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CULTURAL ARTICLES

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‘A gentleman with the mad soul of an Irish convict poet’: remembering Chris Bailey, and the blazing comet that was The Saints

The Saints (Chris Bailey, Bruce Callaway, Janine Hall). Picture by Judi Dransfield Kuepper, Author provided (no reuse) Inala in the early 70s was bleak. A Brisbane suburb...

Sunday essay: empathy or division? On the science and politics of storytelling

Why don’t chimpanzees rule the world? Is storytelling - the mysterious glue that enables millions of humans to cooperate effectively - the answer? Shutterstock Writers can’t...

If animals could speak, would we understand them?

Image: Wikimedia commons Turin, once briefly the capital of Italy, is famous today for its coffee, delectable hazelnut chocolate, Fiat cars, Juventus FC and the...

Encanto, TikTok and the art of social storytelling: why music is not just for listening anymore

Image: IMBD We need to talk about Bruno. The theme song from Disney’s hit movie Encanto (We don’t talk about Bruno) has become the first song...

Sunday essay: single parenting with a disability – how my 9-year-old daughter became my carer in shining armour

Shakira Hussein (seated in chair) with daughter Adalya Nash Hussein. Photo by Leah Jing McIntosh. Author provided My daughter started to describe me as disabled long before I...

Sunday essay: How leftist, feminist poet Dame Mary Gilmore became ‘Aunt Mary’ in the PM’s political narrative

Images: Wikimedia Commons and AAP/EPA/Erik S. Lesser Dame Mary Gilmore died at 97 in late 1962, two and a half years before the birth of...

Sunday essay: ‘fair game’, racial shame and the women who demanded more

Image: Brittany Higgins and Grace Tame at the National Press Club last month. Mick Tsikas/AAP Sexual politics is difficult terrain for young people to navigate. Desire,...

The psychology of a loss of place: when we demolish socially significant places, we demolish part of who we are

AAP Image/James Ross The John Curtin Hotel in Carlton, another of Melbourne’s cultural landmarks, is set to close. Nearly 150 years old, the pub has long...

No, the federal government didn’t spend $4 billion on COVID support for culture and the arts

Image: Shutterstock Canberra thinktank A New Approach put out an interesting paper last week on the state of public funding for Australian arts and culture. The report made...

How scammers like Anna Delvey and the Tinder Swindler exploit a core feature of human nature

Anna Sorokin, better known as Anna Delvey, during her trial in April 2019. Sorokin is the subject of a new Netflix miniseries. Timothy A. Clary/AFP...
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Must-read

Dance the night away in the Dome

  WHAT'S ON | DONATE BECOME A MEMBER Spend your Friday night under the Dome with this immersive after-hours experience full of art, music and dance. Inspired by our Melbourne Out...

Mother’s Day Show

Mother's Day Show
JVG presents Mothers Day Live at the Brunswick Ballroom

Back to back mothers singing songs about motherhood: the joys, the trials, the ecstasy and the mundanity. We have kids running around the studios. Big kids and little kids. Supporting partners, musically and parentally. It’s an afternoon of motherly energy and talent that happens only once a year.

And now for the fourth year the radio show will precede a live expanded version of the show at the very plush Brunswick Ballroom. Mothers Day keeps getting bigger and better. From the radio station to the Ballroom where wall to wall mothers will sing of motherhood in all its glory and agony.

Line up includes:

Kerri Simpson

Angie Hart

Barb Waters

Rebecca Barnard

Talei Wolfgramm

Eliza Wolfgramm

Celia Church

Eliza Hull

and Marie Ewing (mother of 10, including the BB's Venue Director Will Ewing)

plus backing band The Mother's Little Helpers

MC Jon Von Goes

Shows (Silver & Bronze Membership)
12/05/2024 5.30pm | Admin Fee $11.00 | Book Tickets

Brunswick Ballroom
314 Sydney Road
BRUNSWICK
Melbourne, Victoria
3056
Australia

Stella – The Miles Franklin Story

Stella - The Miles Franklin Story
STELLA: The Miles Franklin Story – feat. Monique diMattina, Alma Zygier & Fem Belling

Songs, skits and gossip from a musical in development.

Acclaimed Australian composer/lyricist Monique diMattina presents a concert work-in-progress version of her newest project – STELLA: The Miles Franklin Story.

Sharing songs, stories, gossip and skits from this musical in development, Monique and her all-star chamber orchestra tell the extraordinary life story of Australian author Stella Miles Franklin.

Starring ALMA ZYGIER and FEM BELLING and featuring

The Brindabella String Quartