So usually it starts with a one-liner I get in my head. So a word or a sentence, and then I’ll write it down in my [Notes App] or I’ll sing it on my phone. Yeah. And I feel like you get your best stuff out that way, where you’re accepting of not just your really good stuff, but your really bad stuff as well. Like, it has to come out. It has to! [laughs] Or you just get constipated creatively. There’s a lesson that. So my song, King Street – I don’t think it had melody to it, it was just me trying to figure out what I wanted to say. And it’s like "I’m holding back my tears on King Street. I know after just sitting, you’re the same. You’re in the same place." Like, it’s kind of like just figuring out what I want to say and just having the story, the rough, like, skeleton there. But then I ended up being, like, [Sings] "Holding back tears on King Street. Came here to just be friends." That was like, how it ended up.
Courtney Ammenhauser: So what happens next; once you’ve got a few ideas written down on the page, what’s the next part of your process?
Ashli: So after that, I go into the studio and I talk to the producer. Whatever producer I’m working with on that day; I work with like three or four guys in Sydney who are just amazing artists and also incredible producers and songwriters. And yeah, even though I have ideas, it’s really important to me to see where they’re at as well and what they’re liking because I feel like when it’s more of a two-way street you get the best out of the session and out of the song. And, I don’t know, I love the idea of them also feeling really a part of the music and the process, not just feeling like I’m just a body in a chair, like trying to communicate with that person behind me. Yeah, but it’s like, “Okay, like we’re in this together, like we’re writing this song.” So we’d have a chat, maybe go for a coffee. I feel like that’s the most important part – just having that personal connection and being like, okay, this is where I’m at. This is what’s happening in my life. I’m good, I’m bad, I’m alright, you know? And then we start with a melodic idea, maybe some chords. We put lyrics to it and then we record. Yeah.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Amazing. And where do you get inspiration from?
Ashli: Mainly from my everyday life. I’ve tried before to write about things that I think are cool or things that are like, trendy or like just, I don’t know, break-ups and stuff like dramatic break ups, but I just haven’t had those experiences. So I try to write from my own life and just... Yeah, the boringness. Especially like the last. Was it last year? Yeah. I was working like a really sucky office job. It was probably one of the worst times.
Courtney Ammenhauser: It’s really good for fueling creativity.
Ashli: Yeah, it’s really good. Like, it’s great to have a job. Yeah, definitely can’t take that for granted. But when you’re not, like, where you want to be, it makes you just so sad.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Did you see this speech that Phoebe Bridges did at that awards ceremony recently? She said a similar thing where she was like, when I was little, I knew I wanted to be – and I’m paraphrasing, obviously – “I wanted to write music and be a singer. And so I tried to construct these stories but they weren’t real to her and they kind of sucked. So then one day she was in the car with her mom, heard Taylor Swift on the radio and was like, Oh, this is a young woman just telling her story. And then she was like, I can tell my story.”
Ashli: 100%.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah.
Ashli: What a legacy is that? Like, you’re inspiring other people to tell their own stories. You’re not just like, this is something only I can do. And once I’m gone, no one’s doing it. But you’re inspiring this whole generation of people to do things in their own way. Yeah, she’s amazing. She’s an incredible artist. I love her.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Let’s talk about social media because, love it or loathe it, it is important.
Ashli: Mhm.
Courtney Ammenhauser: How do you feel about it? Do you find it inspiring or just like another thing you have to create?
Ashli: Yeah, I think it does give me a little anxiety because no matter how hard I can try, there is that element of comparison. And I think, like, I can delete it. And I do that a lot. Like, you just get in those moods, like "I’m deleting Instagram! I don’t need to be on that!" But I think it’s important as a writer for me to live in the times. And I think social media is so ingrained in the day to day experience that it’s something that I want to be a part of because it will affect how I write my music and what songs I write, and it affects our everyday relationships. So I think it’s important as a storyteller to be a part of the story. It’s balancing that and also protecting my own mental health, and it’s being able to be happy for someone without feeling like I need to compare and just being like, “Hey, that’s an awesome opportunity. Full stop.” Instead of being like, "That’s awesome. When’s my turn coming?" And I think if I’m not careful, social media can rob me of having joy for other people. And that’s my concern because no matter how big you are, there’s always going to be other people who are getting other amazing opportunities. And I think to be a nice human and a good friend in a good light comrade in the industry, like you need to have that freedom to be happy for someone. It’s like learning how to live with the beast kind of thing. Yeah. How do I, how do I exist in this world and how do I stay happy? How do I stay healthy? You know?
Courtney Ammenhauser: Totally.
Ashli: Yeah.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Do you ever wish that you were an artist before social media was a thing?
Ashli: Yeah, all the time. Yeah. I really wish I was. Especially when you’re independent. Yeah. I think there are a lot of different hats that you have to wear. There’s not a team of people who are there to push your music and help you create content. It’s just like you. And if you’re lucky, you have a really great manager or you’re really great at managing yourself. But yeah, I think that would have been really cool.
Courtney Ammenhauser: I think not being online can create some mystique and intrigue as well.
Ashli: But it’s hard. It’s hard to build that when you’re a smaller artist. You have to give and yeah, like, I don’t know… I haven’t figured out the formula.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Does it ever feel like music is such a big part of your life that in your free time it becomes too much and you need a break? Or are you just all in?
Ashli: I think one thing that maybe a lot of artists don’t talk about a lot or maybe I just don’t pay attention, is how hard it is in the beginning to balance still doing your normal job and your normal life and then also having to be an artist. And yeah, when a lot of your friends are like working full time and starting to, like, get married and buy houses, you’re like, “Yeah, I’m working on my album. I’m writing songs, like I’m performing at this pub.” [laughs] You feel like maybe people are moving with their lives and you’re stuck with this dream. Like, I think it’s a privilege. It is a privilege to be able to chase after your dreams. Not a lot of people in the world get that kind of opportunity.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Are there sacrifices that you’ve had to make to forge your path?
Ashli: The financial sacrifice is astronomical.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah.
Ashli: It’s crazy. It can be so stressful and not a lot of people talk about it. It’s like what mothers say when they give birth. Like, afterwards it’s just you holding the baby and you forget that you nearly died and you were just in the biggest pain of your life. You’re just like, “Look at this beautiful human!” That’s kind of what it is with music. It’s like, “Oh, the pain.” But then when you have the project, you have the songs, you’re like, “Oh, the joy, the joy, yeah, the joy, the fulfilment.” But yeah, it’s so challenging. Like it’s mentally really challenging.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Often we hear that church music plays quite a big role in the lives of musicians growing up. Is that the case for you?
Ashli: Definitely, yeah. So I grew up in church. I went to a Jamaican church when I was in the States. My dad was a pastor. Yeah, And I think. There’s something about church that I think is so expressive. And I think that that really set me up for doing what I do now, which is literally expressing myself in song. My dad is Jamaican and the way that Jamaicans got to Jamaica was through the slave trade and there was a lot of music and spiritual music that came from that time that are the basis of songs we sing today, and different hymns and things. So it’s a part of my upbringing, but it’s also a part of my ancestry. So it’s played such an important role in it. And I think as well, churches are a training ground, because the first time that I sang in front of people on a microphone was in church. It’s a place where you can mess up and you can try different things. And the first time I was ever in a studio was because of church. So it exposed me to a lot of things. And I’m still a part of church today and I think it’s helped me to be the person that I am and the person that I’m becoming.
Courtney Ammenhauser: I also heard you did a songwriting workshop with Sampa the Great.
Ashli: Yeah.
Courtney Ammenhauser: How was that?
Ashli: That was really cool. It was a Zoom session and I got to show her one of my songs and she gave me some really good advice. She said, “You don’t have to give everything in the first half of the song.” And that was a revolutionary thought to me because I feel like her saying that made me think and it gave me permission to be like, Not every song has to be the start and end of the thought or the story. It can just be a snippet. And I think a lot of times it’s easier for me to think of it like that and condense it, and it’s easier to communicate that way. Like instead of me being, “Blah blah blah blah blah. I loved him. Then we broke up and then we got back together” and stuff. It’s like, okay, let’s just talk about when I first met him. Or that first day or how I felt that one feeling that I felt.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Instead of the whole book it’s a chapter.
Ashli: Exactly. A chapter. A paragraph, even. That was an amazing experience.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Is there stuff that you have to challenge yourself to listen to because you know it’s good for you?
Ashli: Yes.
Courtney Ammenhauser: What kind of music?
Ashli: I think heavy metal.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Tell me more.
Ashli: It’s not something that I gravitate towards but I think there’s power in appreciating music that you don’t make and not just listening to your own genre on rotation. I think it’s important to expand your ear and not just stick in your own little neighbourhood. That’s how music becomes interesting when you start to introduce different elements. But, yeah, heavy metal is not something that comes as a natural desire of mine, but it’s a great genre and there’s a lot that goes into it. I think, as a vocalist, it’s so beyond me how they can sing like that and still have a voice.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Totally.
Ashli: That takes really good technique.
Courtney Ammenhauser: My throat hurts thinking about it.
Ashli: My throat hurts right now and I’m just doing an interview! I don’t know if that’s good or bad, but yeah, that’s the genre. But yeah, power to the people that do it because it sounds like a lot of stuff when you’re not a part of that genre. I don’t like listening to it all the time, but I think the lyrics are really heavy. So yeah, heavy metal.
Courtney Ammenhauser: On this podcast we love asking people who they think are stars on the rise, essentially people who you think are “up next”, like the title. Are there any artists who you’ve got your eye on or who you think our listeners should, keep an eye on or listen to their music? Anyone you’d like to shout out?
Ashli: Yeah, definitely. Definitely. Zion Garcia. He’s a rapper also from Western Sydney. He’s my favourite Aussie artist. He’s just so good. And if you see that he has a show you need to go see him because I feel like watching him is like seeing a star before it bursts.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Wow.
Ashli: He’s just amazing and he’s an amazing person. He’s just so down to earth, so warm, so humble, and he’s just incredibly talented. I could rave about him for ages. Honestly, he’s so, so good. Keep your eyes on him and just be there in the beginning. You will regret it if you’re not 100%.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah, I definitely want to go and check them out.
Ashli: Please do.
Courtney Ammenhauser: That description of the style before it bursts.
Ashli: The energy at his shows is like the beginnings of hip hop or something. Like, you know, when you watch those documentaries?
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah. The Evolution of Hip Hop
Ashli: Yeah! Literally: The Evolution of Hip Hop! I feel like I’m in one of those rooms.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah.
Ashli: Yeah.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Are there any other artists?
Ashli: Yeah. I love Zion. I love Nick Ward as well. He’s an incredible artist. When I was around 18 I did this thing called MCA Gen Next and this kid came in and he was setting up his little Ableton stuff. And I was like, to my friend, “Oh, my God, this guy’s amazing.” Yeah, he was amazing. And that guy was Nick Ward. And just seeing his progression and his journey, like, is so insane. He’s an amazing songwriter, an amazing artist, and also a down to earth person. Yeah. So good.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Ashli, thank you so much for coming on the podcast today.
Ashli: Thank you so much for having me.
Courtney Ammenhauser: That was singer-songwriter Ashli. You can catch her at the Sydney Opera House during Vivid Live this June.
I’m Courtney Ammenhouser and this has been Up Next, a podcast from the Sydney Opera House.
From Audiocraft, the show is produced by Marcus Costello and the executive producer is Selena Shannon.
From Sydney Opera House, Head of Digital Programming is Stuart Buchanan, and the Digital Programming coordinator is Georgia D’Sousa.
Weaving a tapestry with Jazz Money
Courtney Ammenhauser: The Sydney Opera House acknowledges the Gadigal people, traditional custodians of Tubowgule, the land on which the Opera House stands. We honour the long Gadigal history of gathering and storytelling, and acknowledge the strength and resilience of First Nations people and communities past and present.
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Courtney Ammenhauser: Hey I’m Courtney Ammenhauser and this is Up Next, your ticket to the most exciting artists and performers coming through the Sydney Opera House doors.
Jazz Money: I always really struggle to tell people what I do for work, because if I say I’m a poet, people will look at you like you just said, like I’m a wizard. Hahaha. It is such a weird thing to say. But if I say I’m an artist and people say “painting,” and then I go, “No, like mostly like poems.” Like, that’s even worse!
Courtney Ammenhauser: Carve yourself into land… and hear the echo deep… of where your heart is buried.
I think this line perfectly encapsulates the poetry of award winning Wiradjuri artist Jazz Money. Their works delicately trace bodies… places… time… and the complex history of the continent… The poems are often interwoven with music and visuals, so they take on a really multidimensional feel.
Jazz first graced the Opera House stages in 2021. They performed their poetry for the audience at Badu Gili, an event which explored First Nations stories, accompanied by projections on the Opera House’s eastern sails. Jazz was invited back in 2022 to create a digital work for the house’s Shortwave digital commission series.
To anyone who’s read or seen Jazz’s work, it’s clear they’re defining a new path for many poets to come.
Jazz and I had a chat in the backstages of the Opera House. We spoke about their experience growing up as the weird kid in a small town, how to make poetry more accessible, and their views on everyday poetics.
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Courtney Ammenhauser: Jazz money. Welcome back to the Open House.
Jazz Money: Thank you for having me.
Courtney Ammenhauser: It’s so nice to have you here. So much of your work is about place. And I wanted to ask you about the place you grew up in and how you think it’s informed you as a person.
Jazz Money: I do think deeply about place, and I think my relationship to place is... It’s… I don’t know, maybe a bit fragmented, perhaps because, like my ancestral homelands is Wiradjuri country and the Murrumbidgee River and my dad grew up around there. But I’ve never lived on Wiradjuri country. I grew up, in my little years, in Bundanoon in the state forest, and we lived on a kind of far out dirt road and my mum couldn’t drive haha…
Courtney Ammenhauser: Amazing.
Jazz Money: Our closest neighbours were this Thai Buddhist monastery and that was kind of it. Like a lot of the time it was just me and my mum out in this like thousands of hectares bush. So it was kind of remote and it was really, really lovely. It was really beautiful. And then when I was, I don’t know, ten-ish, we moved to the Mornington Peninsula to a town called Red Hill. It’s very, very beautiful and bucolic and very weird in ways that I still struggle to kind of comprehend. Very much a European outpost. It’s got rolling landscaped hills and a lot of when I was a kid, a lot of like hobby farmers. I found it had a bit of a sterility and I was kind of a weird kid and felt like just a bit out of place there. But I guess it kind of was fun because I shed any sense of like trying to fit in and really leant into being a weirdo because I was already a weirdo, you know, like it wasn’t like I was going to impress any kids because I’d lost them from the moment I arrived, so I just like. “Okay, wear the weird clothes, listen to the weird music…”
Courtney Ammenhauser: Lean in.
Jazz Money: Yeah, use the big words, whatever it is. Just kind of be an outsider. So when I could, when I was like 17, I was very, very desperate to move to the city. And now I’ve been in cities for a while and I’m pretty desperate to go back to being a weirdo in the bush.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Hell yeah
Jazz Money: We were renters like my entire life. I continue to be a renter. And so we moved every year or two. And that meant that home was this very, uh, it wasn’t a place so much as it was a feeling or it was a collection of memories held together that you could kind of transport with you. And so I think my relationship to kind of thinking deeply about place probably started at that young age of like, you know, you arrive somewhere new and you’re like, I wonder what happened here? I wonder what the stories of this house are and the stories of this place are. And then I guess having that informed by like a First Nations understanding of place and time and thinking about ‘deep time’, you know, I have the words for right now, when I was little, I didn’t. But understanding that so much has happened on any place, it informs my work because it’s just such a rich place to begin any sort of inquiry into what this continent is and the people who live here.
Courtney Ammenhauser: I feel that urge to want to run away to the bush as well. I feel like maybe there’s a turning point in your life where you like it’s time to go back. Do you think that’s a thing?
Jazz Money: For me, I always felt like it was going to be finite because I feel so much better in the countryside. Even if you’re like at a distance from some things. I don’t know. I just I feel grounded in a way that I really struggle to access in a city, even a city as beautiful as Sydney, where you can really locate yourself because country is so like, so present here, even with sort of all the crazy overlay of what this city is, it’s very inescapable country in the way that it sort of like rises up and everything is so fecund and alive. And if you want to get somewhere, you have to dodge like a or navigate in some way a harbour or a river or a block of sandstone or a great big tree. And I love that about this city, that it really does feel like the colonial relationship to place could really just kind of crumble. But even still, I want to get a bit further away from it.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah, I guess as well, ‘place’ is usually seen as quite a tangible thing and poetry, people kind of see that as a bit more intangible. How do you bring the two together in the work that you do?
Jazz Money: I think poetry is great because it can hold so much complexity and it can make things that feel intangible, touchable, and it can make things that are very solid feel somehow ephemeral. But in the poetry that I write and kind of increasingly make, I feel like I make poetry now in different ways because I operate in a three dimensional space and make art with poetry as well. And it’s such a lovely invitation when thinking about place, right? Because you can kind of start with place, which is very solid, and you can kind of, with your imagination, sort of interrogate so many different parts and bring that into poetry. And that to me is like such a delightful opportunity to get to think more closely about places that I have a relationship to and also to invite other folk into that relationship and to have their own more nuanced relationships, perhaps with a place.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah, absolutely. I want to talk about the beginning of your career because you started out in film, right? Can you talk to me about that transition from film into poetry, or what kind of was the catalyst that got you writing?
Jazz Money: Yeah, I don’t think about it so much as a transition, as much as like these kind of many, many threads of many, many different parts of life just sort of tracking along parallel. And sometimes they sort of interweave and sometimes they get back on to their own sort of part of the tapestry. So when I moved to Melbourne, to Naarm, when I was like a teenager, I went to film school because I knew I was really compelled to like work in story in some way. But I got there and realised I was like a kid from the bush and I really didn’t know what to say and I really couldn’t afford to go to film school. And make the sort of films I wanted to make. So I sort of kicked around and worked adjacent to the industry for a while and also studied a Bachelor of Arts. After a period, I guess I was living overseas for the first time in my early twenties and having a bit of a like crisis of identity as you do and just tried to figure out like what was going on. I felt really homesick in this way that I had really not anticipated and felt very at odds with the way I was living my life and the sort of relationships I was in. And I started writing and I thought it would be like writing a journal, but it was kind of weird poetry. And I eventually came back to Australia and sort of realised that there is this really, really abundant, beautiful poetry community here and it has like these overwhelmingly strong queer First Nations sort of component to it of amazing legacy of femme writers and matriarchs who have been writing in this space. So I came back to Australia and I was still writing poetry, very much for me and working in film. And I was really lucky to work as a videographer at a contemporary art museum in Sydney, in the arts adjacent to film and writing poetry. And at some point they all just sort of merged.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Different pieces of the tapestry that you talked about. Yeah, coming together.
Jazz Money: Yeah. So they still bubble up in different ways. Like I still don’t want to ever not be an arts worker. I love being an arts worker, but at the moment I make a bit more than I do arts work, but I think they kind of weave in and out.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah, you can contain multitudes.
Jazz Money: Exactly.
Courtney Ammenhauser: And you describe yourself as a poet, an artist, an arts worker. Sometimes people might see poetry or art as kind of inaccessible art forms if they’re, you know, maybe not in the scene or aren’t kind of familiar with it or don’t know people in that space. What do you think needs to shift to make the artform seem more accessible?
Jazz Money: That’s exactly how I felt when I was kind of growing up. Poetry was like this very elite, weird thing, the domain of dead white European men.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Totally.
Jazz Money: It was very much something that had nothing to do with my life as an adult, sort of entering that space for the first time and realising it’s a really, really beautiful community. It seems solitary, but it’s really very much a community and I love that about poetry, but in terms of kind of destabilising its image, I wonder how it begins… Right? The relationship that every part of this continent has to orality, to story, to protest, to poetry, is like it’s embedded. And I think encouraging an understanding of that, encouraging an understanding that we actually all operate in a space of poetics, we are all trying to communicate ourselves as best we can to one another. And we’re all trying to do our best at bringing the things that we’ve learnt into our future and trying to navigate that future ethically and with all these complexities of self. That’s what poetry is to me. It is a very queer, weird, squishy, marginal space. And it’s also a very, like, robust thing that you can kind of like stand on and like fight with. The page can be really intimidating. And it’s really not a neutral space. Like the way that we access words and written language is so loaded in what language you’re able to read and write and use and speak in and the fluency that you bring to that space and the way that you feel comfortable with words. And I think sort of poetry is a great tool for destabilising those things, but it is often portrayed and it’s often understood as elite. And so, yeah, returning, returning to this idea of poetry as ‘play’, that’s something that I often try to bring up if I’m ever like teaching a workshop because I really disliked in school the rules. There were so many rules.
Courtney Ammenhauser: For writing.
Jazz Money: For writing and like where… I still don’t know where, like where you’re really meant to put an apostrophe. Like, I can kind of guess, but I really don’t know. And I felt like I was always in trouble for that. And it meant that writing wasn’t fun. Yeah. And now I get to write all the time and it really brings me joy, I really still love and find great pleasure in writing and even writing poetry. And I think it’s because it is a form of play. And that’s what I love when other people experience that you can really express yourself and you can really, you know, make imagination happen on the page or in your mouth or in whatever way that you want to express it.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Jazz You had the opportunity to perform at the Opera House for the first time in 2021 at Badu Gili. Did you ever think that that would happen to perform at the Opera House?
Jazz Money: No. I mean, the Opera House is one of those places that, I don’t know, exists in the imagination of any young person on this continent in a way that I think is hard to kind of overstate. And I was thinking about that coming here today to come yarn with you guys that like the idea of being familiar to the Opera House would have blown my mind as a young person. And like it, and it still does. Yeah, it’s like approaching those sails. It still stirs something in me.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Totally.
Jazz Money: It’s so iconic, and I’ve just spent the better part of the last six months overseas and the Opera House is something that you can say anywhere in the world, really, and it conjures an image, I mean, at least in this sort of places I went. So, yeah, performing at Badu Gili was really amazing. Two nights just on the precipice of another COVID lockdown. I think it was really like we didn’t know how precious it was until a week later when we couldn’t leave the house again. And I remember when I was first contacted about doing it, it was to do an hour long performance and I thought, Wow, these guys don’t know what an hour of poetry will do to a crowd. That is hard. It’s a big ask of an audience.
Jazz Money: And so I was incredibly lucky to perform alongside the beautiful Wiradjuri guitarist and singer songwriter Zeppelin Hamilton, who is now a dear friend. So that’s kind of how we met. I had this great opportunity to perform at the Opera House and didn’t want to do it alone. And we’d sort of been in peripheral circles for a while and I was just able to call him up and be like, “Do you want to just, I don’t know, jam alongside me?” And it was so incredible and so beautiful. And that’s been the start of a really, like, delightful relationship and friendship. So. So many things came out of that performance, not least of all fulfilling like some sort of… not my childhood fantasy, because I never would have dreamt of that. But definitely…
Courtney Ammenhauser: Of performing at the Opera House?
Jazz Money: Yes. If I had had a big enough imagination to imagine I could perform at the Opera House, it would have been a childhood fantasy.
Courtney Ammenhauser: I’m just picturing you in the state forest or down on… is it Red Hill?
Jazz Money: Yeah.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Just like leaning into your weirdness, as you said, not thinking about the Opera house. Thinking about something else.
Jazz Money: Yeah, basically.
Courtney Ammenhauser:How do you think that that performance shaped the work that you’re making now or have made since?
Jazz Money: Yeah. So that performance, like I said, really relied on collaboration, which is something that as a filmmaker and as an arts worker, are very, very near to the way that I work. And obviously as a person, being a person in community and being a person in a multitude of communities, working with other people is just normal. And so as a writer, it’s like this kind of strange thing because writing is kind of by nature, solitary. Yeah, and reading is in many ways solitary. But there is this place in between that is so rich for collaboration. And that performance at Badu Gili was a sort of great insight into that, in the way that collaboration can be brought to, for me, to my writing practice. And it has informed a lot of things going forward. Zeppelin and I have worked together a lot since then and I’ve worked with other musical people and music in other ways has come into my practice and that all sort of very much began at Badu Gilli. I just remember being backstage and kind of having a freak out, like in the Opera House green room with a grand piano in there like this and being like “am I a rock dog?” I never thought I would be a rock dog, I’m a poet! And this weird gateway drug.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Here’s my writer.
Jazz Money: Yeah, exactly.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Zeppelin also helped you with your other work in shortwave, right? For people listening who don’t know what shortwave is, it’s a series of digital commissions. Can you tell us about All the homelands, the piece that you had in shortwave?
Jazz Money: Yeah. It felt really somehow part of a journey, when the opportunity to make another work for the Opera House came up. It was important to me to do that with Zeppelin again, because we’d sort of started this journey together and I really loved working with him and it felt like another step in this, in this kind of dance. And that work was, I am trying to remember, it sits in that haze of COVID times…
Courtney Ammenhauser: Oh yeah.
Jazz Money: I think I was contacted to make it in a lockdown and we thought the lockdown would end, but the lockdown never really ended. And so it was a work kind of thinking about place, like you like you opened this yarn with. At the time I was like really stuck in a city and I wanted to not be here. I wanted to connect with homelands and how do we bring Homeland with us, even when you’re in a small apartment in the inner city and kind of thinking about how we are all the legacy of our homelands, no matter who we are, and we’re all the legacy of this deep care and ancestral guidance and just so much abundance, such an abundance of love for any one of us to exist. We have thousands of ancestors that have had to make the decision to love and survive. And that’s kind of where that work came from, thinking about those kind of great legacies and making it in my backyard, as scrappy as that was, I didn’t have a heap of options. And I’m very fond of that work. I then got to send it over to Zeppelin. He worked with me and brought such a tenderness to the piece.
Courtney Ammenhauser: How did it feel to bring those two areas of your practice of film and poetry together in weaving them in this… the tapestry again that we keep going back to? I just keep seeing this image of the different things that you do for work. What was that like of them merging again?
Jazz Money: I love when I get to work with those two mediums. I think they’re really similar. Personally. The thing that I really love in film is editing, which is not a super sexy thing to say, like you don’t often hear a filmmaker being like, I love editing.
Courtney Ammenhauser: I love sitting behind the computer and zooming really closely.
Jazz Money: But I do, and that’s awesome. And I think it is like a form of poetry, right? Because you’re bringing together a known set of images or a known language, and you put together those images or those words in surprising or similar or complementary or contrasting - to bring it back to like VCE or HSC or whatever - ways. And you create new knowledge by those pairings and you create a new way of understanding in that third space. I could talk about it for ages, but you can bring depth in so many different ways. That’s what I think, that’s what I hope.
Courtney Ammenhauser: We’ve been talking a lot about collaboration and how poetry can be seen as solitary. Can you talk to me more about, yeah, that experience of collaboration and what it does for you as an artist in your work?
Jazz Money: I think collaboration creates space for a new way of working that wasn’t possible in isolation or was impossible as an individual. I’ve been really lucky lately to get to collaborate and work in ways that I really couldn’t have anticipated. I recently wrote a piece, wrote a poem that then got turned into a musical piece that was sung as the Sydney World Pride anthem, with around 400 queer choralers from around the world. I wrote the lyrics and then sent them to a beautiful composer called Joe Twist, who arranged and composed my poem into something epic, something so far beyond what I could have ever done. And it accesses people in this way that I have never done before because suddenly the words are set to music and they can carry with people in a way that a poem kind of can be an earworm, but you can’t hum a poem and know what the words are in the same way, you know. So it’s this great connector and it just fills me with joy to be able to work like that. And that is one way of working in collaboration.
I’ve also been thinking a lot about architectural spaces, and that’s another really different way of working. Yeah, I’ve been thinking about the way that poetry and story and narrative can be embedded in architectural ways. That is really exciting for me. It’s really exciting to be able to think on a scale and think in terms of longevity and embeddedness. That is kind of rare for a poet to be able to think of it that way. But those sorts of collaborations, those conversations that you get to have, to me, when I get to work with someone else and it starts with a really just deep yarn about what we’re bringing to the space and what we want to... where we’ve come from and where we’re going. And often, if you want to write a poem about something like that, you get these little insights into someone’s world that can create the scaffold for… I mean, some of my favourite pieces that I’ve written have started as conversations with friends. Gosh, I wouldn’t want to do it alone.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah. I’m interested to know more about the work that you’ve got coming up. Is there anything that you’d like to share about what’s next for Jazz?
Jazz Money: Yeah, I feel like a bunch of stuff. Been working on a feature film, which is hopefully coming towards its final form. It’s a commission from the National Film and Sound Archive in Canberra, and the work is about archives and very much the problem of archives. The problem of archives from a First Nations perspective as this place where gaze is really controlled and thinking about how we reclaim gaze and how our bodies themselves are the truest archive. It’s not a thing that sits on a shelf, it’s a thing that we live and breathe and cinema sound and film archives are these really strange place that capture the residue of the body that existed, not the body itself. And how can we return dignity to people whose images were often taken without the right consent and not taken in the right ways, and then put in, you know, burned onto discs and put in shelves and sit there as these living things that are not cared for. So that’s what the film is about. Oh, yes, totally straightforward. But it’s all made of archival footage. So that’s one project that I’m really excited to see realised.
And I’ve been working on another book called The Fire Inside. It’s another poetry collection. It’s got some good stuff in it! It’s a bit fire! Nah that’s so naff.
Courtney Ammenhauser: I love it.
Jazz Money: And also talking again about Zeppelin and that sort of collaboration. So Zeppelin’s band Velvet Trip have an album coming out and I’ve worked with them to put a poem in with one of their songs. So that’s just like another lovely part of that dance that’s ongoing.
Courtney Ammenhauser: The next step.
Jazz Money: Yeah, that’s a couple of things. There’s a bunch of other stuff.
Courtney Ammenhauser: I feel like you got heaps on there.
Jazz Money: Yeah, a lot of pies or pies. But that’s yum.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Delicious. I like pies. And this show is called Up Next. And we’re always curious about the future of music, arts and culture. And we love to get our guests to let us know who they think are ones to watch. And so I’m keen to hear from you. Who do you think is up next in poetry and art in Australia?
Jazz Money: I was thinking about this on the way over because obviously you want to come with a kind of robust answer. But I was also thinking it’s this kind of funny premise, right, of talking about up next, because so many people are doing so much incredible work in their communities and creating poetry, and creating art, and creating things that don’t get the recognition that perhaps they deserve or they don’t seek recognition in the way that we have kind of commercialised or bring value to it in a way that can feel very hierarchical. So I wanted to start with that as a caveat. Not to yuck the yum of the show title at all, because I do also want to give a shout out to a bunch of people that I think are really incredible.
I’m always excited when I see some names, you know, pop up and when they’ve done something new. I know that Mykaela Saunders has a collection coming out this year. Mykaela won the David Unaipon award last year and is about to release their first short story collection. So that’s exciting. Sara Saleh is also releasing their debut poetry collection, which will be great. I think people like Maya Hodge and Dakota Feirer and Jasmin McGaughey, all those people, when they’ve got new writing up, I want to read it instantly. They’re such beautiful poets and writers and activists and thinkers. Running water community press in Mparntwe are just doing the most incredible work. You know, I think that that desert context is something that it’s so powerful and often sort of sidelined, by the way that we kind of prioritise the coastal voice.
‘This Mob’ down in Naarm make incredible art and are really based around a community practice. And I also wanted to talk about my little brother Elijah Money, who is an incredible drag performer and performs with people like Stone Motherless Cold and Cerulean, and he’s part of an incredible First Nations drag community that I think are great. So yeah. Up next from my perspective these are all great folk.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Definitely some people to put on your radar and get excited about. Jazz money, thank you so much for coming on Up Next.
Jazz Money: Thank you so much for having me. And I can’t wait to see what’s up next.
Courtney Ammenhauser: You’re hearing a grab from poet, filmmaker and artist Jazz Money’s Shortwave digital work All A Homeland. If you want to check out the full video, head to stream.sydneyoperahouse.com/shortwave.
I’m Courtney Ammenhauser and this has been Up Next, a podcast from the Sydney Opera House.
From Audiocraft, the show is produced by Bernadette Phương Nam Nguyễn mixed by Glen Morrow, executive producer is Selena Shannon.
From Sydney Opera House, Head of Digital Programming is Stuart Buchanan, and Digital Programming Coordinator is Georgia D’Souza.
The Up Next theme music is by Milan Ring. Subscribe wherever you listen to podcasts.
Ziggy Ramo The Storyteller
Courtney Ammenhauser: The Sydney Opera House acknowledges the Gadigal people, traditional custodians of Tubowgule, the land on which the Opera House stands. We honour the long Gadigal history of gathering and storytelling, and acknowledge the strength and resilience of First Nations people and communities past and present.
Ziggy Ramo: You know, as iconic as the Opera House stages are, like the sails are even more iconic. If I was a young kid and I got to see an Indigenous man on top of it, telling our, you know, version of our lived experiences like that would just be so meaningful.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Hey, I’m Courtney Ammenhauser and this is Up Next! A podcast full of sit down chats with the most exciting artists and performers coming through the doors of the Sydney Opera House.
Since the Opera House has been going strong for 50 years… In every episode of this podcast we showcase someone who we think is destined for icon status in the next 50 years.
So join me backstage at one of the most iconic venues in the world.
In the last few years, Ziggy Ramo has basically made a second home out of the Opera House. In 2020, at the height of the pandemic, he premiered his first album, Black Thoughts. It was a livestream in the Joan Sutherland Theatre with no audience. The performance was full bodied rapping and heartfelt truth telling. It packed a punch about the dark side of Australian history. NME called it “the most important Australian album of the year”.
Ziggy came back in 2021 to film the video clip for his version of Kev Carmody and Paul Kelly’s famous track From Little Things Big Thing Grow. He climbed on top of the Opera House sails at sunrise to perform the song out in the open, high above the harbour.
In this episode of Up Next, we chat about his new album, Sugar Coated Lies, and his recent turn as an actor and composer in the Australian drama Black Snow.
What I love about Ziggy is his thoughtful, intelligent approach to sharing his story and the stories of First Nations Australians. He has a powerful ability to have hard but necessary conversations, which he continually brings to his artistry in new and creative ways.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Hey, Ziggy. Welcome back to the Opera house.
Ziggy Ramo: Thank you. Thank you so much. It’s always a pleasure to be here.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah. You’re no stranger to this place. You’ve done a few things here. In 2020, you launched your debut album, Black Thoughts, here, you performed on the forecourt. You’ve been on the sails. You’ve been everywhere, pretty much. What keeps bringing you back?
Ziggy Ramo: It’s a pretty kind of iconic stage, right? Like, yeah, I think it’s a dream to be able to kind of present on, you know, one of the most prestigious stages in the country. So, I mean, as long as the Opera House will have me, I’ll keep on trying to do things for sure.
Courtney Ammenhauser: When you were filming the video clip for Little Things, you were on top of the Opera House. You also directed the clip. What was your creative thinking when you came up with that concept?
Ziggy Ramo: It was pretty audacious. The whole thing was really serendipitous. I was supposed to perform a Like A Version and for a myriad of reasons that didn’t end up happening. But I’d started kind of learning From Little Things Big Things Grow. As that process happened, these words kind of just started falling out and, lo and behold, I had the audacity to go ahead and give myself the permission to rewrite the song. And so I had kind of fallen in love with it and really wanted to be able to share it with people. And I spoke to my manager, Courtney, and I was like, “do you reckon there’s any chance that like this might happen?” And she was like, “Actually, I know Bill, Paul’s manager. Maybe I could reach out.” And we were sitting in the car and literally that car ride Bill emailed me and he said, “Hey, Paul is a big fan. Do you want to perform at the New Year’s Eve concert he does? We’d love to have you.” And I was like, What the hell?
So I emailed Bill back straight away and I was like, “Yes, I would love to. And also, while I have your attention. I have this little thing.” So yeah, I got connected with Paul and he was just so humble and gracious and giving and gave me the permission to go ahead and do it. And we worked really hard on the song. Like, I think we started in November and went through to like January.
Once I actually had the song finished and I listened to it, I just started getting this vision of me standing on top of the Opera house. I don’t know why or how I thought it would be achievable. I think the thing for me is that I knew how iconic From Little Things, Big Things Grow I was. And I also knew how iconic the Sydney Opera House is. And I was kind of putting this side of history out there that, you know, hasn’t been heard and maybe hasn’t been put in those kinds of spaces before. So I made some pretty outlandish phone calls and I was just like, here’s this song that I have and here’s this idea. Is there any chance and it kind of got taken up the line and it came back with a yes, which I didn’t really think would be possible. And then it was just a process of really storyboarding and having a clear idea of what we were trying to get. Because, you know, you don’t get, you don’t get ten days on top of the sails. You’ve got one morning. You know, you’ve got to make it happen.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah, absolutely. And I heard that you had to pass a physical test before you were even allowed to climb on top of the sails. What did that involve? Because I’m picturing, you know, a high school beep test. What was involved in this?
Ziggy Ramo: So I had to go to this physio. Physio, she was so lovely. And she started by saying, like, this is going to seem so bizarre, but you’re just going to have to trust me. And there were all of these like positions she had to, like, simulate to show that I would be able to make the climb. Because when you climb up the sails, like there are all of these like little holes you have to climb through and twist and turn and like it’s just a bit of a maze. So out of context when you’re not there, and someone’s like trying to explain it to you in a room, it was so bizarre. It was all just like a little bit of a whirlwind. And then, yeah, luckily enough, I passed and then got to do the climb at like 4:30 in the morning. And it was just so surreal.
Courtney Ammenhauser: I bet. Wow.
Ziggy Ramo: I had to, like, wear these harness underneath the shirt. And so I cut like this thing out the back where like the harness could come out of. So it didn’t look all bulky and stuff, I was like wearing these super tight, intense, like, skinny compression sports stuff, then like duct tape down really hard. So it was, like
Courtney Ammenhauser: Strapped in.
Ziggy Ramo: Yeah, it was, like, so uncomfortable and so cold because it was like five, 6 a.m. and it was cold and I could hardly breathe, but it was all all in the name of art.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah. Rihanna saw you do that and then was like, I want to be up there.
Ziggy Ramo: Hold my beer. I see you Rihanna.
Courtney Ammenhauser: What an inspired idea.
Ziggy Ramo: Yeah.
Courtney Ammenhauser: And did the test come in handy?
Ziggy Ramo: Yeah, massively. Like, that’s what was so funny. Like, as we were climbing, I was like,
Courtney Ammenhauser: Oh, that was this shape.
Ziggy Ramo: That’s this shape. That’s that shape. Yeah. I mean, like, you get up to the top and it opens up and it’s just like, yeah, it’s breathtaking.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Especially at that time of day.
Ziggy Ramo: Yeah. I mean, I don’t know if this is allowed to be aired or not, but everyone who climbs up signs it. And there’s like these signatures from like.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Dish who’s been up there.
Ziggy Ramo: So far, like from people who’ve worked there, like from the moment it opened. Yeah, I like signed right next to Jackie Chan. And then during our Aboriginal flag and I didn’t see any before then, so I was like, That’s pretty, pretty cool.
Courtney Ammenhauser: You’ve left your mark
Ziggy Ramo: Yeah. Yeah, totally.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Nice. I want to go back to the premiere of Black Thoughts. You had a smoking ceremony on the stage for that. What did that mean to you?
Ziggy Ramo: It was pretty surreal, honestly. At the time, Sophie Young and Alistair Hill, they were kind of my like, main people I was running point with while developing that show. They were pretty great. On one of our first calls, Alistair Hill asked me. like, “What’s your Blue Skies dream vision of how this show could go?” And I asked him, like, “Do you mean that honestly? Like, can I really go for it?” And like, he wanted to hear it. And that was one of the, kind of, first things that was a really important thing because it was like in the middle of this pandemic and there was so much heaviness and weight and angst and displacement. Yeah, it was just a very charged time. So the first time being able to step on the Opera House stage and present the debut of Black Thoughts, it just felt vital to be able to cleanse the space and start on the right foot by paying homage and acknowledgement. We did like a rehearsal to camera and it was a bit scattered, honestly, and then to just pause and literally smell the burning of fire and the crackling of the leaves like under the flame and receive a Welcome to Country. You just felt the whole room go still. And that was so big because then we all jumped on stage and like performed and it just couldn’t have gone better.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah, go and check it out if you haven’t seen it, you’ve just released your second album, Sugar Coated Lies. You actually wrote the album about four years ago, right?
Ziggy Ramo: Yes.
Courtney Ammenhauser: A lot has happened in the last four years. Pandemic, the rise of the Black Lives Matter movement, of course, your fame has grown as well, and I assume you as a person, too. What’s it like releasing it now four years later after all that has happened?
Ziggy Ramo: Yeah, I mean, it seems to be an accidental trend where I write albums and sit on them. I mean, Black Thoughts went through a similar thing.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah.
Ziggy Ramo: Prior to putting Black Thoughts out, I thought I was going to put out Sugar Coated Lies in, kind of, 2020.
Courtney Ammenhauser: So you had them both there?
Ziggy Ramo: Yes, I did. But I’d chronologically written Black Thoughts and then written Sugar Coated Lies. And so I think what I really learned about Black Thoughts was, you know, when you put the art forward and you kind of are open to when the art makes sense, like you just kind of trust your gut and go for it. And with 2020 and everything that it was, there was just a really clear moment for me where I just got clarity and it was like, okay, Black Thoughts needs to be out in the world now.
Courtney Ammenhauser: This is the more urgent one.
Ziggy Ramo: Yeah, exactly. And then that kind of happened with Sugar Coated Lies. Kind of like eight months of last year for me was working on a project called Black Snow, which I was acting in and co-composed the score. And that kind of show looks at the Australian South Sea Island experience because I’m also an Australian South Sea Islander. My great great grandfather, Kwailiu was enslaved and brought over to work away on the sugar cane fields. It was like 62,000 South Sea Islanders who were brought across. And, you know, it’s this part of our history that we don’t ever really talk about or reflect. And Sugar Coated Lies is an album, you know, it’s exploring that lineage also in a nuanced way. Like the whole process of Sugar Coated Lies was about erasure of history in the same way that has happened to Australian South Sea Islander history. So it was about sugar coating these songs so that they feel polished and melodic and they can be played on radio and all of that. But deep below it is like this insidious thing that’s bubbling. And I say all of that to say when I was working on Black Snow, it’s this genre murder mystery pace with Travis Fimmel, who is the super good looking man from Vikings. And you come into it and you’re watching it, and then underneath the surface, you start to learn about this community of Australian South Sea Islanders and Sugar Coated Lies obviously was written years before that, but it felt so paralleled and connected in that.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Why was it already called Sugar Coated Lies?
Ziggy Ramo: Yeah
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah. Wow.
Ziggy Ramo: Which was like such a spin out.
Courtney Ammenhauser: That’s wild because you’re there and it’s the sugar cane industry in North Queensland.
Ziggy Ramo: Well, literally.
Courtney Ammenhauser: That is just so serendipitous or something, of like, I don’t know that timing, that’s an amazing story.
Ziggy Ramo: Yeah, and I think that’s the whole thing of trying to remain open, you can’t control any of that
Courtney Ammenhauser: Sugar Coated Lies covers a lot of heavy content around mental health and intergenerational trauma of First Nations people. And you talk about the process of putting your feelings and experiences into an album as being ‘therapeutic’. Can you tell me about that?
Ziggy Ramo: Yeah, In Black Thoughts it was so much about… I mean, it’s pretty morbid, but there’s a line in the last song called Kids and I say “This obituary that I filled full of truths can now become very handy”. And I didn’t know how long I would be around because like, how much the intergenerational trauma was impacting me. My mental health was, you know, so frail that it just didn’t feel like I would be here. And with Black Thoughts, it was like, well, if I’m not going to be around, I’d like to at least leave my understanding of these systems and institutions and, you know, a lens that isn’t often heard. So Black Thoughts was so much about the external, you know, these big frameworks and mechanisms and systems of oppression. It was really explicit and it was really clear, but it was about external. With Sugar Coated Lies it was about, you know, Ziggy Ramo as a character existing in that context. So, Sugar Coated Lies is about going inside and internal. I kind of showed you what the context is that I live, and now I’m going to show you how it makes me feel.
Courtney Ammenhauser: You’ve described wanting your music to be the antidote to apathy and your first album, Black Thoughts, I feel like it did it in a way that’s very sonically big, whereas with Sugar Coated Lies it’s more subtle and more nuanced. But, you know, they’re both taking these different approaches. I wanted to know what changed in you between those two albums and the writing process of them.
Ziggy Ramo: I mean, I changed, like, right? I grew, I got older, I experienced different things. But the purpose is the same in that like, you know, I care for Country. That’s what has happened in my lineage for 50,000 years. So I know why I’m doing what I’m doing. It’s to care for a Country. It’s to leave this space better than I found it. And on an individual level, like just as a person who’s walking around, I don’t want to like, make the same thing right? It’s like eating the same thing for dinner every day. Like, eventually you grow tired of that. And so Black Thoughts was done to me. That was that work. So when I went to start writing The Next Body of Work, it was about like, where could I take that same purpose? But, you know, explore it in a different way? I think I guess the growth side of things is that it was about going into songwriting. Black Thoughts was so much to me about like, I am a lyricist and I’m really good at rapping, like from just a craft perspective. Whereas when I moved into Sugar Coated Lies, like I started producing and I, you know, as much as I grew up listening to Nas and Common, like I also was a kid in the late nineties singing Britney Spears. So, like, I love pop and I love melody, and melody is this universal language that moves people. So I think I wanted to start taking and pulling from different spaces and figure out how that works for me. Like it wasn’t about like tone policing myself to make it, like, more subtle and more palatable. It was like, I also love these monkey bars over at the playground as well. Like how would I do it?
Courtney Ammenhauser: Let’s talk a bit more about Black Snow, which you’ve touched on already, because, yeah, your career, it’s moved into this new direction. You’re acting in this show. You also did the composition. How did that all come about?
Ziggy Ramo: Funnily enough, the Opera House had a little bit of a part to play in it. So Rosemary Blight, who is an executive producer on Black Snow, she had seen the Little Things music video, and when Rosemary saw that, she started to kind of join the dots of, Oh, maybe this person is interested in other mediums and other spaces. And so from there, Rose ended up going and watching the 2020 Black Thoughts performance as well. And, you know, I think I try… like I take performing very seriously and it is a performance in every, you know, aspect of the word. So when Rose saw those two pieces of work, she got pretty fixated on the idea of me being incorporated into two Black Snow. So they reached out in like May, and we started shooting in June. So it was like… it was like a two week turnaround.
Courtney Ammenhauser: That must have been a bit of a whirlwind.
Ziggy Ramo: Massively, massively. But I think it was, kind of, also so good because I kind of couldn’t overthink. It was just about instinct and storytelling and in the deep end and trying not to drown. Yeah, came on kind of solely on the acting thing with the intention to be able to talk about composition. And as I was on set, it just started to become really obvious to me how I thought the score should sound. Because this story, it doesn’t try to tell every story of Australian South Sea Islanders. It’s not about the entire diaspora. Like it’s zoomed in on a single girl of a single family. And that family is from Tanna island, and Tanna Island’s in Vanuatu. And you don’t actually see Tanna Island in the show because it’s about like the Australian South Sea Islander community and that community’s obviously in Australia. But that lineage is derived from Tanna island. So there was such a clear thing in my mind that we could parallel the story of the Baker family through the music that like if we went to Tanna Island and were able to record, we would then take those sounds and then bring them to Australia and then we would, you know, recontextualize them and change them and manipulate them and process them so that, you know, at times they’d almost become not recognisable and different. And as the score goes over the six episodes, like the distortion and those kind of bass samples become more and more, yeah, distorted and hidden. Yeah. So I kind of felt so strong about that, but I’d obviously never composed a score before, so Rosemary ended up bringing in a beautiful composer and human Jed Palmer, who has done this a lot. This is what he does. And Jed was so open to collaboration. So I finished my last day on set in August at like 10:00 at night. And then the next morning we flew to Vanuatu and did a week of recording with family and were welcomed into the Bethel Community Village with Chief Jeffrey, and he took us all around Tanna Island and we were given these beautiful songs and songlines and furthermore given the permission to be able to use them, incorporate them and change them for the context of, of a score. And so after about a week of recording, we went to work on doing like 3 hours of original music and in a couple of months. So it was pretty, pretty intense.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah, I can imagine. I mean it sounds like such an amazing experience to actually get to go and be there with the community and everything that you’ve just described. In terms of like the way you approach your artistic practices as a musician for your solo work. How did it feel to be working in this new way?
Ziggy Ramo: I loved it. Like I had more fun in the post-production. I think like filming, on set, like actors kind of get all of their attention because that’s who people see. But what you film on set, it’s kind of like getting groceries at a store and then when you go into post-production, it’s about actually cooking the meal and it’s like making those creative decisions about how a show will be presented. And so when I was sitting there working on the score, it was just so freeing and so liberating in a lot of ways. So sitting in this room making music invisible, I hadn’t had that kind of experience because all of the music I’d made up until this point has been attached to my face. The idea to, like, step back on stage, like while I was still in that process felt really jarring. And then I ended up performing at First and Forever, and it was like the best performance ever. So it was like, Oh, no, that’s that’s right. Like, I love the attention. Yeah. Look at me. Yeah.
Courtney Ammenhauser: And what was it like bringing that South Sea Islander perspective to this project? And you know, you mentioned it’s not trying to tell everyone’s story. It’s like zoomed in. But what was it like to bring that perspective?
Ziggy Ramo: I almost felt like that was my biggest responsibility honestly. Like, yes, I was acting in it. Yes, I was writing music and all of that allowed me to be in the room. So I was quite lucky. I, like, literally sat in on like all the final mix reviews. So the way that TV’s made is you go and film it and yet edit it and then you do the scoring to the edit. And then once that’s done, you’re also doing sound design and a bunch of stuff and then the producers and the creator will like sit in the room and make final decisions about what’s working, how loud things should be, if things should stay or go. And I was able to sit in on them. And that was, I think, probably my most important work on the show, because it was about really trying to honour and ground the show in authenticity so that, you know, and this was something I would often say in the room is, you know, we’re telling this story on this stage for the first time. So we get to set the precedent of what it is to tell stories about our community. You know, I dream that Black Snow opens the door for many other stories to come, but at least there’s like a benchmark of: we had community consultation, we went to Tanna Island, like we included family like and had Australian South Sea Islander people sitting in the room all the way from start to go. So I think that was so important to me about the kind of foundation that we were laying down.
Courtney Ammenhauser: And where do you think you would go next with your music?
Ziggy Ramo: I know where I’m going next.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Oh dish! Scoop. Hello.
Ziggy Ramo: I mean, the next time we sit down and talk about the next album, Human, it’s going to be a similar thing where I wrote it in 2021.
Courtney Ammenhauser: I was actually going to say, are you sitting on three albums right now Ziggy?
Ziggy Ramo: Yeah, so the next project is called Human, and it’s like both a book and an album. So each song is a chapter in a book because, you know, when I wrote Black Thoughts, it’s like 8000 words and that’s so lyrically dense, right? But a book is like 80,000. So like, you have so much more space and time for history and context. And by doing that, it means like the songs can be more, I guess, like reflective and nuanced in ways and Little Things is on that album. So writing Little Things kind of was this conduit to picking up the guitar and I ended up writing like nine singer songwriter folky songs, which obviously is a massive departure from, you know, what’s happened prior. But I think it was about reinventing and shedding, I think, and trying to grow in a different artistic way.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah, that’s so exciting to hear. Like, you know, you’re moving into different genres and sounds. How is the album and the book like, how do they speak to each other? How do they coexist? You know, you said there’s a chapter for each song, but can you explain how they kind of are in dialogue together?
Ziggy Ramo: Massively so like the way each chapter starts is with the written lyrics of the songs, because they’re like these poems that have kind of taken shape. And then that kind of sets the thesis of each chapter. And then, you know, you’ve got 10,000 words to play with, going into history context and lived experience. So the way that I kind of explain each chapter is that it’s almost like a Hot Dog, which is a weird analogy. But, you know.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Tell me more.
Ziggy Ramo: The bread is like the dry history context. The foundation that, you know, sets the table and keeps it all together and then the like meat is the lived experience and how that history and context interacts with the lived experience. And then your onions and sauces and condiments are my ideas about how those are in dialogue with each other. So you get the thesis from the poem, you get the hot dog from the chapter, and then you listen to the song. Because by reading the words, then reading the chapter, and then hearing it like it hits you in such a different way, because all of these little breadcrumbs that are kind of buried in the songs like you actually know, now, because you’ve been able to see it and read it in a different way.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Can’t wait to read and listen to both.
Ziggy Ramo: Either can I!
Courtney Ammenhauser: Is there like a release date or is that still in the works?
Ziggy Ramo: I mean, like I could tell you something, but it’s like, who knows with me?
Courtney Ammenhauser: Okay, fair enough.
Ziggy Ramo: When the breeze hits me at the right time.
Courtney Ammenhauser: It’s true…
Ziggy Ramo: It’s all moving in the right direction, you know, it’s always the final, like five, 10% that takes the two years.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah, refining.
Ziggy Ramo: Yeah, yeah.
Courtney Ammenhauser: So, Ziggy, you’re writing a book. You’re acting in things. You’re composing scores. You’re writing music. You’re the multi-hyphenate.
Ziggy Ramo: Slashie
Courtney Ammenhauser: Slashie ultimate. What kind of artist do you most identify as?
Ziggy Ramo: I think it’s not a medium. It’s, I guess, the concept… coming from an oral culture. You know, we’ve had song men and women and storytellers who are gatekeepers of knowledge and of wisdom for caring for Country. And so I think because I’ve grown up dispossessed of those songlines because of the removal and denial of access to Country, the innate ability hasn’t gone anywhere and the desire to find it is now like, more stronger than ever. So I think for me it’s storyteller. I think that’s why I always am drawn to, whether it’s books or scores, acting or composing, it’s because all of those things are about communicating a story and that is what inspires and excites me. I think for me it’s really come down to a place of like, I want to see change for my community. And I know I have stories and a perspective that can help create that change. I know, like, a lot of Australians don’t understand hip hop and rap as a craft and as an art form, but it’s like we understand, like for mediocre guitar chords going around and around, right? Like, so I’m kind of like, well, I feel confident in my ability to shift and adapt and learn because I can tell stories. It’s so much about finding the right space for the right story, and that’s like the exciting pursuit for me.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Mmm. Finding that way for people to listen. This podcast is all about spotlighting artists who we think are up next. I’m keen to hear from you who are some artists that you’ve got your eye on or who you think are kind of changing the game right now or will be changing the game soon?
Ziggy Ramo: Yeah, totally. I mean, an artist that I worked with on Sugar Coated Lies, Alice Skye, I’ve forever been the biggest fan, I think, like just such a beautiful transcendent voice, Alice always moves me to like another place and is also just such a beautiful person. And I mean, like Alice is already doing amazing stuff, but I’m always just like any stage that Alice can get onto, I’m always going to be there cheering for her.
Another young artist out of Perth, WA, is Mali Jose. I met Mali when I was still living in Perth. I would have been 19 or 20 and Mali was I think like 14 in high school. And I had a family friend who’s friend of a friend was his school teacher. And at the time I’d like just started kind of making a little bit of noise doing music. And Mali was like playing state soccer and was also at an acting school and but also like loved music and really loved it. And so I went and caught up with him one day after school and he like, played me these demos and I was like, Oh my God. Like, because when I was at that age, I was kind of similar, but I didn’t know anyone or have any kind of access into knowing what to do or how to go about it. And so when I met Mali, I was like, Oh, it’s kind of like looking back in time in a way. And Mali’s just been growing and growing and growing. And last month while I was in Perth, I got to hang out with Mali a lot and, you know, it’s so interesting just to Yeah, I mean, it feels like so much about Up Next. And he actually just put out a song with Koby D, who’s an amazing MC and it’s only kind of going to be a matter of time for all of these awesome things that’s going to be ahead for Mali.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah, Mali’s probably sitting on a couple of albums as well.
Ziggy Ramo: Yeah, he’s like, he’s so much like that as well. Like he’s got all the ideas.
One other artist is Vonn who’s on Sugar Coated Lies. It’s like the first stuff that Vonn’s ever put out. I met Vonn over the years and have always been such a believer in Vonn’s voice. I know music is very soon, we’ve done some writing, and yeah I’m very excited for people to get to know Vonn.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Oh yeah definitely a couple of artists to keep an eye on.
Ziggy Ramo: Yeah I over delivered if anything.
Courtney Ammenhauser: No I love it, the more the merrier. Ziggy thank you so much for coming on the podcast today.
Ziggy Ramo: It’s such a pleasure. Thank you for having me.
Courtney Ammenhauser: That was rapper, songwriter, actor, musician, author, truth teller, all round superstar slashie Ziggy Ramo. You can watch Black Thoughts and Little Things on the Sydney Opera House streaming platform at stream.sydneyoperahouse.com.
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I’m Courtney Ammenhauser and this has been Up Next, a podcast from the Sydney Opera House.
From Audiocraft, the show is produced by Bernadette Phương Nam Nguyễn, mixed by Glen Morrow, executive producer is Selena Shannon.
From Sydney Opera House, Head of Digital Programming is Stuart Buchanan, and Digital Programming Coordinator is Georgia D’Souza.
The Up Next theme music is by Milan Ring. Subscribe wherever you listen to podcasts.
Another one woman show with Liz Kingsman
Courtney Ammenhauser: The Sydney Opera House acknowledges the Gadigal of the Eora Nation, traditional custodians of Tubowgule, the land on which the Opera House stands. We honour the long Gadigal history of gathering and storytelling, and acknowledge the strength and resilience of First Nations people and communities past and present.
Liz Kingsman: What is a podcast if it doesn’t start with people doing the podcast admin?
I don’t know if you maybe have because you’re quite a fancy podcast, so maybe you have, like, music, an intro and it’s all very official, but everyone loves “have you got everything?
Courtney Ammenhauser: Oh, we’re recording, wow!.
Liz Kingsman: Wow. Oh, wow! Hello.Have you started this? Is this on? Is this thing? Oh, my God. I just told that crazy anecdote about getting here…
Courtney Ammenhauser: Hahaha
Courtney Ammenhauser: I’m Courtney Ammenhauser and this is Up Next! It’s your ticket to the most exciting artists and performers coming through the Sydney Opera House doors.
Join me backstage where I’m going to be chatting to a spectacular lineup of artists. Up and comers who are making waves on one of the most iconic stages in the world.
The Opera House has just celebrated its first 50 years. So in every episode of this podcast we showcase someone exciting who we think will transform the next 50 years of arts and culture.
Do you like your female characters to be raw… honest… maybe a little messy in their careers or their love life. Women who haven’t got it all figured out, even though they’re approaching 30! I bet I’m sounding really relatable.
I could be describing hundreds of female centred stories that have become hugely popular over the last decade. From Girls, to Fleabag, to Hacks, to Broad City. Nowhere are these tropes better distilled down to their most concentrated form than in the classic theatre format the one woman show.
Sydney expat Liz Kingsman flips the format upside down in her critically acclaimed, smash-hit meta theatrical parody called One Woman Show.
The show has had rave reviews in the UK and is now touring internationally for the first time. Liz and I sat down midway through her run of shows at the Opera House. She very generously popped in just before the curtain went up, to talk about how she managed to create a satire so brilliant that it ended up showing on the West End in London.
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Courtney Ammenhauser: Liz Kingsman, Hello. Hello, how are you?
Liz Kingsman: Yeah, good, thank you.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Thanks for coming on the podcast today.
Liz Kingsman: Thank you for having me.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Would you like to do some podcast admin?
Liz Kingsman: Been fiddling with our headphones, discussing our journeys in
Courtney Ammenhauser: Pouring a drink really close to the mic.
Liz Kingsman: Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. What was your journey like to come in today?
Liz Kingsman: I got the 396 bus. Lovely aircon on the bus. You forget the value of air con on public transport.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Until you’re in the stinking heat in Sydney.
Liz Kingsman: Yep, yep, yep, yep, yep. I actually came in early to the Opera House because the chair that I use in the show was slightly wobbly. And we had made a whole email chain about getting, between a production manager and getting someone from the opera House to come in with a drill and a bolt or something. And I was like, I’ll come in at three before the podcast record, maybe three. Me messaging on the way, “I’m going to be 10 minutes late”. “Okay, I’ll let them know” all this stuff. And then I got here and the man came to the stage and he literally just, I watched him, just tighten like a screw. Not even like with a tool, just like.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Bare hands?
Liz Kingsman: Like if you’re an office chair and you thought, Oh, that’s a bit wobbly. And you’d find something to tighten. He did that and he was like, Is that better? And I leant back and I was like, Hmm, yeah, no, that’s fixed actually. So like 25 people involved in this email chain to-.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Well look, it’s fixed now and it shows that everyone really cares.
Liz Kingsman: It’s true. It was a test and they all passed.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah. I saw your show last week.
Liz Kingsman: Did you see how loose that chair was?
Courtney Ammenhauser: Well, it’s a prominent feature in the show. So when you said the chair’s broken and I was like, Well, that’s a major issue. So no wonder there were so many emails.
Liz Kingsman: Yes. The Chair and me have a sort of 50/50 billing in the show.
Courtney Ammenhauser: One woman show plus chair
Liz Kingsman: One chair show
Courtney Ammenhauser: One chair show. You know, you’re speaking now and you’ve got this effortless British accent, but you’re actually from Sydney, right?
Liz Kingsman: Yes. What is the truth?
Courtney Ammenhauser: Tell me.
Liz Kingsman: This is my voice. This is my real voice. Okay. Unfortunately for me. I am from Sydney, and then I shed my Sydney voice, not intentionally, in London and in Durham, where I went to uni. All the students at the uni I went to spoke like this and it just sort of rubbed off on me. And then… and now I don’t sound like I’m from Sydney, but I am from Sydney.
Courtney Ammenhauser: But you do a flawless Australian accent in the show too. So it’s…
Liz Kingsman: That’s good. I’m glad you used the word flawless. You can hear like there’s like a giggle just for the accent here that there isn’t when I’ve done the show in London and then I do the Australian accent, they just think she’s doing an accent. But here there’s a ripple that goes around the room of just, like, I think it’s fear that someone’s going to attempt it because it’s famously a very hard accent to do, and I think people butcher it a lot and I feel like I am butchering it in the show.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Really?
Liz Kingsman: But it is legitimately the voice that just sits underneath my other voice. And so I’ve been worried in the weeks leading up to coming here that it was all going to fall apart with that one character.
Courtney Ammenhauser: So uni took you to the UK?
Liz Kingsman: Yes. So I went to uni, I went to uni actually at Sydney Uni for a very short period of time and then left it, no slight, no slight on Sydney uni it was a great uni, I just sort of had my heart set on going to the UK for so long.
Courtney Ammenhauser: So did you study film or something else?
Liz Kingsman: No, I just studied English and History. I wanted to go to film school, but it’s very hard to get into film school if you’ve not already made films. Think maybe they’re going to cotton on to that catch 22, because obviously the only people that can have made a short film without going to film school are the ones who are loaded. So like, I think maybe they’ll figure it out soon, hopefully.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Hopefully
Liz Kingsman: Hopefully, maybe this podcast is going to be the thing that breaks the film school industry wide open. But yeah, I desperately wanted to go to film school and just like I didn’t meet any of the requirements.
Courtney Ammenhauser: So we laugh now.
Liz Kingsman: We laugh now. Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha. Took me so much longer to get into the industry. Ha ha ha ha. But look at me now. I’m so near it.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Hahahaha. So I heard in an interview that you didn’t actually tell anyone that you wanted to be an actor until your mid-twenties. Were you quietly pursuing acting during that time?
Liz Kingsman: Saying that I wanted to work as a director or working in the film industry was like a safe way of getting near it without having to say the deluded, insanely deluded thing of like, “I want to be an actor”, which I still can’t say. Like, you know, when you do your landing slip, not slip, whatever it’s called, immigration, Oh..
Courtney Ammenhauser: It’s like occupation.
Liz Kingsman: Yeah, I just like what, Snapping my pen. I wrote Animal Trainer. Yeah. I just couldn’t, can’t, can’t bring myself to write actor. It’s really fun for my agent.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Do you think any of your mates kind of cottoned on?
Liz Kingsman: I was definitely like the stupid one at school? Like in terms of comedy stuff, Like was definitely the most into comedy.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Like class clown kind of?
Liz Kingsman: Sort of. But I guess we didn’t really have like... I don’t feel like we had a class clown and it wasn’t me. I meant like you still had opportunities to show off and be stupid and funny at school like you just did, right? I did do drama at school. And then we also did, like, house plays and things like that. So there’s always opportunities to be like, “I think I’m funny”, you know, or like, I would, you know, whatever it is..
Courtney Ammenhauser: So you were having those moments when you were young, like kind of testing the waters in comedy, getting kind of that rush when you get a laugh or being into watching it-
Liz Kingsman: Well, it was only until uni I started writing comedy at uni.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Okay.
Liz Kingsman: I didn’t think I could pursue it as a career, but it was very fun, very stressful as well. Like putting on a comedy show at uni when you’ve not tested any single one of the jokes out beforehand. At our uni they had a really great student theatre called the Assembly Rooms and you could book, they had like say a term was nine weeks, they had nine slots. Everyone would queue in the morning at like 6 a.m. on the day they released two slots, you’d have to be, like, act like a business person and be like, “Yes, I am going to make money off this thing”.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Oh to like pitch your show?
Liz Kingsman: You had to do like an application form to pitch your show, but obviously there was only like a limited amount of people who wanted to do that. And so pretty much everyone would get, like, everyone would get the slot they want. So every term it would just be like the same people getting up with another slot. But it was very creative because like you just you’d bag a slot and then you’d have like-
Courtney Ammenhauser: You’d have a deadline.
Liz Kingsman: Four, five weeks, whatever it was, to put on a show.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah.
Liz Kingsman: And so I was really great. It was just constant, like you were sometimes in like three or four shows at the same time.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Oh, wow.
Liz Kingsman: But everyone dovetailing and being like, “Are you doing the Shakespeare tour? I’m, you know…” we’re such nerds as well…
Courtney Ammenhauser: I’m not in the sixth slot, I’m in slot 8.
Liz Kingsman: Exactly. Yeah, you know, after exams, when everyone else in the uni was just getting pissed and having picnics, like all of my friends, we were all just like, Well, I’ve got to learn my lines for Beatrice.
Courtney Ammenhauser: It’s so wholesome.
Liz Kingsman: Yeah, it was so wholesome, so nerdy. We didn’t go clubbing. We’d just stay up all night writing comedy sketches.
Courtney Ammenhauser: I love that. Just the drug of comedy.
Liz Kingsman: Yeah, exactly. The sweet high of making people laugh.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah. So what do you think it was that drew you into comedy back in the day?
Liz Kingsman: I don’t know. I guess it was a combo of, like, everything I’d watched growing up. I watched a lot of British comedy, and then suddenly I was sort of in England surrounded by people who knew those references. And we all had the same sort of reference pool, if you know what I mean.
Courtney Ammenhauser: That must have been so joyous. Just like, yes, they get it. They get where I’m coming from.
Liz Kingsman: Yeah, yeah. So I’d only watch BBC shows.
Courtney Ammenhauser: What kind of shows?
Liz Kingsman: I guess I watched a lot of shows like Big Train and Smack The Pony, Mighty Boosh and Ab Fab and, you know, so all the classics really. I remember discovering Mighty Boosh on SBS at like one am and being like, What is this? And we couldn’t even remember, like, we didn’t know what it was called. It wasn’t until I got to England, I was like, Oh, I have seen The Mighty Boosh. And then you learn that Mighty Boosh is enormous, this enormous cultural touchstone for like so many comedians in the UK. I was in the wrong hemisphere.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah. But you found it now.
Liz Kingsman: Yeah. But I desperately miss Sydney.
Courtney Ammenhauser: So what is it that you miss the most about Sydney?
Liz Kingsman: I just miss the... it sounds like this is an advert for Australia, but I just miss the quality of life. Like I miss the sun. It sounds so obvious, but I miss that your day can just be nice and not miserable. Like I think in London you have to seek things to make things joyful because it is grey and cold and raining and everyone has a great sense of humour and that’s, you know, everyone has a lovely sense of humour and everyone is doing fun things, but it just feels like, you, I do have days of just waking up and being like, it’s like someone’s just taken the colour out of everything and then you come here and everything’s just like gorgeous and like your eyeballs are hurting because everything’s so gorgeous all the time and everyone is so gorgeous as well.
Courtney Ammenhauser: The sky’s too blue.
Liz Kingsman: Yeah, you know. So I miss that. And I, it’s just that I think just people here have got it right in terms of, like, what they prioritise. They’re like, I’m going to clock off at this time and go for a swim. You’re like, that is.. that sounds great. Actually.
Courtney Ammenhauser: It’s pretty nice, especially this time of year. Your show is mysteriously just called one woman show. Before going, I was trying to read up on it and loads of the reviews just say things like “Hard to describe, just go see it. You won’t regret it.” So how do you explain the show to people?
Liz Kingsman: Yeah, I Don’t do a very good job at that. I’ve done a lot of press by this point, you know, for the show. I basically say, “Oh, I don’t know. I don’t know how to describe it.” And then I fluff around for a bit and then whatever I give the journalist in that answer, they’re not able to print because I said I said nothing useful. So I just sort of stuttered a lot. And then I haven’t explained what the show is, but if I was going to attempt it today here and now it’s basically just a theatre spoof, like it’s a pastiche of the genre that the name borrows its title from. So it’s a pastiche of one woman shows.
Courtney Ammenhauser: I think that’s a great little elevator pitch.
Liz Kingsman: Yeah.
Courtney Ammenhauser: So to explain the show and to market it when it’s so mysterious, you, you created a trailer.
Liz Kingsman: Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Which doesn’t really convey too much about what to expect either. Really?
Liz Kingsman: No, I was the marketing company’s worst nightmare because they said we need some video content. And I said, “Great. But I don’t want to make any video content. I don’t want to make any video content.” And then they said, they did convince me that video content was very important for sales.
Courtney Ammenhauser: And you got someone pretty important. Uh.
Liz Kingsman: I assume you’re referring to Kit Harington.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Of Game of Thrones fame. How did that happen?
Liz Kingsman: He wouldn’t take no for an answer, you know, he just like, like I didn’t want him there.
Courtney Ammenhauser: He’s like please let me in!
Liz Kingsman: I didn’t want him there and the marketing company said that he had to be there.
Courtney Ammenhauser: It’ll really get tickets
Liz Kingsman: And, you know, at the end of the day, he’s got a really big profile and I couldn’t say no. So uh… We just, we just asked him.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Oh wow.
Liz Kingsman: Turns out you can just ask celebrities to do things and sometimes they’ll say yes. But yeah, we just asked him. I’d written a draft of the trailer that had him as a joke in it, but that’s because I wasn’t taking it seriously, because I didn’t want to make any video content, because I don’t like video content. So I’d written a joke script almost as a sort of like, “well, if you want me to write the video content, this is what I’ll write, I’ll write a famous person into it and then you can’t have any video content”. Ha ha ha ha. I did my job but really badly. And then they were like, okay, but what if we actually did get Kit? And I was like, Oh my God, if we got Kit, that would actually be funny and I would be up for making video content. Like I’d do it and I’d do it well, I’d really commit to it.
Courtney Ammenhauser: And then they did and you’re like, alright.
Liz Kingsman: So then I had to message him and I had to explain to him that he wouldn’t be the butt of the joke. Except he was going to be the butt of the joke. So I also didn’t want to lie to him. So I said, Oh, so to convince him, I said, the butt of the joke will be theatre and not you, although it will also very much be you. And then they asked me to take that bit out of the pitch because they thought that he’d say no to being the butt of the joke. So instead of taking it out, I said, “They want me to take this bit out of the pitch. But I’m refusing because I think you’re more likely to do it if you understand that I’m refusing to be dishonest. Understand my gumption here.” And then he said yes. And so he came and did it and was great.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Was there a particular moment or experience where you suddenly thought that you really wanted to parody the genre?
Liz Kingsman: No. I wish it would be a lot easier for the narrative if there was like a, you know, bolt out of the blue moment.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah.
Liz Kingsman: It started with me seeing a lot of plays. Not intentionally. Just went to see them over time…
Courtney Ammenhauser: Over time
Liz Kingsman: Noticing things, reading blurbs that sounded very similar to me, noticing adjectives in the blurbs, like ‘raw’ and ‘honest’ that had come up again and again. And then I guess I started talking to friends about how funny I found that, and we’d riff on that. I do remember texting my friend and saying, “I’m sort of going to try and write this parody one woman show”. But it started as… it was more of a text. It was a joke, you know, it’s like a bit you’re doing over text. And so it’s arguably gone- for a bit you’re doing over text. It’s gone pretty far.
Courtney Ammenhauser: It’s gone too far. Yeah.
Courtney Ammenhauser: So let’s get back on to the show, one woman show. It’s a really spot on parody of this, you know, relatable, messy, millennial woman trope that, you know, you’ve done all your research in that you were mentioning before. And who was some of the people you researched?
Liz Kingsman: I would never name names now. I would never be so awful to like… just because it’s parody. You know.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Fair enough.
Liz Kingsman: I think the unlikeable female character is still a good thing.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Well, this is the thing. It’s like they might not be likeable, but they can still be enjoyable to watch. You can still like them. But they’re not typically likeable.
Liz Kingsman: Yes, it’s likeable. For an audience just means you want to spend time with them
Courtney Ammenhauser: Totally.
Liz Kingsman: It just means you want to watch what they get up to. Yeah, and we’ve had that bar has been like that for men for years and years.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Absolutely.
Liz Kingsman: You know, so we don’t need to be likeable to be watchable. Have that on a T-shirt if you like.
Courtney Ammenhauser: We’ll get some merch made for this episode alone.
Liz Kingsman: Thank you. My favourite sitcom is Arrested Development, every single character in that show is deeply flawed and unlikeable. Even Jason Bateman, who’s the greatest straight man of all time.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Jateman.
Liz Kingsman: Jateman, thank you. He’s obviously the straight guy to all of the other people in his family, but he’s got this enormous blindspot, which is like he’s a terrible dad and he’s proud. And so, like, it’s yeah, they’re still the most they’re still the most fun. Playing anyone likeable is very boring.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah.
Liz Kingsman: I guess there’s like the Leslie Knopes of the world, very likeable, very watchable. So that’s kind of a remarkable feat that she’s managed to do that. Amy Poehler.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah.
Liz Kingsman: But she’s still flawed, obviously. She’s like, you know, she’s super, super type A to the annoyance of people around her, but she’s so, she’s so charming and good hearted that it’s very fun to spend time with her.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Mm hmm. I mentioned before that I felt a bit targeted during the show.
Liz Kingsman: I’m so sorry.
Courtney Ammenhauser: But I think that’s what some of the best satire does. So, you know, job well done. Did you have any fear that the show might be misinterpreted?
Liz Kingsman: Yes, and it definitely has been. And I used to get really hung up on that because I couldn’t fathom not being able to control everything. If a headline said it was a parody of one particular show, then I wanted to respond and be like, it’s not a parody of that show. I didn’t even watch that show when I was making it. But I can’t respond to everything. And I’ve had to learn the process of being like it exists separately from me. And it’s out there and it will get misinterpreted. And even now, like reviews that have come out this week have got massive clanging misquotes in them from the show, like they’ve quoted lines from the show completely wrong. And I want to be like, No, that’s not it. That’s not the line. I need to fix it. And I just have to resist because it exists separately. Yeah, it’s out there. I’ve made it. It’s done. Yeah. I find it hard to learn that process. And I’m sure many people who have made anything in the history of time have learned how to do that. Otherwise you’d go insane, right?
Courtney Ammenhauser: Completely. You would never make anything.
Liz Kingsman: You’d never make anything. And potentially I never will again.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Just stare at yourself in the mirror.
Liz Kingsman: Exactly.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Do you think that audiences are getting more sophisticated, like comedy audiences specifically about kind of style and…?
Liz Kingsman: Oh, oh. Ummm can’t answer on behalf of the comedy audience. I’ve just realised. I don’t know. I do know that people… Well, no, actually, I’ll tell you why I can’t answer: because when I go to see things, I often go with other people who make comedy. And we’re like the worst audience because we just watch things and go like, “That’s funny. That’s well done. That’s really well achieved.”
Courtney Ammenhauser: No laughter
Liz Kingsman: Yeah, no laughter, but a lot of respect.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Respect for the good joke.
Liz Kingsman: And then the flip side is when stuff really gets you, like when you really get surprised by something, you go for it way more. You go too hard. Because you’re like, “What? I didn’t expect that. That really tickled me.” Like, so you end up being like, sort of like a slightly insane audience member. Me and my friend Stevie have the exact same sense of humour and whenever we go and see stuff - she is a comedian and would describe herself as a comedian - and when we see stuff together, we will often just like not laugh and then laugh at something for like 2 minutes longer than everyone else. And it’s very annoying for people. So I don’t know about audiences getting savvier, because I can only speak from someone who’s like, can no longer enjoy comedy because I’ve ruined it for myself.
Courtney Ammenhauser: What made you gravitate towards complex theatrical comedy rather than stand up?
Liz Kingsman: I don’t want to ever be myself on stage in any capacity, like I would never… I wouldn’t even want to like host an evening. I wouldn’t want to speak at a playwriting competition as a judge. You know, like I, I could never be myself or talk on stage as myself.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Bit too raw.
Liz Kingsman: Raw, raw and honest. Raw, honest and unflinching, I suppose.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Well, thank you for being here, today. Yeah.
Liz Kingsman: Yeah. Really struggling. As you can see, I’m melting into my chair, but yeah, I’m just, I’m really uninterested in fiction.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Where do you want to take your storytelling next?
Liz Kingsman: I don’t know where you go after the Sydney Opera House. You know, it’s kind of one of the most iconic places you could take your storytelling. I don’t know. I just need to have a quick nap, and then I’ll let you know. But geographically, New York. But, metaphorically? The film.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah I was going to say, film school?
Liz Kingsman: Yeah, Theatre was never meant to be what I spent almost four years doing. It’s crazy to me. Film is where I’ve always wanted to work. So any day now, I should get an acceptance letter from film school, and then, uh then off I go.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Do you have your short film ready?
Liz Kingsman: I do now have a short film ready. Because I became an adult and I earned enough money to fund my own short film. That’s how I now have the requirements to get into film school. So if they’re listening, film school, you can’t wait for people to get adult jobs.
Courtney Ammenhauser: And a show at the Sydney Opera house.
Liz Kingsman: Yeah and a show at the Sydney opera House, in order to fund their short film.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Several publications like Vogue and The Guardian have pinned you as one of the most exciting up and comers in the UK.
Liz Kingsman: Oh la di da.
Courtney Ammenhauser: I’m curious to know who you think other people who are exciting up and comers.
Liz Kingsman: Oh, that’s fun. Well, I’d like to say pretty much everyone Adam Brace is working with at the moment - Adam is director of One Woman Show and he’s had an absolutely insane stand out year. So he’s directed this incredible play called Age is a Feeling, written and performed by Hayley McGhee, which is effectively like one woman’s journey through life. And the audience chooses what path the story goes on each night. And I cried, recovered and cried again during her show. It was just beautiful and remarkable. Incredible, incredible piece of theatre.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Amazing.
Courtney Ammenhauser: If one woman show was a reaction to a certain era of storytelling, where do you want to see storytelling, particularly about women and their lives, go in the future?
Liz Kingsman: I think it would… just variety would be good, wouldn’t it? Just like more of them, more different stories, more different characters. Just variety. I think.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Liz Kingsman, thank you so much.
Liz Kingsman: Thank you.
Courtney Ammenhauser: It’s been a pleasure.
***
Courtney Ammenhauser: That was writer and actor Liz Kingsman, talking about her meta-theatrical comedy One Woman Show, which ran at the Sydney Opera House in February 2023.
In the next episode, we’ll be hearing from Ziggy Ramo, talking about his brand new album, Sugar Coated Lies, and his recent acting debut in the Australian TV drama, Black Snow
I’m Courtney Ammenhauser and this has been Up Next, a podcast from the Sydney Opera House.
From Audiocraft, the show is produced by Bernadette Phương Nam Nguyễn mixed by Glen Morrow, executive producer is Selena Shannon.
From Sydney Opera House, Head of Digital Programming is Stuart Buchanan, and Digital Programming Coordinator is Georgia D’souza.
The Up Next theme music is by Milan Ring. Subscribe wherever you listen to podcasts.
The symphony of soul with Ngaiire
Courtney Ammenhauser: The Sydney Opera House acknowledges the Gadigal of the Eora Nation, traditional custodians of Tubowgule, the land on which the Opera House stands. We honour the long Gadigal history of gathering and storytelling, and acknowledge the strength and resilience of First Nations people and communities past and present.
Ngaiire: My mum flew in from PNG a few days ago to come see it and I said, Mum, how you feeling about all this stuff? She was dropping me off at the Opera House. She just. Burst out crying and she’s like, I’ve always wanted to see a symphony orchestra and to be able to see it with my daughter is and she just couldn’t get the words out. She was just a mess.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Hey I’m Courtney Ammenhauser and this is Up Next, your ticket to the most exciting artists and performers coming through the Sydney Opera House doors.
Join me backstage as we chat to a spectacular lineup of artists who are making waves on one of the most iconic stages in the world.
Together we’ll uncover who’s up next, and how this moment in time is transforming the next 50 years of arts and culture.
Courtney Ammenhauser: In November of 2022, singer, songwriter and all round incredible local creator Ngaiire performed with the Sydney Symphony Orchestra on the Opera House forecourt.
The show blended Ngaiire’s smooth, soulful music with the Sydney Symphony Orchestra’s sound. And the overall effect was a powerful ode to her Papua New Guinean heritage. It was a show that I’m certain will be forever kept in the memories of everyone who attended.
I spoke to Ngaiire just days before this performance. Catching a glimpse of the nerves and the excitement, Ngaiire shared the many lessons she learnt in her career so far, how her life experiences have shaped her art and how this performance had her mum crying tears of joy.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Ngaiire, thanks so much for being here today.
Ngaiire: Thanks for having me.
Courtney Ammenhauser: I want to travel back in time to start to your very first ever full court performance. It’s a bit of a throwback. Could you fill us in on how it all went down?
Ngaiire: So the first time I ever played the Opera House, but also specifically the full court was on Australian Idol and that would have been in 2005, maybe it was the second season of Australian Idol and I managed to get into, I don’t know if you’d call it the top 13 were definitely wildcard contestants. So yeah, at the end of the whole season, they invited all the Rejects back to do a performance with Marcia Hines on the forecourt. And we performed Chaka Khan’s Ain’t Nobody. And there was a full like, no, I wouldn’t even call it a drumline, but there were a bunch of guys with Jimi opening the song. And at that point in my life, I thought it was the coolest thing, which in hindsight probably wasn’t. But yeah, that was, that was how I pop in my forecourt.
Courtney Ammenhauser: I actually remember you from Australian Idol.
Ngaiire: Do you? Yes. So, so crazy.
Courtney Ammenhauser: I remember you being in, though. Yeah, I guess whatever that round was before the top 12. And I was like, Oh, she’s got to get through.
Ngaiire: I still actually get people come up to me, even though it’s been like 15 to 20 years, probably since the show saying, I voted no, you should have got me. And I’m like, Oh, look where I am now. It’s alright.
Courtney Ammenhauser: We’re going to come back to this point in your life a little bit, but I wanted to talk about how you first got into music because you grew up in Papua New Guinea. Was there a lot of music in your life?
Ngaiire: There was. So Pangaea just naturally celebrates everything with music. So whether it’s a death or a marriage or a birth even, or just a celebration, there’s always music, there’s always singing, dancing. So I was always around that quite early on. Yeah, music is as natural as breathing over there.
Courtney Ammenhauser: And your mum noticed you developing a passion for music. And I feel like a lot of parents, you know, they worry about their kids and all of that sort of stuff. But what happened when you told her that you wanted to pursue music?
Ngaiire: She actually didn’t know I could sing at all. I was so shy at that point, so I think it was about when I was 11 or 12 and my mum, she was a single mum for a very long time. So she was very adamant that her kids know what they wanted to do when they finished school, especially in a country like P&G. And she said, okay, kids, I’m going to ask you this in a few weeks or something like think about what you want to do when you finish school. And this is, you know, with kids 11. So at that point, I’d had a lot of traumatic experiences in my life. I had, you know, a huge natural disaster to walk. And it blew up and destroyed our house. And we were refugees for for a very long time, lost contact with my mum. My parents split up. You know, I’d still been, I guess, dealing with the residual of having cancer as a kid. So there were all these things that were happening in my little brain that I needed to kind of get out in a very positive way. And so I would sit next to my mum’s stereo and just listen to anything that she had within her CD collection and I mean series of very expensive in PNG. At that time it was either Celine Dion, Mariah Carey, the soundtrack from Four Weddings and a Funeral.
Courtney Ammenhauser: All the hits
Ngaiire: All of it. It’s so I would listen to it quite avidly and just imitate the people that I like to listen to. And I don’t know what came over me to make me think that I had a voice because I’d never sang for anybody. But I thought I felt it. I thought, I can do this. And so when she asked me, I said, Well, I want to be a singer. And she just point blank told me, I, I should probably look for something else to do because that would put food on the table. And she and rightly so, like, you know, it really crushed my, my little spirit at that point. But, you know, years after when I started pursuing music, it made sense that there was just no way that I could there was not a robust enough industry in PNG needed to do that.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Well, you went ahead and you stuck with your guns and now you’re a professional artist, musician, songwriter, and you’ve had an amazing career with three albums under your belt and your most recent album, Three, took five years to make. Can you tell us about that five year process in making it?
Ngaiire: It really needed to take two years, but as these things go. Yeah. It took a lot longer. I, um. I got very sick when I was pregnant with my son, and, yeah, I would just had really bad abdominal pains and was in and out of hospital for probably the duration of the whole pregnancy. So. Yeah, I was just on a lot of opioids. Anything from morphine to end down to just drugs that you never heard of? I was being put on the well that that’s because I was in so much pain. And so I my whole schedule got cleared. I just couldn’t perform. I couldn’t I couldn’t do anything. So that put a a thorn in the side of the album process. But as soon as I got better and I had Davey, I just jumped straight back into the studio and but yeah it took a long process because of that period. MHM.
Courtney Ammenhauser: And you traveled back to PNG during that time. Can you tell me about that experience as well?
Ngaiire: Yes. So in 2017 I took over a small creative team when we had the discussion about what kind of album I was going to make next. One of the things my producer things one of my producers said to me was, You’re doing really well now, and all of this stuff is happening. A couple of singles now in full rotation and triple j, and we’re playing these festivals, Splendour in the Grass, etc., etc. But people still a very fascinated about your background and no one seems to get it right. And we decided that from that standpoint, we’d embark on a project that would seek to, I guess, highlight the positive aspects. I mean, there’s a lot of negative stuff that I do talk about, but just like the beautiful contrast that make up my culture so we I wouldn’t do it this way again because it was very challenging, but we worked in reverse. We collected all the visuals before we started writing and going. I’ve been to party a couple of times before that, but with my mother. So she’s basically the matriarch of our family. And so she kind of buffers us from a lot of family politics and cultural politics as well. So I learnt a lot from that trip through that process of where I sit as someone who’s been removed from PG for a long time, living in, you know, modern Australia. And you know, when people think about what PNG is or what a Papua New Guinean is, it’s not one thing because we have over 800 cultures and languages and so being able to communicate that to people was also a very impossible task because it’s like I can only tell people who I am as a Papua New Guinean woman living in a Western society, I guess. And so the album was born out of that and we went back for about seven, seven weeks less than that, about four, three, three to 3 to 4 weeks. And just with the whole purpose of just collecting as many visuals as possible and just listening to the stories of family and members of the community. Yeah.
Courtney Ammenhauser: What kind of visuals did you collect?
Ngaiire: We just everything everywhere we went, there was just something to capture. You know, people to nature is a big, I guess, contrast with the coast and the Highlands area. It’s in the Highlands. You have this beautiful, kind of magical, mystical mountain flora and fauna. And then on the coast you have the white sandy beaches and the palm trees and all that kind of stuff. And we interviewed a few people. A lot of those interviews we haven’t really released yet because they didn’t really align with the release as it was. But there’s still so much there that no one’s seen yet that who knows we might use for the next album. I’m not quite sure yet.
Courtney Ammenhauser: So once you got your visual, as you mentioned before, you reverse engineered the record. Can you talk us through that process?
Ngaiire: You know, there’s some lyrical content in the songs that relate to some of the experiences that we had over there. For example, Shiva was written about my grandmother’s spirit following us through our trip, and she had since passed on, which is incredible because when we arrived there, we arrived on at the point of her Brooke Hymn House Cry, which is the end of her mourning. But yeah, there’s a lot of lyrical content in there that I fed through there, but I just was very conscious of not of the album, not being a body of work that kind of sampled traditional instruments. And then because, you know, I’ve seen it done a lot at the time and it’s cool and it sits in a certain genre of music. But I wanted to do something different in terms of capturing more of the aesthetic of what we had felt being there as a team, but also for me going back to PPG. You know, I wrote with Jack Britten, my producer, and then with Lancs Will coming, but we would just kind of sit in a room or just over the Internet and we’d go through tracks or, you know, chordal movements. And if anything kind of stuck out to me, that kind of brought up this feeling that related to something that we’d experience. You know, we’d chase that down the rabbit hole a little bit.
Courtney Ammenhauser: I’ve heard you describe your culture as your engine room, and I wondered if you could speak about that and what that means to you.
Ngaiire: I think even though I come from an indigenous culture, you know, we all have those engine rooms. It’s where you come from, who your family is, what your bloodline is. And there’s something to be said about knowing where you do come from because it informs so much of what you do and it gives you so much pride. For me, specifically, I look at the life that I have. You know, I’m about to play the opera house and that’s something that my family would never, ever have imagined. It really is about the pride that comes with being from the culture that I come from. And I’m very proud that I have the privilege of coming from a country that is still sovereign owners of the land, and that land is still passed down through the generations. I’m proud that my mum, being the only woman in her family, the only daughter in her family, was able to graduate to a point where now she’s a Ph.D. in environmental science and like no one in our family has done that. You know, she was a first graduating forester in Papua New Guinea. So all of those things, all of these stories really just serve to, I guess, power that engine room and make me feel I have something to offer. But I have people back at home who want to see me do well and see all of the hard work of my ancestors come to fruition to see, you know. Ngaiire Performing at the Opera House.
Courtney Ammenhauser: And your show with the Sydney Symphony Orchestra, it brings that those two things together, right? It’s your ancestral villages in Papua New Guinea to the Opera House forecourt. What does it feel like to bring them together?
Ngaiire: I don’t think I’ve wrap my head around that yet. I think that because we’ve just been so busy putting the show together, I haven’t quite stopped to think about the magnitude of what that means. But I do feel it in my heart that, you know, this is something that my family is going to look at. And I don’t know, there’s this expression in P and G where if you feel something strongly or you’re overwhelmed by something they say… which means, you know, I, you know, I just I just cut my hand off because I just, you know, I want to express myself. But how do I do that? It’s like seeing a cute dog and you just want to punch that dog. So cute.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah.
Ngaiire: Yeah, exactly. So I just feel proud. My mum flew in from PNG a few days ago to come see it and I said, Mom, how you feeling about all this stuff? And she was just dropping me at the Opera House over the weekend for the rehearsal and. She just. Burst out crying and she’s like, I’ve always wanted to see a symphony orchestra and to be able to see it with my daughter is and she just couldn’t get the words out. She was just a mess. So that’s that would only be a snippet of what the rest of the family would be feeling.
Courtney Ammenhauser: She’s obviously coming to the show then.
Ngaiire: Oh, you know, she wouldn’t miss it.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Could neo soul pop sounds. How did you go about incorporating the orchestra into your performance and your music?
Ngaiire: It’s been a really informative experience working with the orchestra, you know, because you’re getting two schools of thinking, musically speaking, coming together and trying to meld together to sound like, you know, it’s effortless. We were very nervous about coming in and rehearsing with the with the Sydney Symphony because, you know, classical music has held, you know, a quite a high bar. But on the same token, for them to be able to play music that requires a bit of groove and that kind of and soul and feeling. That’s also a very difficult thing to do for a classical musician. So I don’t know, I’m getting so deep and philosophical in my head, but yeah.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Let it all out. It’s the place for it.
Ngaiire I don’t know. It’s just it’s was just so beautiful to see. You know, we all have so many differences in life and as people, but to see us just trying to work together and not step on each other’s toes, but to find an equilibrium where we can make this magic together. There was a lot of toing and froing and note giving and arranging and producing and reproducing and trying to pay respects to the album and how it sounds, but also the live show, which is obviously very different. But I think we’ve kind of come to a place where we’re like, This is going to be good. So fingers crossed. Oh my gosh, it just made me so nervous.
Courtney Ammenhauser: How long has it been like in the works where you’ve been doing that toing and froing and making all of these decisions about the live show?
Ngaiire: I’d say about four months. Yeah. So about four months of conversation. Missions and meetings, and it’s definitely been the biggest production I’ve been involved in for the Ngaiire project.
Courtney Ammenhauser: And it sounds like it’s such a great opportunity for both you and also the orchestra to find new audiences potentially.
Ngaiire: Yeah, 100%. 100%. I mean, I feel very grateful for this opportunity because, goodness, it’s the opera house. But also we get to play to an audience that wouldn’t normally come to our shows like the at the Lansdowne or at, you know, the Northcote Social Club in Melbourne. So this is a really great opportunity for all of us.
Courtney Ammenhauser: MM And I feel like similarly those Lansdowne fans are, you know, potentially into the orchestra for the first time, but many.
Ngaiire: Yeah, it’s going to be crazy.
Courtney Ammenhauser: You’ve said that you have a lemonade approach to the Australian music industry. Can you explain what you mean by that?
Ngaiire: I have always been aware of myself being a minority within the industry and I mean I came up in the early 2000s when things were very different in the industry. For instance, I, I really love folk music, I love storytelling and that’s something that I’ll always, always love, probably because of my, my culture. But I started out doing kind of folk soul music and people didn’t really know how to take that, especially as a Papua New Guinean woman who wasn’t necessarily, you know, African-American or indigenous Australian or, you know, a type of black person that people know. So that was really hard. Knowing where to put me on the shelf or on the stage, I would always be kind of pushed onto, say, an indigenous stage. I’m like, Oh, we don’t know where to put her. She can play on the on the indigenous stage and there will always be really strange kind of key names that they would give these stages. Like there was a stage called the alternative stage, but they spelt it alternative stage, which is always a little bit cringeworthy. And I was at that point, I was like, Well, it’s a gig. I guess I should play this gig. You know, there were little things like that, but I’d always been taught to not play the victim all the time and to always live deals to you wanted deals to you. You can either decide to complain and whinge about it or you take that and go, okay, I’m going to utilise this to make myself stronger, more resilient and more persistent within this industry to get where I want to go. And so I guess that’s what I mean by having a lemonade approach to the industry.
Courtney Ammenhauser: It’s a really positive outlook.
Ngaiire: Yeah, yeah, I hope so.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Since those days that you were just describing of, you know, where you felt as though people didn’t know where to place you. Do you feel like it’s gotten better? Yeah.
Ngaiire: I mean, we’re talking about my journey, I think, yes, the industry has changed a lot, has a lot of attention being paid to giving more platforms to diverse, more diverse voices. But I always am sceptical because I think about whether people actually doing that because they want to see change or because everybody else is doing it and they want to kind of keep up and do this whole kind of diversity washing situation. There’s always a little bit of apprehension there for me, but on the same token, it’s really nice to be able to get more of a foot in the door. It’s a huge conversation. I think there’s no one answer to that. We’re all so grateful. You know, I speak to so many people in my kind of boat who are like, yes, it’s nice to get diversity, but if you go out there to a situation that is unsafe for you because someone’s just diversity washing it, there’s no point because then you enter into a workplace situation where it’s culturally like people don’t understand where you’re coming from. So it needs to really come from the ground up and people really need to try to not place a sticker on things and go, Yet we’re going to put this person, like we’ve said no to gigs before because someone has literally said to us, Oh yeah, you’ll be good for our diversity slot. And yeah, yeah, those are the things that they say to you and my manager’s like because he said that we’re not playing that festival, so it’s still quite trepidatious and you have to really just find out people’s intentions.
Courtney Ammenhauser: How do you think this show that you have been describing to us will be different from your first show at the forecourt?
Ngaiire: Well, the elephant in the room, which is we’re playing at the Sydney Symphony Orchestra. Yeah. Gosh, I’ve grown so much as an artist and as a person and you know, I’ve she’s it’s just going to be such a polar opposite to that time with Marcia.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Marcia? Oh.
Ngaiire: Yeah.
Courtney Ammenhauser: And were you a teenager then?
Ngaiire: Yeah, I was. I was a little baby teenager. But Marcia has always been a legend. She was remembers me and. Yeah.
Courtney Ammenhauser: It sounds like your life has had some ups and downs and people talk about the arts and particularly music being a difficult path to take, which we’ve talked about today. What keeps you going?
Ngaiire: The chaos. Yeah, it’s about the chaos, I reckon. You know, people do ask me why, how I’ve managed to maintain this career for over 17 years as an independent artist. Part of that time I was fully self-managed and I just look at the life that I’ve had and all the challenges that I’ve had and all the obstacles. And I think that the only reason why I’ve been able to stay the course for so long is because I’ve had all of these traumatic experiences, which through, you know, the upbringing that my mum gave me, I’ve been able to turn that into things that work for me rather than, you know, get sucked into the trenches of, you know, depression or even like full blown anxiety or that kind of stuff. I think that I’ve been very lucky in that I had I been able to grow up with a foundation that my mum set for us to be able to use that as a pivot to keep going, if that makes sense.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Your mum sounds like a legend.
Ngaiire: Oh, she’s a firecracker. Yep, she’s a firecracker. Yeah. Oh, yeah.
Courtney Ammenhauser: For the last question of any artist that you’ve worked with or who you think should get way more love than they’re getting, that perhaps our listeners should stop following.
Ngaiire: Yes, I think everyone should follow Leila Bonetti. They’re a queer black artist, filmmaker, photographer. And the first time I worked with Leila was at a show of mine at the NGV in Melbourne and I remember thinking the live show photography was just unlike anything I’d seen anyone do for me. And ever since then they’ve just been going from strength to strength and making incredible short films about being black and queer. And, you know, I love that they also have the same perspective on diversity in general as I do, which we spoke about earlier. I was going to read what they said it was in The Age, actually, and as and they write, as much as we want to improve diversity statistics, it’s not up to people like myself to do this. What is being done to improve the rate of cultural, education, safety, accessibility and overall cultural competency in the film industry and yet below? La la Binetti.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Thank you for that recommendation. Nari, thanks for coming in today.
Ngaiire: Thanks for having me.
Courtney Ammenhauser: That was singer, songwriter, creator Ngaiire. You can watch her live performance on the Sydney Opera House website, stream dot sydney opera house dot com.
I’m Courtney Ammenhauser and this has been Up Next, a podcast from the Sydney Opera House.
Character building with Lily Balatincz and Rahel Romahn
Courtney Ammenhauser: The Sydney Opera House acknowledges the Gadigal of the Eora Nation, traditional custodians of Tubowgule, the land on which the Opera House stands. We honour the long Gadigal history of gathering and storytelling, and acknowledge the strength and resilience of First Nations people and communities past and present.
Rahel Romahn: We’re talking about one of the greatest theatre actors alive. We’re filled with so much humility, you know, I felt like just a general tennis player. And then you’re throwing me on the court with, you know, Novak Djokovic or Federer or even a Serena Williams or what have you. And all of a sudden it kicks in. Hold on a second. I’ve gone from a training/practise person to someone on the court with the highest level. And so, of course, there’s a level of nerves, but a level of excitement too.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Hey I’m Courtney Ammenhauser and this is Up Next, your ticket to the most exciting artists and performers coming through the Sydney Opera House doors. Join me backstage as we chat to a spectacular lineup of artists who are making waves on one of the most iconic stages in the world. Together we’ll uncover who’s up next, and how this moment in time is transforming the next 50 years of arts and culture.
In 1998, the celebrated British theatre actor Michael Sheen took on the role of young Mozart in Peter Shaffer’s play Amadeus. The show is about a fictitious rivalry between real-life composers Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and Antonio Salieri. Now, more than 20 years later, Michael Sheen is returning to Amadeus, but this time in a different role. He’s back as Salieri, in an Australian run of the play, opening in December. Stepping into his old shoes is one of Australia’s most exciting up and coming theatre actors. Rahel Romahn, will be taking on the character of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, opposite the incredible Lily Balatincz in the role of Constanze Mozart.
You might recognise Rahel from SBS’s The Principal or the 2021 film Here Out West, plus a number of roles for the Sydney Theatre Company. Lily has an impressive CV of US theatre parts, awards and has recently planted her feet as a director of Australian theatre, including the recent hit Bad Machine for the Campbelltown Arts Centre. I’m lucky enough to be joined by both of them today, to chat about their surprising connections to their characters, their careers and who they think is up next in Australia.
Rahel Romahn: Hey, my name is Rahel Romahn. I’m playing Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.
Lily Balatincz: I’m Lily Balatincz, and I’m playing Constanze Mozart in the Sydney Opera House production of Amadeus.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Welcome to you both here on beautiful Gadigal Land of the Eora Nation. One thing we love doing on this show is asking people about the first time they’ve performed at the Opera House. And Lily, this show is not your first time on this stage.
Lily Balatincz: It is not, Courtney, I actually was first on this stage in high school. I was in the New South Wales State Drama Company and we were as part of that, given the opportunity to. compere events at the Opera House in the concert hall. COMPERE C-o-m-p-not…
Courtney Ammenhauser: The hosting kind.
Lily Balatincz: Yeah, exactly. I wasn’t comparing different events, but I would be on stage presenting each of the pieces by the state orchestral company in front of two and a half thousand people, probably starting when I was about 14.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Wow.
Lily Balatincz: We got given a bit of a budget to buy a fancy dress and oh yeah, we were in black tie. It was very fancy.
Courtney Ammenhauser: It’s very sophisticated.
Lily Balatincz: It was very sophisticated. And we were I think we were a little we were a little sort of jump in the deep end hosting something of that scale. But yeah, that was my first time on that stage, looking out at the beautiful space.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Rah, that was Lily’s first story about being in the concert hall.
Rahel Romahn: Yes.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Can you tell me about yours?
Rahel Romahn: Well, I’ve never been in the concert hall. I have never even stepped into the concert hall. So this is very exciting for me to be able to smell it and feel the temperature and be able to walk around and exist in that realm. I have however performed at the Drama Theatre, in the Sydney Theatre Company’s Midsummer Night’s Dream, which Kipp Williams the now Artistic Director was amazing enough to grant me that opportunity. I played the very very small role of Snug the joiner and a fairy. Now Snug the joiner, is one of the mechanicals in Midsummer Night’s Dream one of the play actors. And yeah, it was a really fun time. It was a great way for me to learn about how the theatre works. Yeah that was my first time.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Rahel, can you tell me about the first time you discovered your passion for acting as a child?
Rahel Romahn: Yes, when I was younger, I was extremely isolated and bullied and I found the mirror as a form of escapism. I would sit in front of the mirror for hours because I was quite isolated from family and friends and I would use the mirror. I would do different accents and voices and faces, and I would exist within the realms of the many different dimensions that I could have possibly been born in, so that I could bear the weight of existence.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah. wow.
Rahel Romahn: I found an enjoyment in that escapism. You know, I didn’t feel as though I was shackled to my my physical being. I was able to explore spiritually what it was to be other people than other people’s adversities and vicissitudes that they faced. And I found that an adventure. So, yeah, once I discovered that form of of artistry, I very much plunged into the depths of what that was.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah, A number of your roles Rah, like the principal and hear out west are set in western Sydney and you grew up in Parramatta. How did you bring your connection to Western Sydney to these roles?
Rahel Romahn: I came here when I was three and a half years of age as a refugee from Kurdistan escaping Saddam Hussein’s genocide and grew up pretty much in the Parramatta region. And I grew up in a particular environment of multiculturalism and an amalgam of different ideas and thoughts, but kind of in a, in a peaceful, tranquil existence. I feel as though I mean, I’m a pretty out there kind of person. I feel as though the soul and the physical vessel are two separate things. And this physical vessel, which to the outer world is a middle Eastern, young, Middle Eastern guy who looks a particular way is the vehicle that I’ve been given to drive. And within that vessel, I’ve experienced particular things in a particular way. And the roles that I get very much in line with that. And when I get the principal or hear out West or any of the other multiple roles that I’ve played in the same world of a young Middle Eastern character who’s usually angry, misunderstood, you know, confused, which, you know, is quite I like I like playing those those kind of feelings, whatever the culture may be. I was able to bring that level of history and experience to those roles and attempt to find very subtle, you know, differences between those roles. So that whenever I played those roles, they wouldn’t always come out the same. So you wouldn’t watch any role that I play twice and go, wow, he’s literally playing the same role. No, each of these people as as similar as they may seem to the to the outside are very nuanced and complex and different individuals. And I was keen to shape that sort of difference.
Courtney Ammenhauser: And how important to you are those characters and those portrayals?
Rahel Romahn: Very important because there are, there are people of my descent out there that feel absolutely alone and scared and worried and isolated the same things I felt when I was young. And I want to be able to show them as a different way of exploring those. There are multiple ways of expression to be able to, to showcase your inner vulnerabilities without being afraid of the judgement that comes along with it.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Lily, you got your big break in New York City. How did you end up living over there and, you know, living every actor’s dream?
Lily Balatincz: Oh, gosh. So it, I was actually I did an undergrad degree in film, but I just couldn’t quite shake this, this desire to be a performer that I’d had from when I was about three years old. I started out as a dancer, and then I moved to poetry recitation and first speaking training when I was five and I auditioned one last time for NIDA was not successful and on a bit of a whim decided to apply to Juilliard and booked an airfare. Really spur of the moment and then found myself in New York auditioning for Juilliard and NYU.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Wow.
Lily Balatincz: I got through the call-backs, but I didn’t get into Juilliard, which in the end I think was the right thing because different programmes have a different sort of energy to them. And I think I suited NYU. I ended up being taken by the hand by the person who I was auditioning for, for the undergrad programme, and she said, I think you need to go to the grad programme, which I didn’t even know existed. And I got a call-back and I got offered a place, one of 16 people out of about a thousand auditioning.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Wow.
Lily Balatincz: So it was yeah, it was a bit of a surreal moment and that was how I ended up on the other side of the world, not knowing anyone.
Courtney Ammenhauser: After you left New York, you moved away from acting and into directing, and you brought some very Australian stories like Bad Machine to life. What was that change like?
Lily Balatincz: So before I moved into directing, I was producing a bit of a it was a journey, I guess from I was heading up the performance programme at Campbelltown Arts Centre for a few years. That was a really great experience in and of itself because it was, it’s a great organisation, it only commissions new work, it doesn’t do any buy-ins. So it was learning about sort of different parts of the performance world than I had ever been exposed to before, such as contemporary performance, contemporary dance, performance art, even. So that sort of led to, as a producer, I commissioned a new play, Bad Machine, which was me transitioning across to directing. It’s a new Australian play by an incredible young Australian playwright named Brook Robinson, who’s from Campbelltown. She’s based out of London primarily, and it’s exploring the topic of the robo debt crisis. She and I came together. She’s worked mostly in London, I’ve worked mostly in New York. And we had this sort of impassioned discussion about, you know, if we were in London and if we were in New York, there’s no way we’d be able to make the first art work about this topic because there’d be seven existing plays. And we found it sort of bewildering that there was no art form actually, that had been exploring it as yet. So we kind of jumped in and made a work that was looking at the human impact of these large scale, high level government decisions and the very real effects that they have on people just like you or me. One of the things that was instilled in us at NYU was that you’re not just an artist, you’re an artist citizen. And yeah, I’m really proud to have been a part of the creation of New Australian theatre, but also making a work that gives a voice to people who otherwise maybe don’t get much of a platform.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Nice well, I’ll definitely be keeping an eye on Bad Machine for sure. Rahel, can you tell me a bit about the behind the scenes of Amadeus? I’m keen to hear about how it felt when you got the part.
Rahel Romahn: My agents told me that this particular production of Red Line and Opera House had been searching for four months to find the actor or performer to be able to bring to life Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. And I was quite interested. I mean, I, I’d never thought that I would be the candidate to play the role of Mozart. I never even thought it was a possibility. I don’t know why, because upon reading it, I thought, wow, myself and this character are quite similar. Not in the levels of genius. I’d like to stay humble in that regard, but in the levels of eccentricity and passion. You know, I feel that connection too, to Mozart. And when I got the audition, my agent was like, Please, you know, take this seriously. Learn your lines. I said, Have I ever not? You know? And so once I got the audition, I read the two scenes that I was meant to do. One of them was a raunchy escapade into the sexual desire, and one was a passionate connexion to a godlike genius existence. And I thought, well, two extremely different scenes that would be great in any school or role. And I learnt those two scenes. I just understood the character, I understood the musicality within it, I understood the pain, I understood it on a particular level that I just was dancing at the joy, because my favourite part of performance is to break down and analyse the dialogue and the scenes and the thoughts, the thoughts in between, the birth of thoughts, the revelations, the inner circle, outer circle and greater circle. You know, I just it was exciting. And when I learnt it, I went in there and I absolutely was like a child in a playground.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Wow, you really painting a picture of of that moment. I wish I was in the room.
Rahel Romahn: It was exciting and it’s always fun. Yeah.
Courtney Ammenhauser: You mentioned a little bit about the eccentricity that you saw in the character and yourself, were there other similarities between?
Rahel Romahn: Yes, they call him the tiny creature and I myself of not of a tall stature or build those physical details. Have I also found a similarity.
Courtney Ammenhauser: And Michael Sheen is in this version of Amadeus and has previously played Mozart.
Rahel Romahn: I love this man.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Did this make you nervous to join him on stage?
Rahel Romahn: Of course.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah?
Rahel Romahn: We’re talking about one of the greatest theatre actors alive You know, I felt like just a general tennis player. And then you’re throwing me on the court with, you know, Novak Djokovic or Federer or even a Serena Williams or what have you. And all of a sudden it kicks in. Hold on a second. I’ve gone from training practise person to someone on the court with the with the highest level. And so, of course, there’s a level of nerves, but a level of excitement because I look at Michael Sheen and I see myself in so many qualities in him, not only physically, but passion. You know, you watch him in anything, you Google him in anything, you YouTube Michael Sheen on anything. He is so passionately invested in whatever it may be, as silly or as grand as it may be, you know, so absolutely. It is so exciting to be able to work with a master of the craft such as Michael Sheen.
Courtney Ammenhauser: I love that analogy to of the tennis court.
Rahel Romahn: Yeah.
Courtney Ammenhauser: And the playing. I mean that’s what acting is right?
Rahel Romahn: Absolutely.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Lily, this show is a return to the stage for you. What have the last few years been like and how does it feel to be back?
Lily Balatincz: I’ve been, I’ve been working, I guess, yeah. In different creative capacities. Bit of this, bit of that, bit of circus artistry as well. And I’m actually so grateful for the opportunity to have explored different parts of my creative practise. To me, it feels like expansion of awareness. You know, as you continue to grow awareness as a human being, you’re naturally going to have awareness grow. It’s like parts of the room that were in the dark before have a light shone on them, and you start to see that, Oh, there’s something over there that I wasn’t aware of before.
Courtney Ammenhauser: How does it feel to be back and going into the show?
Lily Balatincz: Feels pretty great. Feels pretty, pretty damn exciting. Yeah, a little daunting. I’m not going to lie. It’s, you know, it’s on a very large scale. And working with one of the finest living theatre actors. One of the finest living actors. Yeah, it’s a rare confluence of factors that comes together to feel almost fated, and it’s definitely pinch me territory.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Lily, your dad was actually born in the same town as Mozart. Is that right?
Lily Balatincz: Yeah.
Courtney Ammenhauser: What happened when he found out that you got the role?
Lily Balatincz: Well, he. He was over the moon. And the first one of the first things he said to me was, well, you’d better go to Salzburg for research. And my dad has always said that he would never go back to Salzburg. He’s, he was born there in a refugee camp and spent the first couple of years of his life in that refugee camp. So he’s, there’s a lot of stuff attached to it for him. We’re from Hungary originally. And and I said to him, Yeah, I’ll go if you go, Dad. And he, to my surprise, said, okay.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Wow
Lily Balatincz: And so we actually just visited as a family. My family went back to Salzburg. We went for the first time, but he went back for the first time since he was a little boy, which was a really beautiful, rare emotional journey.
Courtney Ammenhauser: I bet
Lily Balatincz: It was just surreal, to be honest. It was like visiting the the birthplace of Mozart, visiting the place where Mozart then lived when he was older, and they moved to a different home. And that was a place where my character, you know, went and visited Mozart’s father with, with him. And, you know, my character died in Salzburg. So I went to the house where she died. And meanwhile, just a little bit over there was where my father was born. So it was yeah, it was quite a, quite a strange coming together of events and kind of contributed to the feeling, I guess, of it being a little fated, the whole thing.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Mm yeah. It’s quite a powerful catalyst for your dad to go back like you getting this role.
Lily Balatincz: Yeah, it was. It was actually. Yeah, it felt like intergenerational healing. You know, my grandparents, my nagymama and nagypapa died when I was very young because they they had cancers from the DDT spray, which people were sprayed with when they entered Australia as refugees. And so my father was so young that he didn’t get sprayed, but his parents did and they died very close to each other, far too young. And so that’s a huge reason why he was never going to go back. So to be a part of, you know, researching for the play, but also being a part of my own, tracing my own family lineage and yeah, holding space for my father and being by his side for that was, you know, am going to get a little bit emotional talking about it, to be honest, because it was a very rare, rare experience that I don’t think many people have the opportunity to have and has come about really because of this play.
Courtney Ammenhauser: It’s wild. That it’s worked out like that.
Lily Balatincz: It’s so wild. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Rahel, what do you think Amadeus is about?
Rahel Romahn: I think Amadeus is about the unsheathing of the shiny, alluring sword of one’s propensity for malevolence. And the revelation of one’s most darkest feelings and desires, which is the yin and the yang, light and shade. The Union. Umbra or shadow. It’s essentially a dance with the devil. The inner psychological odyssey of Salieri’s retelling of a particularly envious period of his life.
Courtney Ammenhauser: And Lily?
Lily Balatincz: I think it’s about the interplay between mediocrity and profundity, what it is to be someone who is born with the capacity to recognise profundity, but not with the ability to produce it. And I think that that must be a very tortured state of affairs. Yeah, the exploration of of a of a real person who existed in history. Who created some of the most. I mean, transcendent, transcendent art across any art form that has ever been made. He touched God. And I also think being that I am playing Constanza, that, you know, that she has been given a pretty rough wrap even to this day by biographers as being, you know, money hungry, greedy, not worthy of him. And I’m quite proud of the character that I’m playing. Every actor kind of, you know, stands up for their character. But if it weren’t for the fact that she published his works and that she spent the time to sign off on every single page of his works after he died far too young to make sure that no one else could be taking. You could take credit for his work, or that no one else could say that was Mozart when it actually wasn’t. Then we wouldn’t have the catalogue of his works that we have.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Rah, the plot of Amadeus famously applies a lot of creative licence to the story of Mozart. What kind of creative licence do you want to bring to your interpretation?
Rahel Romahn: What I want to bring. I mean, I find that oftentimes Mozart is played with a particular childlike quality. I want to bring something a little more, layered. The childlike quality being only one of the qualities. And I want to bring my version. You know, my fingerprint, as it were, to this role. And I have an odd ability to mimic and sing opera and and belt out a few tunes. And due to the simple reasoning of mimicry as a child, I used to love mimicking people and their voices and their not just the voices, but the intent in the voice and the musicality in the voice and everything like that. So when I look at the script, that’s what I want to bring vocal dexterity more of a complexity.
Courtney Ammenhauser: It’s quite amazing to hear about you singing opera as well. Had you sung opera before?
Rahel Romahn: No. So I actually well, I never sang opera professionally or anything. But funnily enough, I was involved in Cosi, which we put on here at the Opera House and Cosi was short. It’s an Aussie Australian play written by Louis Nowra, one of our great playwrights, and it’s about an asylum that is as the passion and and willingness to put on. Cosi fan tutte, which is one of Mozart’s famous comedic operas. And within that opera, there are scenes where the characters have to sing opera. And within those scenes, once we were taught the operatic bits, I found this natural inclination to be able to express myself within the operatic scheme and all the operatic kind of artistry. And and I found that I with my vibrato and with my dexterity, I was able to mimic quite well opera. So I’m going to try my best to incorporate that into the role, which as of yet I have not seen done. So hopefully it works out well.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah here’s hoping. In 2022 you’ve won the prestigious Heath Ledger scholarship. Can you talk to me about the acceptance speech you made?
Rahel Romahn: We were told, you know, obviously prepare speech, you know, and I’d been nominated for a few awards prior to that, but I’d never won and I never thought I would. It was more of an exercise for me. I wrote from my heart, you know, that speech, never knowing whether I’d recite it. I wrote a wonderful poem when I was nominated for an actor award, which I never got to recite. And I remember ripping it up in my pocket, my jacket pocket, when I didn’t win the award. Part of me was hurt that I didn’t get to read it. But part of me thought everything, as Lilly was saying earlier, was fated and that it was not time yet to recite this. Hmm.
Courtney Ammenhauser: And in the speech, you talk about artists who are perhaps less fortunate, who maybe don’t get to study, as Lily was talking about earlier, in formal institutions. Yes. Can you elaborate a little bit more for people who might not have heard the speech?
Rahel Romahn: Absolutely. In the speech, I talk about less fortunate artists. And what I mean by that is whether it be financial, whether it be knowledge, whether it be whatever the circumstances may be. There are artists out there or at least people that haven’t yet uncovered the - the fact that they could be artists, that potential for artistry, such as myself, I knew I wanted to do something. I didn’t know what NIDA was. I didn’t know what WAAPA was. I didn’t know what anything was. And I know that there are people out there that are less fortunate. Hopefully one person will see that speech or see that moment and see themselves in me and know that it’s possible. If it’s possible for me, it’s possible for them.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Do you think that things are getting better and that barriers are being broken down at all?
Rahel Romahn: Absolutely. Diversity is number one. I mentioned that in my speech. Also, it is the mirror to the world in saying that as much as diversity is important. What’s most important to me is ability and merit and hard work. I don’t want to see people in this industry that. It’s not doing them a service to bring forth mediocrity, which isn’t that funny. That Amadeus is about that, isn’t it? That it’s about mediocrity versus genius? You know, absolutely. I love hard work. I love the undying necessity to be the top level of anything. There’s a wonderful casting director. Recently I had a coffee with and she told me that. She’d never known the level of technique I encapsulate until she saw me in a particular play. After ten years of auditioning for her, it’s because I didn’t get a piece of material that was, that gave me the opportunity to showcase what I could do. And then she came and saw me in a play and then goes, Holy moly, this guy has a technique that I’ve never been that I’ve never been able to see at work. And that is just an example of what I’m saying is dig deep, really try and find the great ones. Not that I’m saying I am one. I’m saying that that is the duty of the industry.
Courtney Ammenhauser: What’s one thing that you think would enhance Australia’s theatre scene?
Rahel Romahn: I think everything starts in writing. You know, whenever I start anything as an actor or as a performer, I look at the writing. I think the most important thing is giving playwrights adequate time to be able to mould their thoughts, the complexities of the writing, the giving, each character, their own specific detail, and that and colour and quality and musicality. And I think when you allow a playwright the time to be able to carve that out concretely, you get the most potent mixture of what it is to watch a play, to mirror the inner vulnerabilities of what it is to be human to an audience so that they connect on an unconscious, subconscious and conscious level and don’t even know why they’re so moved. But they are so I think absolutely taking time, you know, to carve out the best piece of art as possible, as is the case with everything else in life, whether you rush something. Rome wasn’t built in a day. You know, I know that’s a, it’s a cliche, but. It definitely applies to this circumstance.
Courtney Ammenhauser: And Lily, with your experience in theatre, both here and overseas, the same question for you: what do you think could really enhance Australia’s theatre scene?
Lily Balatincz: I have a similar sentiment to what Rah has just said, insofar as you have to sort of I guess give people the opportunity to showcase their chops and sometimes maybe think outside the box with who you would see for something. So like bringing people in for things that maybe goes against the grain, but sort of expanding the parameters of who could be allowed to play different characters, different sort of archetypes. And also, yeah, opening up positions at the table for new people to break in, not just having a sort of you can’t sit with that kind of philosophy.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Totally, less gatekeeping.
Lily Balatincz: Yeah, I guess I also agree with the idea of a meritocracy. And I think that, you know, a meritocracy is inclusive of diversity. You know, you really just want to be encouraging the creation of art that is reflecting our society back to us in an authentic way and ensuring that people are being given opportunities to cut their teeth and build their careers and develop their talent over time. And not just be replicating the same sort of thing over and over again.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Well, speaking of making space for new people and new artists, who are some people who both of you think are up next that we should be keeping an eye on? Rah, do you want to go first?
Rahel Romahn: Recently I watched Never Closer at the 25 Belvoir, written by an amazing playwright, Grace Chappell. I promise you, I watched this play and I thought it was written in the fifties or sixties or I was like, Oh, wow, this is one of those classically amazing Northern Irish plays. And then I left the theatre and I said, So what? When was this written? The fifties. The Sixties. She said no. This is a recent work by an amazing playwright called Grace Chappell. And I was like, wow, this is. It was so Jacobean. It was so deep. It was so layered and had a good one direction. Fantastic. And it was just it gave me hope and excitement that there are writers out there. There are playwrights out there that follow the formula that works.
Lily Balatincz: I worked with an actor on Bad Machine named Abby Lee Lewis. She just toured the UK with Belvoir. She was phenomenal in Bad Machine, but she’s also just directed, had her directing premiere and I’m excited to see where her career goes as a performer, as an actor and as an arts leader. Because I can see her as being an incredible artistic director one day, and she’s a powerful, powerful First Nations woman with unlimited talent. So that’s one. Hannah Bronte and her partner Jesswar J, e, s, s, w, a, r for people wanting to look it up. Hannah Bronte is a visual artist. I worked with her when I was working at Campbelltown Arts Centre. She works with sort of projections and video art a lot. Plus she deejays. Her partner is a hip hop artist and they are incredibly talented. You know, those two kind of mishmash stuff together. Hannah Sometimes deejays and uses her projection art in conjunction, and I would love to see Hannah’s works on the sails one day. Victoria Pham she’s, she actually performed here recently with James Nguyen. They did a work at the Opera House and it’s about their exploration of the dong som drum. They’re both Vietnamese Australian, so they kind of, these drums that have been taken out of Vietnamese culture and put basically into museum archives in Western countries, they’ve taken it upon themselves to start buying these drums, which is so incredible. So they’ve kind of got this like, you know, I think they’ve got a couple now, a couple of 2000 year old drums, the Repatriation Project. And she’s just a force of nature. I mean, talk about the future of opera at the Opera House. She went to the Con. She’s a composer, a musician. She’s doing her PhD in archaeology at Cambridge at the moment. She is one of the kindest humans you will ever meet and just a force of nature. I don’t know how she fits it all in.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Doing the most.
Lily Balatincz: And the next thing she’s as we met for coffee recently and she said, I think I’m going to do an opera next. And I was like, Of course, Victoria, of course you are. So that’s another one to watch. So, anyone at the Opera House wanting to programme watch those spaces.
Courtney Ammenhauser: That was Rahel Romahn and Lily Balatincz, performers in the new production of Amadeus, opening at the end of this year. In the next episode we’ll be hearing from singer-songwriter Ngaiire.
Ngaiire: I just feel - my mum flew in from PNG a few days ago to come see it and I said, Mum, how you feeling about all this stuff? She was dropping me off at the Opera House. She just. Burst out crying and she’s like, I’ve always wanted to see a symphony orchestra and to be able to see it with my daughter is… and she just couldn’t get the words out. She was just a mess.
Courtney Ammenhauser: I’m Courtney Ammenhauser and this has been Up Next, a podcast from the Sydney Opera House. From Audiocraft, the show is produced by Bernadette Phương Nam Nguyễn mixed by Glen Morrow, executive producer is Selena Shannon. From Sydney Opera House, Head of Digital Programming is Stuart Buchanan, and Digital Programming Coordinator is Georgia D’Souza. The Up Next theme music is by Milan Ring. Subscribe wherever you listen to podcasts.
Getting in the mood for love with Rainbow Chan
Courtney Ammenhauser: The Sydney Opera House acknowledges the Gadigal of the Eora Nation, traditional custodians of Tubowgule, the land on which the Opera House stands. We honour the long Gadigal history of gathering and storytelling, and acknowledge the strength and resilience of First Nations people and communities past and present.
Rainbow Chan: And sometimes there are songs that I write that are just for me. I can’t sing them, no, they’re too special, they’re too painful, they’re too sacred. But I sing them in the shower. I sing them when I’m walking down the road about to catch a bus, and I sing them for the people who remain in my heart, even though they’re no longer here.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Hey I’m Courtney Ammenhauser and this is Up Next, your ticket to the most exciting artists and performers coming through the Sydney Opera House doors. Join me backstage as we chat to a spectacular lineup of artists who are making waves on one of the most iconic stages in the world. Together we’ll uncover who’s up next, and how this moment in time is transforming the next 50 years of arts and culture.
In 2020, Wong Kar-wai’s cinematic masterpiece In the Mood for Love turned 20. To celebrate the iconic work from Hong Kong, three innovative Chinese-Australian performers reimagined it as a shimmering audio-visual dream. The show, In the Mood, was streamed live from the Opera House across the world in the peak of Covid lockdown and then returned! For a special one-off in-person show for Vivid 2022.
Sound: Music from In the Mood
Today we’re chatting with Rainbow Chan, Australian vocalist, producer and interdisciplinary artist originally from Hong Kong. She’s better known for her deeply original pop music and eccentric artistic expression. But she showcased the breadth of her talent as one of the performers and co-creators of In The Mood. She describes it as one of the most special experiences in her life.
Behind the stage of the Opera House, Rainbow and I got cosy and had a chat about her first time performing at the Opera House, bringing Hong Kong cinema to Australian audiences and all things love and loss.
Courtney Ammenhauser: I want to start at the beginning of your career. When was it that you knew that you wanted to make music?
Rainbow Chan: I think I was always gravitating towards performance and music, and I used to make little dances and make my family watch me do little performances in the lounge room. But I think there was a moment where it really clicked and I took it more seriously. I guess I sort of imagine that it could be a real future for me. I guess in high school when I entered the talent quest
Courtney Ammenhauser: Oh huge!
Rainbow Chan: Oh, man, it was exhilarating, I think. And it was the first time I’d like I entered it in the kind of my junior year doing hilarious dancing to Christina Aguilera’s dirty.
Courtney Ammenhauser: My gosh, your childhood is mirroring mine.
Rainbow Chan: I think I’m pretty sure the school took, like, VHS videos of every single year. And I asked them actually recently whether based or had a copy, and I think someone’s destroyed it. So I’m both relieved, but also devastated.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Oh no! Yeah.
Rainbow Chan: But yeah, I think it was like year nine. I’d written my first song, original song, and I performed it in front of the school and it actually it was like, girls, I’d never talk to my grade. Suddenly, you know, came up to me in the car and I was like, “Hey, I really liked your song.” And then I think that kind of gave me a little confidence boost, but also saw the power of music to connect me to people. And, and that was really special. And I kind of just became a bit addicted to that kind of whole process. And I think that’s when I really wanted to go, “Hey, I’m going to make I feel like I’m going to make music for the rest of my life.”
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah. Wow. From a talent quest.
Rainbow Chan: Yep. That’s right.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Oh I love that. Going back to like when you first started Post Talent Quest, how would you describe your early style of what you were making in in those early days?
Rainbow Chan: In the early days, I think I just really wanted to Bjork. I just really, I felt like, I was I was just obsessed over and I at uni, I did my honours paper on her and I just loved her artists vision and her, I guess her her imagination. I mean, I didn’t even need to describe how amazing she is. I think everyone knows how amazing she is, but I think I was just really struck by her ability to translate these abstract landscapes and psychological, I guess, states into a very specific musical vocabulary, which she had invented herself. So thinking in particular, like volcanic beats that she would make or string parts that would be reminiscent of Icelandic fisherman songs and how she was able to craft that into a very specific style and always push at the boundaries. So I think even though my music didn’t necessarily sound like hers, I always adopted her ethos and her vision, and I think I was. That really played an integral part in how I wanted to approach music and embed aspects of identity, being a female producer into my practise. So I think when I first started out, I would say I was less confident in those kind of conversations. Maybe I was testing out a lot of the ideas, but then over time it actually became more formalised as particular like themes that underpinned my practise.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah. And in that kind of evolution as it went on [00:05:14] what do you think influenced that? Do you think it was just like confidence and experience, or were there other things that kind of helped evolve the practise?
Rainbow Chan: It was a bit of both. I think inevitably I think artists always influenced by their life experiences. I think also as a pop musician, you’re generally drawing from autobiographical sort of encounters, so that that’s always like the bed of a lot of my songs in music. But honestly, I think it actually was a reaction to how I was perceived maybe by the public or by, I guess, music journalism at the time, like ten years ago. I think maybe at that point we hadn’t really developed a very sophisticated language around identity, and particularly as someone who’s a woman and of Asian descent in Australia, I felt like I was very much pigeonholed into a particular category and the descriptions that were used weren’t necessarily reflective of what I was actually making. And it was maybe more stereotyped or kind of, you know, I couldn’t be divorced from my body and the way that I looked, which at that time I felt was very unfair. I was like, my songs have nothing at that point really overtly to do with being Chinese or but it was always a point of conversation, but not in a way that where I where it was on my terms, if you know what I mean. And so I found that I actually then that’s why I said I kind of almost formalised it as a starting point so I could reflect those conversations back on to the person who might be asking me those questions and then make it more of a dialogue where it was more mutual and where I could actually challenge maybe some of those preconceptions or amplify them in a way that a bit get gets a bit ridiculous or, you know, where actually generates more conversation. That is more about diaspora, really, about migrant families, migrant individuals and that place of sort of not belonging really to either cultures which have kind of been immersed in and having to navigate that. But at the end you kind of create these really interesting hybrid identities or conversations that connect with people in other ways.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah, it sounds as though you almost like taking your power back, being like, if you want to have this conversation, I want to lead it, actually.
Rainbow Chan: Exactly. Exactly.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah, love that. We’re going to talk about the show that you performed at the Opera House in a bit. But before we do that, you’ve actually performed here a few times. Can you tell me about the first time?
Rainbow Chan: I believe it was in primary school at some sort of dance eisteddfod. I was possibly dressed as Pebbles from the Flintstones. It all becomes a blur. Even after that, there were I was in like children’s choirs when I was young. So I think there were a few times where I’d performed in a like a big mass choir. But yeah, the Opera House was always, you know, it’s such an iconic place, you know, in not only the Australian imagination, but internationally as well. I think when I was in Hong Kong, like the Opera House or something that, you know, we would associate with like Australia, the place we’re going to move to. So it was cool to be in there and performing.
Courtney Ammenhauser: What were your thoughts about the Opera House before all of the choir performances?
Rainbow Chan: I think the Opera House has the image of being quite I guess in a way, you know, it’s a bit elitist. Opera is, you know, historically designated for a very particular type of audience. And so. I guess. It was something that, you know, I might have looked from afar and gone, Maybe I don’t belong in that place or I’m not sure if I can go there kind of thing. But then to be able to perform in there was really great to kind of smash that trope around what, what this institution means.
Courtney Ammenhauser: It’s internationally recognised. So it’s like, you know, everyone sort of has this idea of it even though.
Rainbow Chan: Yes
Courtney Ammenhauser: We don’t all get to actually go in.
Rainbow Chan: No that’s right. It’s just, you know, like I think people go, Oh, what’s that pointy white building in Australia? In fact, my youngest sister in year five, I still remember she made this assignment and it was about Australian landmarks and she picked the Opera House and she created a hat that was made out of felt that had that was like stuck to a bucket that she could wear on her head anyway. So, you know, it’s just, it’s like something that, you know, is in everyone’s vernacular. Interestingly from the outside, maybe, but like, I don’t know how, you know, I don’t know how diverse of a of a of an audience maybe would be on the inside of it.
What’s exciting is that there is a shift maybe in the in the voices that are represented in the programming of the Opera House. But also. Yeah, the audiences that are coming to the opera house, I think that the there has been I guess, I guess a recognition in maybe the the kind of I guess, yeah, like historically what this place means and who it’s for and stuff. And I think, you know, a good push now to really to think about the future and and having this place be more inclusive.
Courtney Ammenhauser: So I’m keen to hear about the digital work In the Mood, can you tell me about it?
Rainbow Chan: So if you’re not familiar with the film in The Mood for Love, it’s about two people who live in an apartment block and they are married, but not together. There are two separate couples, but they realise over time that their partners are cheating on them with each other and it’s about them kind of reconciling the affair and in the process they sort of fall in love with each other, but they don’t want to be unfaithful to their cheating partners. So yeah, it’s the tension about this love that can’t exist.
Sound: Live recording of In the Mood
Rainbow Chan: It was this kind of serendipitous moment where border closures were happening. This movie was about not being able to not be able to have the intimacy with someone that you yearn for or love, but also in the in the context of everything that was happening in the world. And there were a lot of changes in Hong Kong at that point. It was a really special moment to go. Hey, let’s make a tribute to the filmmaker Wong Kar wai and also Hong Kong. So I’m from Hong Kong. That’s my birth place. The producer of the show Alistair Hill, Alistair also has roots there too his family. His mum’s from there. So that’s where their initial conversation came from. And then Marcus Whale was also involved. Obviously, he was the the other lead, Eugene Choi and Sophie Penkenthmengyoung.
Courtney Ammenhauser: So you gave a lot of like context of the time in which you did that production. How natural did it feel as a creative choice in that moment of your career? Outside of, I guess. The events of the world.
Rainbow Chan: It was probably the most ambitious project that I’d ever done and probably still is really my career. I think the timeline also was quite tight. It was about five weeks between the conception and when it was going to be performed. And what was really interesting I think, was the format of a digital livestream, something I’d never done before. To this extent where there were like multiple cameras involved were in the Joan Sutherland Theatre, you know, and it was but it was a completely empty audience. So there was an uncanny feeling of, you know, you’re being watched, but there’s no immediate feedback. And as a performer, that’s really disorienting. And the other quirk was Marcus and I could not be next to each other because of the COVID restrictions. So we were always five metres apart and we had to figure out ways to represent the moments of intimacy and and connection between the two characters of the film. But physically, we literally had to be five metres apart, so we had to come up with creative sort of camera cutting techniques to make it look like we were next to each other. And some like projections and animations, but it was really fun. It was like problem solving for this format. But it also allowed us to reflect some of the really specific cinematography in In the Mood for Love, particularly the use of like, historical objects and, and mirrors and windows and glass to shoot through the camera. I always being kind of refracted through objects. And then you see the figure that’s always sort of distorted a little bit or warped. And so we were able to achieve some of those really iconic moments in the film through the camera techniques on the digital screen, which, you know, is not as easily achievable in a live context in a theatre.
Courtney Ammenhauser: And what was your relationship to Wong Kar Wai’s films before doing this? Were they in your home growing up?
Rainbow Chan: Yes, they were less so when I was a child, but my parents were always using Wong Kar wai as like a way to describe when something was too arthouse for them and they couldn’t understand. Just kind of lived to in my imagination as this kind of enigma. But as I was older and particularly as I was, you know, going back to the earlier conversation of like me reclaiming my cultural heritage and my identity, Wong Kar wai became so and that was quite important because, you know, he was making all these really beautiful films that kind of crossed over into the mainstream, or at least in the kind of western world. And I found him a really interesting figure that was expressing a lot of social, cultural sort of tensions through a the stories. And I felt like very connected to that style of storytelling, which I do in all of my pop songs, basically. So yeah, Chungking Express was, is one of my favourite films. Ever. Just love the colour palette of his work and the I guess the slowness. But also everything he does is like poetry. So. Yeah, I, I always loved his work, so it was such an honour to be able to be part of this project.
Courtney Ammenhauser: And it was first live streamed in 2020 right in the middle of lockdown, an empty theatre bringing this show to Australian audiences and being Chinese Australian performer from Hong Kong. How did it feel to connect the cultures in that way?
Rainbow Chan: I think it was a really special time to present this work with the world, sort of being on pause and having to stop you know, what everyone’s used to doing. You know, we’re so used to being productive. We’re so used to having this mobility. And it was a moment to actually stop and reflect on what was important in life, you know? And for me, one of those things was family. But it was really hard because a lot of my family in Hong Kong and I couldn’t see them. So I think.
What our production was able to do, I think from conversations afterwards was allow other Australians to have those sorts of conversations around in particular I think around diaspora and sort of people who have family elsewhere to, to think about I guess that longing and distance for home and what home actually means. And I know in the story of In the Mood for Love is more you know, it is more about love, but there is subtext there about belonging and identity. And I think, you know, as Australians we live on stolen land. That is a very you know, that is a conversation that’s ongoing. So I think, yeah, it’s generated. I think the work has generated dialogue with in particular with other people who are Chinese Australians and who have Wong Kar Wei as part of their imaginations growing up and, and I guess connecting people in those, in those kind of communities, but also a bit broader I think as well. It’s just about kind of migration and place.
Courtney Ammenhauser: What kind of reactions did you get after it was streamed online? I mean, you didn’t have that audience feedback, but did you get it elsewhere?
Rainbow Chan: This is one of I think this is one of the most special experiences I’ve ever had coming off the stage. I keep using that word special, but I really do feel like this this particular production will always have a very important part in my life. I felt it was really strange. After we finished the performance, there was no audience applause. It was just completely empty. And, you know, it was just like, All right, and we’re done. And like, the lights kind of turned on. And it was really anticlimactic and very strange. And I walked back to the green room and turned on my phone and I received all these messages on WhatsApp from my family in Hong Kong who had been livestreaming it. And I didn’t realise that they, you know, they actually gathered at a dinner and watched it together and I just burst into tears. It was the best response I could ever get in that moment where we were so distant, it was it was suddenly together, you know, it was just like I was embraced by by those messages and that. But yeah, it was just, it’s been really positive the reaction and we were a bit nervous because it’s such an iconic film and we knew that, you know, we couldn’t just do a copy of it and we had to kind of inject our own original, I guess, take on certain aspects of the film. So I think we’ve created something that’s a bit hybrid. A bit, yeah. Like has generated kind of extra conversations and that’s been really, really fruitful.
Courtney Ammenhauser: You’re invited back in 2022 to perform it again at Vivid in person in front of an audience. What’s it been like starting although of a back from you five eisteddfod the choirs you know and then to moving into that moment.
Rainbow Chan: It was pretty damn cool. Yeah I think yeah. Like it was just I miss that feeling of sharing, you know, I think and I think a lot of performers have felt this way as well after COVID and actually finally being able to perform to a live audience again is that that that is such a privilege and it’s such a sacred space to have that shared embodiment of a time and place together. And so I don’t take it for granted anymore. I used to be like, Oh, you know, I’ve got a show. Coming out here, I go to work. And now it’s like, Oh my goodness. How special is this? So yeah, it was just fantastic. And because it was just a one off show as well that I really, you know, I think we really put our all into it. And what was really challenging, I guess, but also rewarding, was now how do we translate something that was made for the digital screen back to a live theatre context?
And so one way we went about this was we had a big scrim that covered the entire front of the stage so that projections of the digital work, certain parts of it, could then be superimposed over the top of our live moving bodies that was behind the scrim. And so there was this very intertextual layer which was beautiful and helped to still reference the filmic language that we’ve drawn inspiration from for this work. And, you know, subtitles were so able to be used because it’s such an important part to the original film In the Mood For Love. I think they really play with typography, poetry as text that appear on the screen at certain key moments in the film. So yeah, to be able to translate that to a live audience was really great. We also did something a little bit, a bit whimsical, where we in the show, halfway in the show we actually left the stage and we went around the back, unbeknown to the audience, and reappeared in the crowd.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Fun
Rainbow Chan: And there were spotlights on Marcus and I, and we sang a duet together from either side of the theatre on the stairwell, and I could hear audible gasp.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah I was just about to say what was happening in the audience?
Rainbow Chan: They were like [gasp] And that was beautiful as well. And so and then from that point we ran back onto the stage and it was great because it was like the, the, I think we took the liberty in like making the performance immersive and really like using the whole theatre because the first time we did it we were collapsed onto a 2D screen. So this time we really wanted to make it 3D and alive.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah in the thick of it. It sounds like you’ve put a lot of time and energy into this project and no doubt you have. What influences did you take away from that project that you’re bringing into your new work?
Rainbow Chan: So I had written some music actually just a little just before the project started, and that was the song “Heavy” and “Doing Word,” which were both developed further for the show. And at that time I was listening to a lot of Mandarin and Canto pop of my parents generation, which actually corresponds with the kind of timeline of In the Mood For Love. So after the show, I really built upon that material and I guess reflecting on the role of nostalgia in identity formation and used the power of ballads and melancholy as a trope to explore the next record that I made, which was called “Stanley.” And it was an ode, I guess to to these yeah, to these ballads I had listened to growing up, and in particular a song called Teresa Teng. Then like one who’s like the most famous singer in East Asia. She’s just very like, everybody knows who she is. And she tragically died at a very young age at 42 from an asthma attack. So she’s got this kind of tragic cultural legacy, but like, yeah, like a huge, huge following. So, yeah, the record was looking into the role of melancholy and really sappy love songs, but also I was fascinated about the role that language and music, how they interact in Chinese music because Chinese is a tonal language and so your melodies can’t just dance around. They have to conform to how the language is spoken, the tones of the language. And so I notice that Cantonese and Mandarin music have very particular melodic contours because of the the language. And I took that as a way to actually then write new songs. And even though most of my songs are English, it was just playing with that tension between word and sound.
Courtney Ammenhauser: We’ve been speaking about matters of the heart a lot, and I have a confession. I first came across your music when I had a very sore heart, and I found a lot of comfort in it, particularly your track “nest.” And I’m interested to know where do you find comfort in those moments of heartache and of love and loss?
Rainbow Chan: I find comfort in actually vocalising my pain. Going back to that first sound quest, I had experienced my first heartbreak at 14. And it was like something. It was just like looking back on it now, you know, it was the worst pain I’d ever felt. It was just so I guess maybe when you’re a teenager, everything’s a bit more amplified as well. But I’d never experienced that kind of heartbreak before. And and since, you know, I’ve gone through lots of other things as well and, you know, have become quite resilient. But I think when it’s the first time your heart’s broken, that’s something that’s just such a shock to the system that you never really quite forget what that feels like. But I found writing music was a way to survive, was my way to navigate that pain, a way to navigate things that I felt were, you know, unfair or confusing and has always remained a tool for me to to ask questions when the world is just too chaotic. And there’s, you know, sometimes there is no answer. It is just chaos. And to just take a moment to hold space for those complexities. So the process itself is very therapeutic for me. And sometimes there are songs that I write that are just for me. I can’t sing them, they’re too special. They’re too painful, they’re too sacred. But I sing them in the shower. I sing them when I’m walking down the road about to catch a bus, and I sing them for the people who remain in my heart, even though they’re no longer here.
I feel like that’s why music has existed since, you know, time and also group singing. I think ways that particularly women have used song to pass on knowledge, to create community, to express solidarity. The power of vocalising is healing, is very healing. And so what has been so magical about writing these songs for me is having moments like this where I meet people in the future who, you know, I never imagined another person would listen to my song. You know, it’s just this when I write it, I don’t necessarily think about what how it’s going to travel and what the life of it is going to be afterwards. But when it comes back to me in this form where someone’s gone, it’s helped me through this time or, you know, I connected with this. It’s always such a it’s such a it’s such a surreal moment. It’s like these things I experience can connect with other people and and become their own story and, you know, have their own life. I find that really, really beautiful.
Courtney Ammenhauser: You’ve taken so many interesting pathways in your career so far, and you seem to keep finding new and exciting ways to reinvent yourself into practise as an artist. What’s next for Rainbow Chan?
Rainbow Chan: What I’ve really appreciated, I guess, reflecting back on my career so far is the more lateral ways that my practice have evolved across different disciplines. I think, you know, when I first started, I imagined, you know, a very typical kind of conventional pop music career where I’d be a recording artist and I’d tour and, you know, try and get bigger and bigger and bigger and expand in that way, going more vertically. Right.
But I think that for me was, you know, over time, I didn’t feel like that was as interesting and not sustainable as well. And what I’ve loved is actually going horizontally across and meeting different people, collaborating with different people across different fields of working in the visual arts, worked in theatre, I’m a teacher as well, so I teach at unis. All these different elements of my practice has really enriched, I think, my creative life.
So the next big project I’m working on is trying to reimagine a collection of folk songs from Hong Kong, which I have been introduced to. Well, I was introduced to it a couple of years ago. So the story was that my mum is Weitou which are the first settlers of Hong Kong, and she can speak a dialect which is actually disappearing. It’s sort of a little bit it’s related to Cantonese, but it’s a dialect that is sort of on the brink of disappearance. And a couple of years back, I asked, Mum, can you teach me the language? And she was like, You know what? I think there are some songs in language that you could probably like learn, and that would be easier for you to to understand not only just the words, but the lifestyle and the kind of the stories and you know, yeah, like you get a more holistic understanding of the culture.
And so I reached out to some elderly Weitou women in Hong Kong who know this music. And from there, it’s just been an explosion of knowledge that’s been passed down to me. These women are like in their eighties, nineties, and they didn’t receive a formal education. Everything for them was oral tradition. And so they learnt through songs and stories and through like crafts, like embroidering and weaving. And it would be women only sort of shared spaces where they would exchange this craft and knowledge.
They were also in arranged marriages. So one very specific thing I’ve been learning is bridal laments, which are marital mourning songs that women would sing before they were married off. And it was a song cycle that lasted three days where they would sing in front of their friends and family and actually cry. It’s called to its weeping songs. And they would cry because that once they were married off, they were symbolically no longer part of this family. They were kind of separate. And and then also when they were, you know, they’d never even met. They grew most of the time on the wedding day. They’d see the groom for the first time, and then they would always be an outsider to that family, too, as well.
So these bridal laments, mourning songs are so incredibly sad and they’re sung in the dialect and they reflect the landscape of the of Hong Kong pre-colonial days. And it is just so rich in history and identity and women’s voices that have not been documented very well, and still it’s not mainstream knowledge at all. So what I’ve been doing is, yeah, relearning my songs but also trying to, I guess see similarities of that kind of liminality. As someone living in Australia with Hong Kong descent and, and, and trying to work out for me in my generation what this liminality means. But what’s been amazing in my practise now is that it’s kind of come full circle. Like I’ve now able to reteach the songs to my mum who didn’t know how to sing the songs. And I imagine that, you know, hopefully I can teach it to the future generations too. And this project has been particularly rewarding in that it’s connected me to a lot of other people who’ve experienced similar things, women who with indigenous knowledge, who have, you know, passed on these oral traditions. And yeah, just just seeing parallels, even though it’s very, very different. But like parallels between these stories.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Gosh, those songs sound so devastating.
Rainbow Chan: Yeah, it’s very devastating. And but I guess I’m trying to, again, harness that the power of the pain to actually express also the resilience of the women.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah.
Rainbow Chan: And and also thinking about the resilience of the culture and the resilience of the language because it’s not yeah, it’s not dead. Yeah, it’s sleeping. It’s it’s fading. But hopefully through, you know, making these songs like I guess I’m doing it as a, like a multi-pronged project. I have an aspect of it which is more about conservation, preservation, but then there’s another aspect where it’s more generative and creative, where I’m turning them into club songs or I’m turning them into, you know, something that might have autotune on the vocals. What’s going to, you know, like kind of connecting it to the aesthetic and the sonic palette of my authentic self, and then that then connecting to a contemporary audience and then allowing those songs to have a revitalised sort of existence. And that’s been really cool.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah, for sure. As we’ve been recording this, you were listed as one of the 40 under 40 most influential Asian Australians, and we’ve talked a lot about what’s influenced you, what’s influenced Rainbow, but what’s it like being told that you’re now somebody doing the influencing?
Rainbow Chan: I think I feel like, you know, there’s always going to be a moment of kind of feeling like imposter syndrome and being like, wait, am I actually that influential? And I think it is also, you know, in these sort of awards or acknowledgements, you know, you don’t ever you never, you know, represent everybody. Like, you know, there’s so many other people that could be on this list. So it really is like a little bit of luck as well in being selected. But, you know, there is hard work. I obviously put a lot of effort and thought into my practise, so it’s cool. But yeah, to know that there’s a privilege there. And a bit of a platform to promote other people as well, lift other people up is really satisfying and really rewarding. So I think especially my teaching and mentoring practice, I try, you know, to, to empower other people and give them the skills to tell their stories. So yeah, I think if that’s the influence that I can have, then that’s great. It’s great to have more diverse voices, more inclusive stories being told. So if I can contribute to that, then yay!
Courtney Ammenhauser: You’re talking about platforming other people. And we always like to find out who you think would be Up Next. So I’m interested to know which artists or performers do you have your eye on or do you think ones to watch?
Rainbow Chan: I have so, oh I have so many people that have really struck me as like doing something really innovative. Anne So there actually, well, was one of my old students, but on their own path now, fantastic performer. They rap in Korean and English, and their music is just so rich in its electronic soundscapes, in its grittiness. But then they sing with the most pristine kind of Mariah, Mariah Carey style, like Mauresmo vocals as well. So there’s a really interesting mix of references and and styles that Anne So creates in their music. Also Indira Elias, incredible songwriter, beautiful vocalists. Her songs are just they. When I first heard them, they just sound like they were classic songs that had been written or already that I already knew somehow, but was just like unfolding in these, like, really like, poetic ways. Every single line, every single melody just kind of floated into my ears this ethereal energy. I love her music. And yeah, she is a great performer as well.
And also, Ida Warhol, harpist who and vocalist who was actually the harp player in in the mood again really just my goodness I would say probably my favourite songwriter performer Shallow released much music yet if at the time of this recording I don’t think any music yet, but please look out for her music. I think she’s just she’s literally my favourite performer. Singer, vocalist, harp player. Incredible.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Definitely one to watch. Thanks so much for coming in today.
Rainbow Chan: Rainbow Oh my pleasure, thanks Courtney.
Courtney Ammenhauser: That was Rainbow Chan, vocalist, producer and interdisciplinary artist. In the Mood is available to watch online for free, on the Sydney Opera House streaming platform at stream.sydneyoperahouse.com
In the next episode we’ll be hearing from Sydney actors Rahel Romahn and Lily Balatincz, who star in the brand new production of Peter Scahffer’s Amadeus, opening at the end of this year.
I’m Courtney Ammenhauser and this has been Up Next, a podcast from the Sydney Opera House.
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Facing demons with Michael Mohammed Ahmad
Courtney Ammenhauser: The Sydney Opera House acknowledges the Gadigal of the Eora Nation, traditional custodians of Tubowgule, the land on which the Opera House stands. We honour the long Gadigal history of gathering and storytelling, and acknowledge the strength and resilience of First Nations people and communities past and present.
Michael Mohammed Ahmad: I would argue 99% of people who call themselves writers or aspire to be writers will never really be able to do it. It’s a bit insulting to say that, but it’s fine because if it was easy, then it wouldn’t be special.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Hey I’m Courtney Ammenhauser and this is Up Next, your ticket to the most exciting artists and performers coming through the Sydney Opera House doors. Join me backstage as we chat to a spectacular lineup of artists who are making waves on one of the most iconic stages in the world. Together we’ll uncover who’s up next, and how this moment in time is transforming the next 50 years of arts and culture.
Today I’m hanging out with Michael Mohammed Ahmad who is the founder of Sweatshop literacy movement and the co-writer of the play The Demon. The Demon is part of the Opera House’s Unwrapped series that highlights some of the most exciting independent creators from Australia. It’s a Lynchian crime thriller that stretches across generations and in this play, the creative team draw on their Chinese, Arab, Anglo-Celtic settler and Indigenous backgrounds to weave a surrealist allegory for the Australian demon of racism.
Michael and I sat together ahead of the play’s October 2022 season. And we spoke about his brief but emphatic acting career, his journey as a writer, and what it means for his communities to see themselves represented on the stages of the Opera House.
Michael Mohammed Ahmad, welcome.
Michael Mohammed Ahmad: Hello. And thank you for having me, and Salaam alaikum.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Thank you for being here today. I wanted to start off by asking you, you know, we here in Fairfield recording on beautiful Darug country and it’s also Western Sydney. You grew up in Western Sydney and it’s clear from the work that you make that it’s a special place to you. What is it about Western Sydney that fosters creativity for you?
Michael Mohammed Ahmad: Western Sydney is the most culturally and linguistically diverse region in the country. Some might argue even the world. It’s also the most densely populated. It has almost 2 million people. So in many ways it represents a microcosm of what Australia is. It also has the largest populations of people who identify as first nations. This kind of melting pot is the correct place to get a sense of who we are as a nation.
On any random street in the western suburbs of Sydney, people could be speaking a hundred different languages at the same time. That’s pretty magnificent. It also means that for me, as a writer and as somebody who’s specifically interested in literature as opposed to just story, I’m interested in language. It means that we are in a region that can really push the parameters and the boundaries of what we mean by Australian language and even Australian English. It means that we are in the right place to tell the most exciting and complex and original stories about who we are as a nation.
Courtney Ammenhauser: And you’ve had quite an interesting journey to become a writer. You originally wanted to be an actor. Can you tell me about how your family responded to you catching your big break in acting?
Michael Mohammed Ahmad: So I had aspirations when I was growing up of being important, not being an actor. I wanted to be important. And in a kind of Western capitalist sense, celebrity and Hollywood seems to represent importance more than anything else, even more than being a politician, you know. And so the idea of being a Hollywood movie star seemed to represent importance, especially when I was growing up. And things like the Oscars were actually a really big deal. I’d watch the Oscars, and I would have fantasies of my own Oscar speech. So that was my boyhood aspirations.
And at that time, I was completely oblivious to my racialised identity, my name, my appearance, my background. None of that meant anything to me. And I didn’t think that that would actually be a barrier that we learnt that we discover the barriers through race, gender, class, sexuality as we get older. By the time I was 19, I was starting to get some auditions but the only auditions for TV shows and films that I was getting were for roles as a drug dealer specifically. And this was the context, the climate at the time was when there was a lot of media reports about Middle Eastern crime, specifically in relation to drug dealing and drive by shootings and also sexual assault. So there was a lot of narratives around sexually predatory behaviour from Arab and Muslim men in Australia because of their culture and their religion.
So the only auditions I would get offered were to play Lebanese drug dealers in the show. The shows that were being produced at the time, included movies like Cedar Boys and the Combination and the Combination 2 and Convict TV shows like Underbelly, The Golden Mile and this other TV show called East-West 121, which aired on SBS. And that’s the show that I auditioned for. I was cast in for episode three of Season One. I was cast as a drug dealer named Vinny Mahmoud.
The story for Vinny, is that he is caught with a bag of drugs in his pants. And then they arrest him and make a deal with him that if he spies on his group. In return, they will not give him a high prison sentence. So fundamentally they turn him into an informant. And then the next scene, you see Vinny going to his gang. And during the interaction with this gang, they find out that he’s wearing a wire. They blast his toe off. And then they drag him. And you’ve got to imagine that when I say it’s happening to him, it’s happening to me, in that I’m playing this out. And I’m there rolling on the floor screaming “my foot my foot!”
And that’s basically the last you see of the character of Vinny Mahmoud. I mean, he’s so insignificant, you don’t even see his conclusion. At the time, I thought it was still special. Minorities have a tendency to think that any representation is good representation before we develop some critical consciousness. So just the fact that, like one of us is on TV was exciting for my family and it was exciting for me. So I brought the whole generation together, you know, my parents and my siblings and my aunts and uncles and my cousins and we’re all watching it together in the living room. Yeah. And I remember at the end of the episode, my cousin, came up to me and said, “that was hectic cuz you were the lowest piece of shit I’ve ever seen on TV.”
Courtney Ammenhauser: Oh, my God.
Michael Mohammed Ahmad: And I remember that being a real epiphany for me. A really shocking moment of realisation. I had become a pawn and that I was complicit in the perpetuation of simplistic, one dimensional narratives about Arab and Muslim men as either sexual predators, gangsters, drug dealers or terrorist suspects. And it was really in that moment that I understood that I couldn’t be the prop for storytelling. I needed to be the storyteller. I needed to be in control of the narratives that are spoken about us. And from that moment on, I moved into creative writing as my discipline and my form.
Courtney Ammenhauser: And now you’ve written three novels, The Tribe, The Lebs, and the Other Half of You. And writing is this really introspective art form. How do you think that writing this trilogy helped you to understand yourself better?
Michael Mohammed Ahmad: Firstly, in response to the story I just told you, the concept in cultural theory of the burden of representation is that many minorities, First Nations people and people of colour often feel the pressure to create positive representations to counteract all the negative, negative representations. And that’s a burden because we don’t necessarily want to do that.
You know, all these TV shows about us and all these films about us represent us as drug dealers. I don’t want to perpetuate that stereotype. But the reality is that there is anti-social behaviour in our community. And so for me, the response to taking control of the narrative and speaking for ourselves wasn’t about telling a positive story or a clichéd romantic, happy story to counteract the negative stories. It was to tell a complex story to counteract simplistic and one dimensional stories. And by that I mean providing some nuance and socio political context that helps a reader understand where a certain antisocial behaviour might emerge from.
Now, in terms of the novels themselves, so the genre that I write in is called autobiographical fiction, it’s drawn loosely from my own life. But I think it’s really important for Australians, specifically white Australians, but I would broaden out to all Australians to understand that people of colour and first nations people have the capacity to be artists. Everything I’m writing is not just a diary entry revealing my racist, homophobic, misogynistic thoughts. These are characters that I’ve invented and that even though I am drawing from my lived experiences, I as an artist, I’m in complete control of what I’m creating, and I’m doing it to meet certain purposes and certain goals and to try to get my reader to come along with me on a journey that hopefully brings them to a place of awareness through that journey. And so that’s a very tricky thing to do. That’s actually a skill.
Which is why through my work at Sweatshop, but also through my craft as a creative writer, we focus on the art of storytelling and the art of literature as something that can be learnt. And in my case I have an arts degree and honours degree and a PHD and you put all that together with your lived experiences to create what I hope is good art.
Courtney Ammenhauser: And you just mentioned sweatshop. You are the founder of Sweatshop. Can you tell us a little bit about how it all began?
Michael Mohammed Ahmad: Sweatshop is a literacy movement based in western Sydney that is devoted to empowering First Nations people and people of colour through reading, writing and critical thinking. I was deeply inspired in my in my during my postgraduate studies by the work of an important African-American feminist activist and scholar and writer named bell hooks.
She argued that all steps towards freedom and justice in any culture are always dependent on mass based literacy movements, because degrees of literacy determine how we see what we see. And so this enabled me to recognise that the information that the young people in our neighbourhood, this is culturally and linguistically diverse people in Western Sydney, the information that the young people in our neighbourhood were consuming and how they were absorbing that and internalising that, was determined by their level of literacy, by their ability to grab onto a piece of information and deconstruct it, make sense of it.
The second quote that I learnt from bell hooks was the concept of coming to voice. She defines the concept of coming to voice as the act of moving from silence to speech as a revolutionary gesture. These two ideas, the ideas on coming to voice and literacy are actually two sides of the same coin. One is about understanding representation. It’s about being able to reverse engineer information. And the second is about creating alternative representations. And I built this idea of a literacy movement called Sweatshop around that coin, around those two ideas, empowering the young people in our community to think critically about the information they fed and then giving them a platform to create alternative representations.
Courtney Ammenhauser: So Sweatshop has been a big part of the work that you do. How has it shaped you both as a writer, but also just as a human being?
Michael Mohammed Ahmad: The majority of the public appearances that I do are related to my own, my books and my play, The Demon, for example. However, it’s about 10% of what I actually do. 90% of what I do is my work at Sweatshop and more broadly is my working community. It’s about giving back to the people in my community and my communities, the multiple communities that I identify with and trying to empower them to have a platform to speak for themselves.
The work of Sweatshop is designed to create a phenomenon referred to as mirroring. So a really good example of mirroring is the very famous photograph of Obama, there’s a young boy, a young African-American boy invited with his family to the White House to meet the president. And in this photograph, the president is bending over and the boy is feeling his hair. What prompted the creation of this photograph? Is the question that the boy asked the president. He asked him, is your hair like mine? And an Obama bends over and says, “Well, why don’t you feel it and decide for yourself?”
This is a very good example of the symbolic power of representation. I, as an Arab and as a muslim, I’m very critical of Obama’s presidency, as are many people. There’s a lot of things that he let us down on in very tangible ways including, for example, his policies on the Middle East. However, I value the symbolic importance of an African-American president, and it is embodied in that photograph. Just the significance of young people of colour seeing themselves reflected in these kinds of positions of authority can be transformative. And in the same way one of the principals of Sweatshop has been about mirroring, has been about creating spaces where we get to offer an alternate alternative complex and empowering representations of First Nations people and people of colour by the communities themselves. That gives hope and gives and gives trajectory for the next generation.
Courtney Ammenhauser: The Other Half of You is your most recent novel, which you wrote. You were writing the trilogy over the span of a decade. How do you think that your writing changed and evolved over that time?
Michael Mohammed Ahmad: Firstly I’ll say that the three books that I’ve written, The Tribe, The Lebs and The Other Half of You are described as a trilogy because they’re all autobiographical to some extent, and they are written in chronological order. However I didn’t write them as a trilogy. I wrote them as standalone novels that you can read on their own and they’re fully fleshed out so that a person can just jump in with any book and read and know where they are from the beginning to the end.
But what I find so fascinating about the journey of writing these books is when you look at the Tribe, it’s a quite a small book, it’s a little square book. And then if you look at the Lebs, it’s kind of a more mid-size book. So it looks like a more conventional novel than the tribe, but it’s not in that kind of large trade paperback edition because it was quite small as well. But then the Other Half of You is a very big document, 100,000 words, and it’s published as a very big, dense book that’s about 350 pages. And it’s so interesting that you could almost see me growing up with the books if you literally put the books next to each other. They grow up, they are getting bigger. And I like to think that as I grew up as a writer, as I matured as a writer, I got better as a writer, and I became more determined to push myself as a writer to write more ambitious works. And I would like to think that as writers, we do improve. We learn lessons from the previous book, and we continue to challenge ourselves. And I think that journey is very clear in the creation of these three works.
One thing that I think is really important about the final book, the Other Half of You is that there’s a kind of level of tenderness that I was able to infuse in the work that I wasn’t ever able to create prior to the other half of you, because it’s written as a letter to my son. So my son is named Kahlil, named after the great Lebanese poet Khalil Gibran. And, you know, he is the product of an Arab Australian Muslim dad and an Anglo Australian mother who comes from a very atheistic, middle class family. And our story of coming together was an incredibly challenging one. There was tremendous amounts of pressure from the families for us not to be together.
And it’s really written as a letter to my son to explain how he got here. And so because I’m talking to my son, there’s a little bit more of a kind of affection, you know, a gentleness. I’d like to think that you still get that kind of raw, rough, gritty Western Sydney vernacular that makes our language the language of Western Sydney writing so special. But I feel like it’s kind of layered with a, with a sense of fatherhood and parenthood that really gave me perspective and vision on the next kind of incarnation of the type of writer I want to be.
Courtney Ammenhauser: I want to chat about the Demon now, For listener could you give us a description of the plot?
Michael Mohammed Ahmad: The Demon is a play that I have been working on in collaboration with Dr. Rachel Swain, a dear friend and collaborator of mine, and who’s the director of the show. It is a play that we’ve been co-producing, co-writing together for ten years. I’m going to say that I don’t really know how to articulate the plot, but I will talk about the politics of the work. There is a compelling story that is very action, heavy, very exciting, that’s drama heavy. And that has some really amazing dialogue and some important sequences of events that link together three Shared histories, histories of First Nations people, Asian Australians and Arab Australians.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Speaking of the politics, would you like to share some of the themes in the demon?
Michael Mohammed Ahmad: I think that the the demon is about shared histories of xenophobia, and it tries to link three distinct histories together. So the the xenophobia that manifests on this land, as soon as it becomes colonised, as soon as the the First Fleet arrive and begin the process of genocide against the First Nations people. And then after this, is the xenophobia that manifests against Chinese communities in the context of the Gold Rushes, in the context of Burrangong and the Lambing Flat riots, and then leading all the way up into Western Sydney looking at the post-9-11 hysteria and moral panic around the Arab and Muslim communities in light of events like the 2005 Cronulla riots and the 2019 Christchurch massacre.
So we see these are linked histories of xenophobia. What’s so frightening is because it took ten years to write. It was confronting to see how history had been repeating itself and reproducing itself. So we’re talking about these old histories. We’re talking about colonisation. We’re talking about the Lambing Flat riots. We’re going back 20 years to talk about the September 11 attacks. But then in 2019, while we’re still developing the script, an Australian born white supremacist goes into two mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand, and slaughters 51 Muslims peacefully conducting their Friday prayers. About 12 months later, the first stories of COVID-19 are emerging, and we see a huge rise in anti-Asian violence across Australia and around the world. And then straight after that, George Floyd is murdered and we’re suddenly witnessing the explosion of the Black Lives Matter movement, which draws tremendous attention to the mistreatment of First Nations people here in Australia, specifically around deaths in custody, 500 deaths in custody since 1993. And so we’re seeing this linked history of xenophobia from hundreds of years ago to the post 9-11 era re-emerging in the last three years with Christchurch, COVID and Black Lives Matter. And so without us intending for this to be the case, the Demon has become even more relevant and more urgent. The demon of xenophobia is a demon that we literally and metaphorically want to bury.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Absolutely. And, you know, as you mentioned before, it’s been ten years in the making that you’ve been working on it. And yeah talking about the recent history as well it’s still present. What’s it been like going from those initial conversations when you came up with the idea to bringing it to life on a stage now?
Michael Mohammed Ahmad: You know what’s so interesting was that I was just a kid. You know I was just starting off in my career when Rachel first approached me. In fact, it was very shortly after my experience with East West 101, you know, like I’d only really just left the acting world and had started to enter into professional writing, studying at university and running a writing programme at the time called West Side Publications, which was the early incarnation of what is now Sweatshop.
Rachel came to my office, my little grungy office in Bankstown at the time and told me that I had been recommended to her as someone that could potentially write the dialogue for these characters. You know, it required some foresight on her part, you know, like they were kind of predicting who the successful and leading Arab Australian writers might be and who would actually be able to create something meaningful and significant as the years go by and as we developed this. So, you know, this is before I had a doctorate in creative arts. It was before I’d had written any one of these three novels that you were talking about. And it was before Sweatshop existed. So it was very, very early on. And in a way, I had to kind of learn to write the play as I grew into it. And of course, the entire world around me kept changing. So the politics of the play kept changing. Until it really cemented itself with the with the kind of the cycle of xenophobia that revealed itself from 2019 onwards.
Courtney Ammenhauser: And how do you go about navigating the different forms of being a playwright and a novelist? Do you find it’s challenging or what, what’s your experience switching between the two?
Michael Mohammed Ahmad: There are technical differences, which, of course, somebody who is very educated and trained in creative writing should be able to do. If you’re skilled in the form and of course, when you’re talking when I’m talking about teaching creative writing and when I’m talking about studying creative writing for ten years, we learn about as much as is imaginable in terms of just the technical abilities to do it. So once you’ve kind of got all those technical skills, then it becomes to me really about one simple concept across every single form, whether you’re writing novels, whether you’re writing a play, or whether you’re writing non-fiction or poetry. I don’t dabble in all the forms. I’m very restricted to non-fiction, prose and playwriting.
But as an editor and as the director of Sweatshop, I teach all the forms. I edit poets, I work with poets for example. The number one thing that connects all of these creative writing forms together is a concept that we actually teach in creative writing at the university, which is referred to as an original contribution to knowledge. So when you’re creating a piece of art, whether it’s a whether it’s a play or whether it’s, say, a novel, what you’re seeking to do is contribute something to the world of knowledge that the collected knowledge of the human race that is new, that is original, that hasn’t been done before. That’s a very, very difficult thing to achieve, which is why so many people who aspire to be writers are not very good at it. I would argue 99% of people who call themselves writers or aspire to be writers will never really be able to do it and that’s fine. It’s a bit insulting to say that, but it’s fine because if it was easy, then it wouldn’t be special. What makes great art special is that it’s actually very hard to do as hard as any other form. So the idea of creating an original contribution to knowledge is always what’s driving me. So when I write a sentence, if one of my characters is saying something to someone else, whether it’s in a play or whether it’s in a novel, if I’m setting up a scene or a sequence of events in a play or in a novel, I always go back to the question, is this scene I’ve created? Is this dialogue, is this moment? Is this description an original contribution? Has it been done before or is it reproducing, tired and boring clichés? And if it’s an original contribution to knowledge, then I trust that the audience is going to appreciate its value and its quality.
Courtney Ammenhauser: The Demon has a really great team attached to it. What’s it been like collaborating with people from different fields?
Michael Mohammed Ahmad: Incredibly significant. I can say the classic things like, I love this team so much. They’re so awesome and they’re so talented
Courtney Ammenhauser: Blowing me away.
Michael Mohammed Ahmad: Yeah. And you know, in closing, like, you can see us all on stage hugging and kissing each other. But but actually, there’s something more technically important when I say it’s significant, which is how do you make a work that is looking at First Nations experiences of genocide and ongoing dispossession. How do you make a work that is looking at the ongoing xenophobia and demonisation and violence against Asian communities in Australia from the moment they arrive? How do you make a work that looks at Islamophobia and anti-Arabness? And how do you make a work that links these three legacies together? And then also attempts to address issues of orientalism and colonialism and imperialism. Like how do you make a work that addresses all these issues on your own? You can’t because I don’t inhabit all of those different identities. So you can only make it collaboratively and you can only make it with the communities themselves. And you can’t make it with the communities in a consultative way that is an old white colonial model. You have to make it together in collaboration with each other, where everybody is empowered through the experience, where everybody is invested financially, professionally, where everybody grows through the process and everybody makes a contribution to knowledge that expands expands the capacity of Australia to be thinking critically about itself. And so to bring together such a culturally and linguistically diverse team for a show like this, and for a story like this is the only way. And so, of course, when we talk about the actors, when we talk about the the other writers that I worked with, when we talk about the directors and the the choreography and the stage management, the dramaturgy, when we’re talking about it and we say that the the team who created this reflect on every level, the, the people that are being spoken about and spoken for in the show. This is the only way that we can ethically make a work in the year 2022.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah, it’s that whole thing of, like, nothing about me without me.
Michael Mohammed Ahmad: Exactly.
Courtney Ammenhauser: The show’s got a season at the Opera House, which is very exciting. Did you ever think that your work would be on at the house?
Michael Mohammed Ahmad: No, I didn’t. And it wasn’t a goal of mine. My goals have always been about people, you know, and I’m not saying this in a romantic way. just to just to establish what my views are and how I feel about the work I create. Once I’d had the epiphany that I no longer wanted to be rich and famous and a Hollywood movie star.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah.
Michael Mohammed Ahmad: Once I’d had the realisation that there was something toxic about the way our community was represented, I really didn’t only transform the field of work that I was in, you know, move into writing, but I also transformed what its purpose was. I didn’t want to be world famous anymore and I didn’t want to be rich. What I wanted to do was create art that inspired and empowered the people I cared about and that I loved. And, and so my work has always been focussed on creating a, an experience for an audience that pushes them as far as they can be pushed to ask hard questions and hopefully to have some kind of transformative experience and, and an experience that we share together not one that is me just being a teacher, but maybe always being a student and a teacher trying to listen to my audience and create work that respects their interpretations.
But here’s the thing about putting on a work at the Opera House. I was very fortunate when I was starting off to get a few gigs out like, say, Belvoir, for example, Belvoir Street Theatre. And I remember finding out when I was a lot younger that Belvoir was a quite a respected and very loved space. And when you go and you perform there, you’d get quite a middle class, primarily white Australian audience who really appreciate that kind of alternative space. You know, this little theatre in on a random street in the inner west, there’s something very alternative and trendy about that. But when my family members and my Arab Australian friends from these, you know, lower socioeconomic backgrounds in the western suburbs of Sydney were rocking up to Belvoir. They were just like, Bro, this is just some trashy little theatre. Like, what are you doing here? You know? And it’s, it’s really that contrast between people who have privilege, a kind of look for alternatives. You know, they play it down. And people who don’t have privilege play it up. And there’s a name for that is conspicuous consumption.
That’s why, the kind of the common thing that a lot of my friends used to pick up when they go to Newtown is, “bro, the people here are rich, but they act poor.” And in contrast, you see a lot of people in the western suburbs of Sydney like really opting for the most expensive TV or the most expensive handbag or, you know, the most expensive car because they’re trying to compensate for their low socioeconomic status, performing a level of privilege and wealth to hide the socioeconomic disadvantages. And so, you know, it was so interesting to realise that a space like Belvoir could be very much appreciated in one socio political context, but not the other. And the other is the one that matters more to me, is my own community, how they receive that, this kind of work. And so for them, for, you know, for a lot of the communities that I grew up around, they can’t really understand the value of some of these more alternative spaces, theatre spaces in Sydney they have a kind of more conventional understanding of what theatre is.
And really for them the Opera House is the symbol of the very best and the highest point of theatre that you can reach and that you can have. And so I’m so excited about it at this point. Now, having finished a play and knowing that it’s going to be put on at the Opera House because I know it, it’ll mean a lot to our communities. The working class, culturally and linguistically diverse communities in Western Sydney. We have a show that is born and bred in Western Sydney and that represents our communities and it’s being put on in the most iconic theatre in the country. I’m hopeful that for that reason some of these communities from Western Sydney are going to have the chance to come and see it.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah. And see, you know themselves on the stage as well. To wrap up, we like to ask our guests about people on their radar or, you know, artists who are coming up that we should keep an eye on. Is there anyone that you think is, you know, going to make some waves?
Michael Mohammed Ahmad: Oh yes of course. That’s a terrific question. So firstly, I can’t talk about everybody because I run a nationally renowned, very successful literacy movement. So there are just so many amazing arts practitioners that I’m working with at the moment. So the first thing I would say is this for anybody who’s interested in my work and in the work that I’m doing in my community in the western suburbs of Sydney, please check out the Sweatshop website. Sweatshop.ws the WS stands for Western Sydney. So that’s how you remember it. But you can jump on our website and find out about all the amazing artists that we’re working with. You can check out some of the publications, the amazing anthologies and books that we’ve published from these up and coming superstar writers.
Now, some of the style writers that I’m really excited about in the next, say, 12 months. Shirley Le, who’s a Vietnamese Australian writer who grew up in Yagoona in western Sydney, has a novel coming out called Funny Ethnics. She’s just signed with Affirm Press. It’ll be out in March of next year. Iit is an autobiographical fictional novel about her experiences as a Vietnamese Australian woman growing up in the western suburbs. So keep an eye out for that one.
And then you’ve got Sara Saleh, who’s an important Palestinian Australian award winning poet who’s going to release her debut novel next year as well. Also with Affirm Press. And Sara’s book is called Songs for the Dead and the Living. And it’s, say, an intergenerational diasporic novel about the experience of being a Palestinian Australian. And I think, again, it’s an incredibly important novel, especially as we have more and more intense and more honest conversations about the plight of the Palestinian people. And I think Sara’s book is going to be a real game changer for that conversation.
And then lastly, a writer that I’m very, very excited about is Winnie Dunn, whose debut novel is coming out next year with Hachette, Australia, so a multinational publisher. Winnie’s book is called Dirt Poor Islanders. I guess the other side of the Crazy Rich Asians coin. And it’s, believe it or not, the first Tongan Australian novel ever published. And it is frightening to think that after hundreds of years of Pacifica communities engaging with Indigenous communities, that there’s never been a mainstream novel yet that represents the Pacifica community. And so Winnie will be the first. She happens to also be the general manager of Sweatshop. The editor of a new anthology that just came out called Another Australia, which you can find on the sweatshop website. And so I’m particularly excited about Wendy’s debut novel because I think it’s going to make a very important contribution to Australian literature.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Thank you so much for coming in today. It’s been a real treat.
Michael Mohammed Ahmad: Thank you and thank you very much for having me.
Courtney Ammenhauser: That was Michael Mohammed Ahmad, writer, playwright and founder of Sweatshop Western Sydney Literacy Movement. I’m Courtney Ammenhauser and this has been Up Next, a podcast from the Sydney Opera House. From Audiocraft, the show is produced by Bernadette Phương Nam Nguyễn mixed by Glen Morrow, executive producer is Selena Shannon. From Sydney Opera House, Head of Digital Programming is Stuart Buchanan, and Digital Programming Coordinator is Christie Yip. The Up Next theme music is by Milan Ring. Subscribe wherever you listen to podcasts.
Pearls of wisdom with Mahdi Mohammadi
Courtney Ammenhauser: The Sydney Opera House honours our First Nations by fostering a shared sense of belonging for all Australians, and we acknowledge the Gadigal, traditional custodians of Tubowgule, the land on which the Opera House stands.
Mahdi Mohammadi: Take care of your artists. They are the one who showed you that. What is your truly feeling? They are the one who show you the way. They are the ones that show you and remind you that. What is life about?
Courtney Ammenhauser: Hey I’m Courtney Ammenhauser and this is Up Next, your ticket to the most exciting artists and performers coming through the Sydney Opera House doors. Join me backstage as we chat to a spectacular lineup of artists who are making waves on one of the most iconic stages in the world. Together we’ll uncover who’s up next, and how this moment in time is transforming the next 50 years of arts and culture.
Mahdi Mohammadi: Our pronouns in Persian language doesn’t have any gender differences. So your lover could be a he, or she, or whatever form of gorgeousness you desire.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Dorr-e Dari: A Poetic Crash Course in the Language of Love, has been a hit ever since its first show at Sydney’s PYT Fairfield. Inspired by the tradition of private recitals and ‘curtain shows’ performed all through the Persian-speaking world, Dorr-e Dari combines thousand-year traditions, with personal story, singing, joyous dancing and sumptuous video imagery, where guests appear on video calls from Afghanistan, Iran and Canada.
I had a chat with Mahdi Mohammadi, cinema and theatre director, co-diviser and performer in Dorr-e Dari ahead of the show’s season at the Sydney Opera House. We spoke about his journey into the world of the arts from Afghanistan to Australia, his award-winning Papyrus theatre group back in Afghanistan, and the biggest lie he ever told his dad.
Thank you for being here today.
Mahdi Mohammadi: Thank you for having me.
Courtney Ammenhauser: What was it about theatre and performing that made you think I want to do that?
Mahdi Mohammadi: Well, when I was a child in Afghanistan, I used to watch a lot of movies. And I was a big fan of, you know, being an actor. While growing up in Afghanistan, I saw and I noticed a lot of problems with women in Afghanistan, and especially my mother. I saw how she was treated in our family and all other women in Afghanistan, especially the violence against women in Afghanistan was really a big issue and I always wanted to do something for them. So before going to university, I was thinking that which subject is the best for me to study, to reach my goal and help the women of Afghanistan. And I did a lot of research and I found out that people of Afghanistan, they really love arts and especially acting, movies, theatre. You know, that’s when I exactly decided to be an artist and to, you know, this is going to be my life passion and I’m just going to be an artist and actor and I will do anything I can to help the women of my country.
Courtney Ammenhauser: You mentioned that it was a problem for your family. What did they have, other plans or hopes or things that you would follow?
Mahdi Mohammadi: Of course, like like all other families, like my father. My father was really a religious person. And he always wanted me to be a doctor or an engineer or, you know, something, as he says, always something better. That I had to lie to my father. When you go to university. So before university they take exam from you and you have ten choices. For me, art was my second choice and the first one was to be a doctor. And I knew definitely that I’m not going to get that. I told my father that art was my 10th choice, my last choice. So, and I got it then. This is the only subject that I can study so now there is no other way. And my father was like, I don’t like art, and I said, you know, look father, I can’t just waste one another one year to wait to become a doctor or something, just let me do it and let’s see what will happen. And my father said, okay. And that was the, I think the biggest lie that told my father.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Revealing all on this podcast today. So you went on to study theatre in Afghanistan, and you’re part of this amazing award winning theatre group there. Yeah, it was called Papyrus Theatre. Can you tell me about how it came to life, how it began?
Mahdi Mohammadi: I was in the second year of university. Then I met this amazing woman. She was an actress too Tahya Hashimi and her two sisters, Burhan Hashimi and Nadia Hashimi. And we had a lot of chats. And we then we found out that we all think in the same way. And like helping women in Afghanistan. And we decided to publish this theatre group, Papyrus Theatre Group in the Cement National Festival of Theatre in Afghanistan. We performed a performance which the name was The Wall, and it was about all the problem for Afghan women. And we won the first prize for that performance. After that, we decided to ask for some funding and work with the NGO’s Western people. And we tried to show the women of Afghanistan their rights. And even then I’ve got to say this - because I was the only man in our group, all other was just women. Sometimes I had to go to the family and say, like, hi i’m from this NGO and we would love to take your wife or your daughter for a picnic and we’ve got to pay and we’re gonna pay you as well. And because they don’t have any problem with going for a picnic and, you know, especially when you’re paying as well. And then after that, we take the women to the theatre salon and show them the performance and talk about their rights. And which, a lot of problem came after the show.
Courtney Ammenhauser: What kind of problems came?
Mahdi Mohammadi: Well, the, you know, the men of the family would come to us like, did you really take my wife to a picnic? Because since they’re back from that day, they’re talking about their rights, they’re talking about all other stuff, which is weird. And I, I’m not sure if you really took them to for a picnic in the park, like, yeah, we did that. I don’t know, maybe she saw in the TV or some other things and that was good. At least we made them to stand for their rights.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah, absolutely. And so how do you think that being in Papyrus Theatre and making those shows about women’s rights in Afghanistan helped to prepare you for the future work that you were going to make?
Mahdi Mohammadi: I had no idea that one day I’ll be here in Australia. I was really happy with the work that I was doing in Afghanistan. But, you know, fighting for women’s rights in Afghanistan is a, is a really big deal, especially, you know, Taliban around this, all other Islamic groups around. And they always threatened you and like, got a lot of warning blackmails about stop doing this job. But I was happy. And because I found out they wouldn’t blackmail me if I wouldn’t do anything, you know, big. So it means I’m doing my job, right? And I loved it. But, you know, coming here wasn’t my choice. It was my family’s choice. Like, they forced me because they cared about me not being in Afghanistan and they just asked me for family’s sake, for all other friends that care about you, you got to go out of Afghanistan. And I had no idea that I would come here. Then I decided if I go to any other country, I would love to continue my theatre and arts. I did a lot of research and I had some friends here and I thought, well, Australia would be the best to go and just continue my art. But now I’m so happy to be here. I’m so happy that I have a lot of stories to share with Australian people. [00:07:47][68.0]
Courtney Ammenhauser: You mentioned before that you had to lie to your dad about your university applications. You’ve had quite a lot of success now. Does your dad know that you lied?
Mahdi Mohammadi: Uh, I’ve got to say, unfortunately, I lost my dad two years ago.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Okay.
Mahdi Mohammadi: While I was in Australia, but the most happiest thing I remember from my dad the last time I spoke with him on the phone, he told me, my son, I’m proud of you and I’m proud of what you’re doing and the life that I had here. And he told me that I never known. I always thought that art is about being, you know, it’s a shameful thing. And the way that they lived, they haven’t studied too much. He always told me that I thought art is about dancing or this all that stuff but the thing that you did and I saw I’d done, my mom and my sisters, brothers used to show to him the things that you’re doing in Australia, you know, being on the stage, all of this stuff. I’m so proud of you and I’m so happy that my dad was happy about me and being proud and I could definitely change his idea about art and yeah, and I think he’s proud of me and I’m proud of my dad.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah. And you said you had some friends who were already here and you did a bunch of research and when you came and arrived in Australia, what was it like to sort of get your foot into the industry and continue your creative practice in a new country?
Mahdi Mohammadi: Well, it was a really hard thing. First of all, I did ask my friends, but I didn’t ask like about how arts is going in Australia. I just asked them how is this country so, so like this is a country full of opportunities if you just come here and take it. But when I arrived there for the first time there, there was an Australian person and I met old lady, very nice lady, and she asked me that, what did you used to do in Afghanistan? And I said I was a director of cinema and theatre. And then she asked me, what is theatre? And I was shocked. I was like.
Courtney Ammenhauser: What do you mean?
Mahdi Mohammadi: What do you mean though about the, I was so scared like, I hope not all Australian people think like that. It was just that time I was really scared. But when I just walked into the society and it was really hard for me because I wasn’t allowed to do anything like study or just work or go around. So I always wanted to make art. It was really hard for me and it’s a really long story, but I was getting depressed. But to be honest, I had to see some psychologist and I told her about everything. I was telling her about my job in Afghanistan. I would just wanna make art. She knew someone in PYT Fairfield. Karen Therese was the artistic director of PYT Fairfield, and she introduced me to Karen. After that, yeah, I got involved with the ensemble, which is a group of young people just gathering together every week and thinking about their arts, what they want to make. It was really fantastic for me. That’s the only reason that I, it like helped me to go through this depression. And finally I made it and I got introduced to PYT Fairfield and it a kind, it was a kind of survival for me. [00:10:54][68.3]
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah, it’s a it’s a big journey that you’ve been on.
Mahdi Mohammadi: It is a big journey.
Courtney Ammenhauser: What has theatre in Australia taught you about this country?
Mahdi Mohammadi: Theatre taught me art is not that important here, to be honest. You know, we’re living in Afghanistan. It’s a poor country, but the way they respect arts, the way they respect artists is just totally different and artists walk proudly. Now I’m in Australia, I’m an artist and I see all other artists. It’s a really hard job. It’s not well, well paid. You’ve got to work hard. Being an artist deserve more to be respected. Take care of your artists. They’re the one who showed you that. What is you’re truly feeling? They are the one who show you the way. They are the ones that show you and remind you that what is life about? All other this, you know, beauty in life. Because being an artist is a talent and not everyone has this talent. But you don’t make art for yourself. You make art for people. That’s what I really want to see in the future in Australia. And that’s what I saw the difference between Australia and Afghanistan, that artists deserve more and they need to be respected more.
Courtney Ammenhauser: The Tribunal was your first major experience in theatre in Australia. What do you think was the biggest learning from that production?
Mahdi Mohammadi: The biggest learning was that when I came here I suffered a lot as a refugee, being a refugee in Australia and because that is story was the relationship between refugees and Aboriginal people. So I learnt a lot about Aboriginal people, and Auntie Rhonda, which I’ll call her my grandmother. She’s my Aboriginal grandmother and she told a lot of her stories. And one of the other biggest reason that I survive in this situation, living in limbo was when I was thinking about what happened to them, like through their history and how they have been living. It just make me think that, wow, what is happening to me is just a small thing. It’s nothing and I can handle it so easy compared to what happened to them. Yeah, I think the biggest thing that I learnt from that show was, that’s not fair what’s happening and it shouldn’t happen. But well, we can do anything. We can just say that to them and hopefully people bring some change. And I love Auntie Rhonda because every time that she sees me and she always say me, you’re welcome here. She always told me so nicely to me. It just makes me feel like I’m in my home.
Courtney Ammenhauser: So your next show, Dorr-e Dari, you’re acting in it as well as you are a co-divisor. Can you tell us about the show and what it’s all about?
Mahdi Mohammadi: Dorr-e Dari, which the ’dorr’ means the pearl. So it’s the Pearl of Dari. And Dari is our language that Afghan people and it’s a part of, it’s a branch of Persian language which just Afghan people speaks in Afghanistan. This show is it’s about our culture and how this culture is like a pearl and very precious for us, how this culture has survived through all this. Now, it’s almost 50 years of wars in Afghanistan. The only thing that we have is that culture. That’s the only thing survive because that’s the only thing that we, we carried by our hearts. Poetry is, I can say is one of the most important thing in Afghanistan. It’s a part of everyday life in Afghanistan. It’s like, you know, you can’t live without eating. So it’s, in Afghanistan you can’t live without poetry. Think if you walk around Afghanistan and you just stop a kid and ask him or ask her if you know any poetry, they will definitely know something. So this show, we try to talk about our culture and how poetry is important in our life. We brought some personal stories from our teenage and how it goes in Afghanistan to be in love, like Afghan Romeo and Juliet and how we love to sing, we love to dance. It’s all about good things, about Afghanistan for the first time that Afghanistan is not all about war, drugs, or all other things. That’s what we try to do in this show. And I think we were successful, especially when audience, even Afghan people or Persian speaking people see this show, they just cry and they sob out the tears, if just because of their happiness. They always come to us and thank us because we remind them of their culture and we show them that this culture will be always alive.
Courtney Ammenhauser: What do you think are the things that Australians know about Afghanistan? You’re talking about all the wonderful things you want to show in the play.
Mahdi Mohammadi: Well, the most things that, of course, they know is, is just what’s going on in Afghanistan war. It’s all other things, Taliban and, you know, killing and all other stuff. But this poetry was when we did this show and they were just shocked. They were thought because as I know, I believe that in Australia poetry is for educated people. In Afghanistan, poetry is for everyone. So you don’t need to be educated to know poetry. Used to be 90, but I don’t know right now, 90% of people of Afghanistan were uneducated, but hundred percent of them like all of them, knew poetry, you know. So that’s the problem here in Australia is just I think they show the kids that you need to educate to know some poetry. I think that is the, one of the biggest difference here.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah, it almost sounds like the way music is here, like everyone experiences different kinds of music, but
Mahdi Mohammadi: Yes.
Courtney Ammenhauser: It’s pretty much in most people’s lives. What is it about poetry as a form that you’re, that you find so special?
Mahdi Mohammadi: Let me ask. Well, let me explain with the question. Have you ever been in a situation that you you can explain something to someone?
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah.
Mahdi Mohammadi: So that’s when you use poetry because poetry is the easiest way in Afghanistan to explain your feeling, to express when you have problem with the explanation. Because in English, it’s really hard to just, you know, explain what you what you’re feeling, but in Persian poetry. Just it’s just explaining it straight away perfectly the way that you want to explain it. Especially the love poetry there. I’ve never seen people in there like, you know, love couples that they talk like. So like, you know, I love it is this they always talk to their poetry, they send to each other the poetry express their feelings, which is amazing because. Yeah, that’s, that’s the only special thing. Poetry helps you when you want to explain a feeling that you cannot do it in the normal way or with your just, you know, language.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah, that’s so beautiful. And for people who aren’t from a theatre background you mentioned before that Dorr-e Dari is a co-devised piece, so it’s made in the rehearsal room on the floor rather than coming in with the play that’s already been written.
Mahdi Mohammadi: Oh, definitely, like we have been gathering together for one year, every week, one night, and we had this amazing meals like Aussie meals, Afghanistan, Persian. We used to just cook and talk, talk about everything. Yeah, like all this stuff that’s happening in Afghanistan, our teenage stories about everything. And at the end of a year, we had this like all lots of, you know, material. It could go for ten, 15 hours. And then we just sat down and we just, we chosen which one is better to go to the show, you know? And then, yeah, it came up like that because at first it was just a five minute show and now it’s an 80 minute show.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah, yeah. Wow. The show, it has a Sydney Opera House season. What did you know about the Opera House before you came to Australia?
Mahdi Mohammadi: For me, the Opera House was the symbol of Australia, I had no idea about anything else, like kangaroos or other stuff and nothing. Just as soon as Opera House, Australia. That’s what I see. First time I came here and I think the second day I just came to, I went to Opera House to just look it closely and see like, you know, how it looks. And it was amazing. I have got another story about being an Opera House. When I was-
Courtney Ammenhauser: Please.
Mahdi Mohammadi: When I was studying in Kabul University. So my teacher showed us this big song in theatre and all over the world. And then Opera House came and, and he just told us, like, you will never get to perform there. But I’m just showing you, you know, that this is a really nice place.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Well, well, well, yeah.
Mahdi Mohammadi: Well, this is a wrong thing as well, because the teacher in Afghanistan, they don’t encourage you like you can do it, you know? But it’s my second time performing in the Opera House. But the first time when I went to Opera House, I did text my teacher.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Good on you.
Mahdi Mohammadi: Do you remember that one day when you were teaching, as you just said that, and now my show is going to Opera House and I’m performing there. He didn’t answer me and he blocked me.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Really? Yes. Oh, my gosh. Well, that person just is.
Mahdi Mohammadi: Well I so happy, I sent my picture.
Courtney Ammenhauser: I was gonna say, hopefully you sent a selfie with the sails.
Mahdi Mohammadi: I did send! I did send. I did send and I did send to all over my classmate to everyone. I’m like, look, you can do whatever you want to do. You just need to keep pushing and do hard work and just think big. That and I always tell to Afghan people like, I’m so proud to go there as I have came first and perform there. And they can believe it too, because it’s really big deal. Opera House, you know?
Courtney Ammenhauser: Oh, yeah.
Mahdi Mohammadi: Sydney, yeah.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Absolutely. Now that you’ve had this dream come true to perform at the Opera House, what’s next in store for you and what are your other dreams?
Mahdi Mohammadi: Well, one of my other dreams is to always, as I wanted to make a theatre company, as I made in Afghanistan. Because I would love to work with the younger people and talk about acting. And still that problem that we had in Afghanistan, we have here, like, can you believe how hard it was for us to look for an Afghan actress here in Australia? I thought we were living in Australia. It’s just, you know, democracy, everything. But it’s still most of the Afghan families have the, they think art is something shameful. It’s not a good deal for and for us as Afghan people, we really struggled a lot to find an Afghan actress. And finally, we, I knew Bibi Goul Mossavi, the first actress who was involved in Dorr-e Dari and yeah. So I would love to work on that and make a theatre company and work with Afghan women and trying to encourage them and make them understand that this is not wrong. Art is not what you think and what your family thinks. It’s just something different. And if you really want to be an artist, you’ve got to do it.
Courtney Ammenhauser: I’d be keen to know what else you’d like to see on the stages of, you know, Australian theatre stages in the future.
Mahdi Mohammadi: I would love to see a lot more performers from, I’m not going to say Afghanistan, but Middle East because they haven’t been given the opportunity to be in such a big stage and there is a lot of amazing performers. They just need this chance to be on the stage of Opera House.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah. And what about the people that you’d like to see?
Mahdi Mohammadi: There is a lot of people that I would love to see on this stage of Opera House. One of them, Hasiba Ebrahimi, this amazing actress who is working with us in Dorr-e Dari. She lived a tough life and she made it all the way here to Australia. And she, she’s a fighter. She fought for herself in Afghanistan for her rights. And it’s really hard. You can imagine it’s really hard to be an actress in Afghanistan and be that famous. And she made it here and she did this. One of the shows that I went to see in Opera House, one of this is the show that Hasiba Ebrahimi did in Kabul. And that time I was here, I’m really upset that I missed it and I would love to see that show here. And it was called Intelligent Tara. And then the English, I think means till freedom. It’s this beautiful, unbelievable story about love between Taliban and one Afghan girl. It’s just such a beautiful, amazing story. I would love to see Hasiba on the stage because she deserves it. And I would love to see another one. Munira Hashimi, the sisters of my co-worker in Afghanistan, she did a show called They Stars. Now she’s living in Sweden. And this show is about four of the most famous Afghan women, which I saw this show in Blacktown. She came all the way from Sweden and did this show in Blacktown. It was just another fantastic story from Afghan women, it was really amazing and powerful story. I would love to see that show on the stage. I would love to see my housemate, Jawad Yaqoubi, is another performer in Dorr-e Dari. This guy, when I met this guy, he’s uneducated. He didn’t studied at all, but he, the passion that he had. I met him in Indonesia. We became friends and he always wanted to be an artist and he made it all the way to Australia. And now he’s, I can honestly say he’s better than me. He’s just unbelievable. He learnt so fast he, and his dream is all the same. I want to do my own show in Opera House. I would love to see him on this stage. That would be the biggest dream. And for my Australian friends, Karen Therese, Kaz, the ex-Artistic Director of PYT Fairfield. I just recently saw her show in Carriageworks, Sleeplessness. Such an amazing story. It’s just.
Courtney Ammenhauser: It looks incredible, yeah.
Mahdi Mohammadi: It was, it was just I think it’s connected to everyone’s life. It’s just beautiful. It’s just beautiful. How the story of her life is. I think she deserves to be on the stage of Opera House, and I would love to see our director, Paul Dwyer, on the stage. I saw his theatre from long, long time ago. I mean, and he was working, performing with us in Tribunal as well. He’s such an amazing actor and director. I’m learning a lot from him. I’m learning a lot because when I came here and I found out that I know nothing. I studied for years, but I still I know nothing. I’m learning every day.
Courtney Ammenhauser: That was Mahdi Mohmmadi, cinema and theatre director, and co-diviser and performer in Dorr-e Dari. In the next episode we’ll be hearing from writer, teacher and community arts worker Michael Mohammed Ahmad…
Michael Mohammed Ahmad: How do you make a work that addresses all these issues on your own, you can’t because I don’t inhabit all of those different identities so you can only collaboratively and you can only make it with the communities themselves.
Courtney Ammenhauser: I’m Courtney Ammenhauser and this has been Up Next, a podcast from the Sydney Opera House. From Audiocraft, the show is produced by Bernadette Phương Nam Nguyễn, mixed by Glen Morrow and executive producer is Selena Shannon. From Sydney Opera House, Head of Digital Programming is Stuart Buchanan, and Digital Programming Coordinator is Christie Yip. The Up Next theme music is by Milan Ring. Subscribe wherever you listen to podcasts.
Fangirling with Yve Blake
Courtney Ammenhauser: The Sydney Opera House honours our First Nations by fostering a shared sense of belonging for all Australians, and we acknowledge the Gadigal, traditional custodians of Tubowgule, the land on which the Opera House stands.
Yve Blake: And I’m learning about how like some fans don’t use spoons anymore because one of the band members said that he, like, wasn’t into spoons.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Hey I’m Courtney Ammenhauser and this is Up Next. I’m a culture writer, a radio presenter and a huge nerd about all things music, arts, and culture.
Right now I’m sitting in a little backroom at the Opera House, behind one of the most famous stages in the world. And it feels kind of surreal to be here, so far from where I grew up at Mission Beach in Far North Queensland. Back then, I didn’t know much about the Opera House. It was just a fancy place that I only saw on TV.
As an adult I moved to Sydney and found myself enthralled by the underground arts and music scene here. I loved watching emerging Australian talent rise up, make a mark, and carve out a space for themselves on big stages. Changing the culture and stories of Australia as they went. What excites me most is seeing them make it all the way here. Where they reclaim this stage above me. All eyes on them.
This podcast is all about capturing this moment and seeing all the exciting places it takes us. Up Next is your ticket to the most exciting artists and performers coming through these doors… In each episode, we discover who’s up next… who’s defining the future of arts, music and culture in Australia.
It’s no secret the award-winning musical Fangirls has taken the world by storm since its first season at Queensland Theater in 2019. Following fourteen year-old Edna, the musical dives deep into her love for beautiful, perfect, Harry. But there’s just one problem, Harry is the star of the world’s biggest boy band.
I spoke to playwright, screenwriter, songwriter and creator of Fangirls, Yve Blake ahead of the show’s current season at the Sydney Opera House. She’s here to tell us about her meteoric rise from unknown artist to award-winning playwright… about the Fangirls of Fangirls… and why musicals are for everybody…
Courtney Ammenhauser: I wanted to start the interview with a pretty big question, who did you fangirl over as a tween?
Yve Blake: So I often say is like, No, I wasn’t a fangirl of anyone. And that’s why when I found out about Fangirls, I had to research them. And that’s true to a degree. But honestly, I was obsessed with Missy Higgins and Megan Washington and maybe like a little bit of Regina Spektor. So like singer songwriter girlies. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And I have a chaotic story about...
Courtney Ammenhauser: Please.
Yve Blake: OK I was 13 and I saw Missy Higgins did this gig in Centennial Park, massive park in Sydney. And so we were like 100 metres back from the stage. We were so naughty. We tore away from our moms and we raced to the front and we were right on the barricade watching. And then at the end my friend, shout out to Mari, knew that at the end you’ve got to like yell at the security gods if you want a guitar pick from stage. So Mari was like, "Give me a guitar pick!" So then I panicked, I wanted a relic and I saw her water bottle on stage. So I asked him to give it to me and I brought it home, this holy relic. And I put it like right on the top of a bookshelf. And I remember when I like finished year 12 and packed up my stuff from my parents house, I found this like ancient half drunk Mount Franklin water bottle. And I was like, what? But it did feel kind of special to touch this thing that she had touched, and she just felt like this kind of magical being. So I always am like, Yeah, I wrote this show because I couldn’t relate. But then I think about the water bottle. I’m like, Wait a second.
Courtney Ammenhauser: I spy some of the similarities.
Yve Blake: Yeah.
Courtney Ammenhauser: I have to ask, what happened to the water bottle?
Yve Blake: Yeah, I did just throw it out, but mad respect to Missy. And then she saw Fangirls last year. Yes. Which was such a full circle moment. It was in Melbourne. She sent me a lovely email and did an Instagram post and I passed away briefly after.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Truly. Well, I’m glad that you’ve resurrected yourself somehow to join us today. Fangirls, you know, Missy Higgins enjoyed it. It’s been enjoyed by many people. It’s got a season at the Opera House this year and it’s had lots of rave reviews and it’s also been picking up a bunch of awards as well. It’s won the AWGIE Award for Music Theatre, the Matilda Award for Best Musical, the Sydney Theatre Award for Best Main Stage Musical, and also a Green Room Award as well. You’ve even done a TED talk about it, but for someone who somehow has not heard of Fangirls, maybe they’ve heard about in passing but don’t know heaps about it, or they might not consider themselves like a musical type of person. Could you explain what the show is about and why this musical is for them?
Yve Blake: So Fangirls follows a 14 year old girl called Edna, and she’s in love with a boy called Harry. But the only problem is he is the world’s biggest pop star. And what happens in Fangirls is that, Ooh, how do I do this spoiler free? Edna gets an opportunity she never thought she would have in her life. And it’s going to require her to do some very dangerous and intense, life changing things without spoiling what happens. Fangirls is like this musical comedy with blockbuster stakes. So because it’s a story about being 14 and first love and and stopping at nothing to like get to your crush. I knew the score needed to sound really adrenal, right? So I decided I wanted the score to sound like a pop concert meets rave, also meets church. So, like, the experience of the show itself is like bombastic and huge, and like, feral and like, has these subwoofers in the theatre that will, like, wobble your seats. But yeah, it’s like a Trojan horse, so it appears to be this fun camp night out. But it really is an exploration of like the ways that we raise young people and the lies that we tell them about themselves.
Courtney Ammenhauser: And this kind of bombastic experience and this battle cry for young people came to you in a pretty unusual way, which I’d love to talk to you about. You mentioned it in your TEDx talk that when you’re 21, you had a pretty fateful meeting where you met a very special teenager who told you about her husband. Can you take us back to that story?
Yve Blake: I was 21 and I met my friend’s little cousin and she was 13. And she told me she had met the man she was going to marry. I thought, okay?
Courtney Ammenhauser: Huge.
Yve Blake: Absolutely huge, very organised. Must know more. So I said to her, okay, tell me everything about him. And she looks me dead in the eyes. And she confidently told me that his name was Harry Styles.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yep.
Yve Blake: Right. So at this point I laugh. Exactly. And I’m like, sure. And she’s like, "Do not laugh at me." I’m like, okay, cool, cool, cool. She’s like, "No, don’t laugh at me. I would slit anyone’s throat to be with him." So I have like, I am immediately interested.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Oh yeah, that’s commitment 100%.
Yve Blake: And I’m a writer. I’m like, Oh yeah, I have to make a show about this. So overnight I start researching One Direction fans because One Direction, the band was still together at the time that I started writing the show. I’m so fascinated that I’ve discovered what feels like a sovereign nation of teenage girls on the Internet and then, like the world shakes. Because overnight one of the members of One Direction, Zayn Malik, leaves the band without warning. You remember?
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah, of course.
Yve Blake: Everyone remembers where they were. So I. Of course, I’m like, whoa. Okay, I’m following all of these fans on Twitter, and I see my timeline are up to, with like, people who are just so grievous about it. And then I notice in mainstream news outlets that are covering the story, they’re using really interesting words. They’re using words like desperate, pathetic, over-the-top, crazy, unhinged, psycho. And it’s interesting right, because I look at all this language and I ask myself a question. It never occurred to me in my life before, which was that, you know, if this was a news story about young men but perceived young men being upset about something that had happened in sport, would these journalists be reaching for the same words? And that is really when I knew that I had to make this show. I wanted to explore the question, like, why is it that when we describe enthusiasm being expressed by, like perceived young women, we use all of this like minimising language and we ridicule them and we socially sanction completely different behaviours for young men and young women. So yeah, I was like, Wait, that’s so deep. I have to write about that.
Courtney Ammenhauser: I’m going to make some art.
Yve Blake: Yeah, literally.
Courtney Ammenhauser: All right. So this is where the idea of of Fangirls came from, the stories that you’ve just taken us through. You then pitched the idea to the Australian Theatre for Young People, ATYP, and you became the recipient of the Rebel Wilson Theatre Maker Scholarship. But you didn’t know how to write music at the time, which is quite wild considering it’s a musical. But you did round up a really killer creative team. Can you tell us about your team?
Yve Blake: Yes, it’s kind of chaotic in retrospect. I was 22, 23, and I had this idea that I wanted to make a musical. But the problem was that I didn’t and I still don’t play a single musical instrument and I have no idea how to read music. So my first step was I went on YouTube and just watched a lot of YouTube tutorials on how to create music on your laptop. So I use a software called Ableton Live, and then from there I spent probably six months on my own writing the music and like I said, I can’t play a piano. So I had to kind of use my QWERTY keyboard on my laptop and slowly it’s so silly, but like I just had to sit there and like hum out the tune and then press the buttons until I could kind of hear it back. So I realised that that wasn’t going to cut the mustard, like that was not going to get me all the way to a musical. I needed a music producer, right? I needed someone who was going to make it sound like an actual pop concert. And I found this guy, David Muratore, but he’s like a mad genius. He’s amazing. He’s won, like, Triple J remix competitions because he just does this thing with sounds or he collages sounds together in these really unexpected ways. But he also knows all the pop tropes. So I got him on board, and then I got this amazing vocal arranger, her name’s Alice Chance, and she’s like quite fancy in the classical world, or at least from what I can tell. Like, she writes amazing like vocal arrangements and classical arrangements that get played like all the time. She literally makes a living as a composer and she’s in her mid twenties. She came on board and I said, How can you take these songs but add like a girl’s choir to them, like make us feel like we’re in the church of Harry? And then I brought on board Jonathan Ware as my dramaturg, which is a word that everyone always kind of goes, ooh what’s a dramaturg? That sounds fake. But he is like, I guess like the story consultant. So while I was writing the scenes and the music and the lyrics, that’s like a lot to keep sight of. And he would sit with me and read the drafts and help me make smart edits and go, Oh, you’re repeating yourself there. And look, we worked on this for like three, three and a half years before anyone became interested in it. So I often think of them as like my bandmates, you know what I mean, and we would just spend so much time together refining this and then things kind of changed. And suddenly all of these theatre companies and like TV and film companies came knocking because it was, you know, this show about Fangirls. And I guess we didn’t ever imagine that it was a commercial idea, but suddenly that sort of changed overnight.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah. And I want to ask you about that because, you know, you create it and, was skipping over a lot, but basically you write it gets heaps of seasons, multiple different theatres, as you say, have come knocking to get a piece of the fan girls puzzle. People love the show. What was that shift like from going, as you describe yourself, a bit of an unknown talent to then having award winning in your bio?
Yve Blake: I guess the thing that I reflect on a lot is for years, like years and years, it was me and Dave and Johnny and Alice. We had this magical idea that we knew was special. And slowly people started to go, oh, I think that’s special, too. And theatre companies became interested. But we were just like all in our early twenties and we had so much to prove. And so the creation of this show began with like dinner table readings around my dinner table, and I would just make pasta for all my friends. And it’s like, Can you just read this out loud? I need to hear it. Or like going to Dave’s studio above a tire shop and just working for hours and then getting a $5 Domino’s Pizza because it’s like what we can afford. It’s interesting that it went from that to then suddenly all of these companies became interested in it and it had this huge season and it was really surreal. Like when it first came out in 2009, Paige Rattray, the director, did such an extraordinary job and I was in the original season and I remember walking onto the stage for the first time and seeing the set, which is like these two story high LED screens, like a Beyoncé concert, and just being like, how many people made this? So it’s been really surreal. And I think like what’s been especially wild is that before it came out, my fear honestly is like I know that the people who mostly go to theatre are middle aged, rich white people, to be frank. And I wanted to reach teenagers and I was scared they wouldn’t come. I was scared they wouldn’t find it. But then, you know, in our original seasons, teenagers started coming and then they started coming back. And then they started bringing signs for the fake boy band in our show. And then last year on the tour, it just like it went to another level. And there were people who came 15 times, like someone got a tattoo of the show. People named their pets after the show, all kinds of things happened. And then there was this meta layer where like people who loved the show found each other specifically on Twitter and created this huge group chat called the FGFG, which is like the Fangirls Fangirls. And then when we went like into lockdown in the second half of last year, I’d go into Twitter and I would see members of the FGFG just like posting pictures of their distanced picnics and pictures of their zoom parties that they were doing and like these ridiculous PowerPoint presentation nights where they’d all jump on a zoom link and then make like a comedy PowerPoint about Fangirls. Like one that I saw was called Why Every Character an ape likes Fangirls is a lesbian, no, I won’t be accepting any criticism. And like these kids, I shouldn’t say kids. These young people are so funny and industrious and kind of represent everything that inspired me to write the show. So now it’s amazing. Like yesterday I went into rehearsals for the Opera House season and it’s the first time I’ve been in rehearsals. It’s the first week of week three, so they’ve been working for two weeks without me and it was so surreal to see this like tightly oiled machine. Everyone knew where they were going. There’s like tubs and tubs and tubs of props and like matching silver boots for everyone. And it is, it’s very difficult to, like, emotionally comprehend that this started as a word document on my laptop. Like it’s yeah, yeah, it’s just really special.
Courtney Ammenhauser: But a lot of the inspiration for the show has come from One Direction fans. Harry Styles has famously said that young women’s taste is often ridiculed by cultural commentators. But who’s to say that their taste is less valid than a 30 year old hipster guy? Why do you think people are so quick to judge stories about young women but are open to consuming content from a man’s perspective?
Yve Blake: Kind of feels like what’s that word? It starts with P and ends in atriarchy. Is that the word?
Courtney Ammenhauser: I think it, I think I’ve heard of it.
Yve Blake: Have you heard that word? I feel like it’s that word I. That’s the question. It’s so interesting, isn’t it? There was that movie Turning Red that came out and I don’t know if you heard about this, but there was like some middle aged male reviewers who wrote about how this Disney film that had been made about a 13 year old girl was frustratingly unrelatable and like there was just a lot of rightful clapback about like, I’m pretty sure everything else is made for you. Yeah. And the like. Why can’t you extend your empathy? But you know what’s been interesting is like with Fangirls, I’ve maybe had a bit of fear about that, if I’m honest. It’s been interesting as well in the years I’ve had this experience I’ve had of telling people about this show, I’ll be at a dinner party and I’ll describe it to them and some times before I kind of get to the punchline. Like, it’s just interesting to observe the interesting comments that people will say like, Oh yeah, but it’s different for girls because like, there’s something sexual about when they like these pop stars and you know, and when guys like sport, it’s not like that. And there’s, and then that becomes interesting to me because I feel like we socially sanction like the sexual desires of young men in a completely different way than, than young girls. Like I think about this story someone told me where she, her brother in his room and I think this is like in the nineties had a whole bunch of posters of like women in bikinis or less on his walls. And in her room she put up a poster of Robbie Williams from Take That and he had like some overalls on, but no shirt underneath.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Oh, risky.
Yve Blake: Yeah, yeah, yeah. Her dad came in and took the poster down, said this is completely inappropriate, and she was older than her brother. And I just remember that story and I just think, yeah, like that is the question why do we socially sanction completely different behaviours for young men and women? And like another thing the show really goes into, it’s a show like about Fangirls, but it’s also just a show about what it’s like to grow up in the world when you’re being like socialised as a young woman and something I kind of have never gotten over, I’m so obsessed with is, I don’t know if you can relate to this, but I feel like when I became a teenage girl, it felt like overnight the world just started yelling at me with like this list of things that I needed to change or modify or upkeep.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Fix all of this.
Yve Blake: Fix it. Those eyebrows. What are you doing?
Courtney Ammenhauser: Those pants? They’re wrong.
Yve Blake: The pants are wrong. You need, that is not the correct lip gloss and you need to smell like pink. Get impulse spray now, like, just. I feel that’s so interesting. The world yelled at me to consume and modify and that nothing was enough. And also that like, hotness was my superpower. But figuring out how to like, hack the code of hotness was this impossible algorithm. And the show is kind of about that, too. And it was really interesting to see, you know, in the original season when I was in it, how many like dads and granddads would come up to me after the show crying and like, give me a hug? And I’d be like, I’ll never forget this guy who I’m guessing was in his seventies, eighties. And he came up to me after the show and gave me a big hug and he’s like, "Oh, I was that girl, I was that girl." And I just loved it so much. And there was like this dad that came up to me and he was like, "Wow, I really see my daughter differently." And so it’s been exciting to see how it’s really captured the hearts of like, different generations has been really beautiful.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Hmm. What are some of the lessons that you’ve learnt that Fangirls or this process has taught you that you’ll take into your next project?
Yve Blake: I think about the early days of this project and how scared I was that people wouldn’t get it. And like a big driver for me is that when I was a teenager I fell in love with musical theatre. But like, you know, if you ask anyone their favourite musicals, I’ll guarantee you, like, all the biggest ones were made by an all male team. I think back to 23 year old me who started this. What I want to be careful of is now not forgetting that like, the reason that this show became what it was is that we wanted to be feral and weird and different and we didn’t want to tick any boxes. And so yeah, like don’t, if you’re a theatre maker listening to this, don’t try and make something that’s like something else you’ve seen. Make your own weird thing that like, maybe no one will get.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah. And I think going back to what you were saying about a typical theatre audience as well, maybe that’s the audience because that’s who has historically been on stage. But if you make a show that’s telling stories about other people, you know, people are going to come see themselves on stage and relate.
Yve Blake: And yeah, I completely, completely agree with that.
Courtney Ammenhauser: You’ve got a show at the Opera House.
Yve Blake: What the hell?
Courtney Ammenhauser: What the hell? Did you ever think that would happen?
Yve Blake: No!
Courtney Ammenhauser: How are you feeling about that?
Yve Blake: So excited. No, I’m really I’m really excited. Like I grew up in Sydney, so. This is wild.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah.
Yve Blake: The Opera House is from Keychains at tourist shops. I guess I budgeted emotionally for some stress around this time because, you know, I guess I would have imagined three months ago that like, oh, well, I’ll go into rehearsals and I’ll see them and there’ll be like this little thought in my head of like, ooh, what if I hope they’re good enough opening like ooh, I hope they get it right. But then it was crazy because I went into rehearsals yesterday and like, Oh my God, okay, I want to do something with my hands, so I’m going to do some audio description. Mm hmm. Okay. So if I put my hands, like, at my hip, that’s where I thought the performers would be when I came in. And then if I put my hand up like my chest, that’s where I hope they get to at opening night. And then when I went into the room, my hands like as high as I can reach it, that’s where they were. Like this cast. And I’m not just saying this is like ad copy because I’m on a podcast, but genuinely I actually cannot believe what they’re doing. And, and, you know, we had to cast a lot of them over Zoom and stuff because of COVID. So, you know, we didn’t get to have them in the room and like check chemistry, but they’re just like, it’s another level. And our original cast, we never knew how we’d replace them. They were so incredible and of course are all unavailable because they’ve booked like Netflix shows. I think I’m just going to sit there and just like beam and cry. They’re just so, so good.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Hell yeah, proud stage mum?
Yve Blake: Yeah, I’m stage mum.
Courtney Ammenhauser: So did you ever imagine that your work would be performed at the Opera House?
Yve Blake: Oh, my God. Well I dreamed about it. Yeah. Like when I was a teenager, I was such a theatre geek. Like, I just loved it, you know like, teenagers don’t have disposable income, so I would write to Belvoir and STC, Sydney Theatre Company.
Courtney Ammenhauser: What would you write to them?
Yve Blake: Well I’d just write to them like, can I have some tickets, please.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Oh, I love how bold that is.
Yve Blake: Yeah, like so. So the way that I did it at Belvoir is I became friends with the front of house manager and then we’d email him and he’d sneak me into shows, which was amazing. And the STC, the Education Department, did like this youth advisory panel of like teenagers who can come in and, like, advise the company on how to make it more teenager friendly. And then the Opera House did that the year after I finished high school, so I would have been like 18. And I sent them like a desperate email being like, Please, I must do this. So we spent this year getting to have these free tickets to the Opera House in exchange for telling them how to make the space more welcoming to teenagers and a space where teenagers could feel like they were at home. And it was my total am so it’s so surreal to think that I spent that year walking into this building again and again and being like, Oh, one day I hope I can have a show here. And specifically, though, talking to them endlessly about like, how do we make this space a place where teenagers feel like it’s theirs? And now, quite literally, ten years later, to be there doing this is quite spooky looky.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Totally. Like the seed was planted all those years ago. I feel like musical theatre can kind of, you know, get a bit of a reputation for being cheesy for people who aren’t necessarily who don’t, you know, they don’t call themselves musical fans. I do think there’s a bit of a barrier there, but it’s changing a bit. There’s new works coming out aimed at younger people. There’s more women or non-binary or gender diverse people working as well. And this show has obviously won a stack of awards and has become part of the zeitgeist. But what do you think brought about that change?
Yve Blake: I think that a lot of the perception around musical theatre being cheesy is that it’s like super earnest, right? Or maybe also that, yeah, the roles are kind of narrow and I just think there are so few musicals about like some woman who wants to get married or, you know, like women written by men singing about, like, even though he’s terrible to me, I love him no matter what. And I wonder if it’s like the girls, the gays in the theys got obsessed with musicals because we love to feel things and then all grew up and went, I’ll have a go. And I wonder if. I wonder if that’s it, you know what I mean?
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah, it’s definitely, I think, able to broaden the appeal of musicals as well, having different stories. Do you agree or?
Yve Blake: Oh, yeah, totally. And like I’ve got a really smart friend, Adam Lenson, who actually wrote a whole book called Breaking Into Song: Why You Shouldn’t Hate Musicals. It’s such a BOP. But he said this thing that made my jaw fall off my body, he was like, musical theatre is, it’s a medium, but we treat it like a genre. And he’s like, you can have infinite forms of music, infinite styles of music and infinite, like, styles of theatre. So why can’t you have like infinite iterations of musical theatre? He says we always talk about how in musicals, people burst into song when words are not enough, and he’s like, That’s such an unhelpful, like, incomplete idea, because what if you need to burst into a song when words would be too much or when like words would be wrong, or what if you need to burst into song because you’re like gluing together two people who are singing across a 50 year gap, like there’s just so many different ways you can use music. A key inspiration for me has been the way that, like teenage girls speak in Australia and the way they go off at the end, every sentence has been like really interesting to me and like putting that into the melodies in the show, also in just like the, the lexicon. So I was tested how Fangirls talk about how they’re like actually dead about something happening and they’re literally dead like literally plan my funeral. Like I cannot breathe anymore, I’m ceasing to exist.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah I am deceased. Exactly.
Yve Blake: There’s an entire song in the show called Actually Dead, which is just like kind of this wonderful collage of, of amazing things I saw on Twitter like that.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Yeah, that’s amazing. You spent so many years working on this show, the better part of your twenties. What is next for you? Have you had any recent chance meetings that have kind of inspired a new idea, like the one when you were 21?
Yve Blake: Well, how do I answer this question? I’m really lucky that, you know, so Fangirls, it looks like is going to have an international life, fingers crossed. I know. I just I literally just got back from overseas working on an overseas version of it. So cross we cross our fingers and toes and bum hold it. That happens.
Courtney Ammenhauser: I’m actually dead hearing that news.
Yve Blake: Okay me to. Please, please, could that happen? But, you know, with theatre you never know, especially in the midst of a Panasonic. So um.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Truly.
Yve Blake: Truly. So fingers crossed that happens and I’m really excited. So Paige, the director, and I are developing a screen adaptation, so also fingers crossed that happens. That’d be so cool. I know. Thank God the series, please. But then separately, I’m really lucky. Like I’ve got a bunch of screenwriting gigs and a few new, very, very new ideas that I’m playing with. But I mean, look, like I started writing Fangirls seven years ago, so. These things take a lot of time.
Courtney Ammenhauser: So we’re all about highlighting upcoming talent on this podcast. What do you think is up next for musical theatre in Australia as a genre? We kind of touched on it before of the shes, the gays, the theys being like, I’ll have a crack.
Yve Blake: Oh my God. I was born ready for this question. I’m going to give you a roll call of just some of the new Australian musical theatre writers I’m obsessed with.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Please.
Yve Blake: People often talk to me and they’re like, Wow, isn’t it? Wow. There’s no young women out there making musical theatre. And I’m like, Excuse me, shut your mouth. These are the people I’m obsessed with. Everyone look up Vidya Makan. She’s an extraordinary writer. She’s currently in SIX the musical because she’s also what an amazing actress. But look up a song she’s written called Hugh Jackman on YouTube. It’ll make you laugh and cry. Jules Orcullo is doing an incredible musical called Fraser Babies, look it up, it’s extraordinary. Cassie Hamilton is amazing. Gillian Cosgriff, I think, is one of the country’s best songwriters, and no one’s heard her stuff yet, but it’s going to change the game. Jean Tong and Lou Wall, extraordinary. They have a musical they’ve written together called Flat Earth, is the musical, someone programme it you cowards. Jordy Shea and Victoria Falconer-Prichard are developing this amazing musical called Lola that’s like about this Filipino grandma and her granddaughter. And listen, hijinks ensue. It’s incredible. I want to shout out Samantha Andrew, Mel O’Brien, who is in Fangirls, but also an extraordinary songwriter. It’s illegal that she’s good at both of those things. Oh, my God. There are so many more. I’m going to absolutely kick myself for forgetting. But there’s just so, so, so many great writers out there. Mags McKenna is extraordinary, they’re in Jagged Little Pill.
Courtney Ammenhauser: I saw Jagged Little Pill last week and was blown away in You Oughta Know.
Yve Blake: Okay, everyone knows that they’re like this massive star of musicals. But like, is everyone aware that they also write absolute bops and bangers? Incredible. Also, Laura Murphy has written The Lovers, which is about to come out at Bell Shakespeare. And I’m truly shaking to see and I’m so, so excited. Hannah May Reilly made an incredible musical called The Dead with Meg Washington earlier this year, which was wall to wall bangers.
Courtney Ammenhauser: And another one of your idols.
Yve Blake: Yes. Oh, who also saw Fangirls.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Go, oh, my God.
Yve Blake: I literally.
Courtney Ammenhauser: Missy and Megan?
Yve Blake: I know I’ve absolutely passed away. We just need Regina now, come through. Anyway. Yes. If you are someone in this industry with power and you are looking for new, incredible musical theatre writers, I have a whole list. DM me.
Courtney Ammenhauser: You can DM Yve Blake at Y-v-e B-l-a-k-e. In the next episode we’ll be hearing from Mahdi Mohammadi, co-diviser and actor in Dorr-e Dari: A Poetic Crash Course in the Language of Love.
Mahdi Mohammadi: Our pronouns in Persian language, doesn’t have any gender differences. So your lover could be a he or she or whatever form of gorgeousness you desire.
Courtney Ammenhaurser: I’m Courtney Ammenhauser and this has been Up Next, a podcast from Sydney Opera House. From Audiocraft, the show is produced by Bernadette Phương Nam Nguyễn, mixed by Glen Morrow and executive producer is Selena Shannon. For Sydney Opera House, Head of Digital Programming is Stuart Buchanan, and Digital Programming Coordinator is Christie Yip. The Up Next theme music is by Milan Ring. Subscribe wherever you listen to podcasts.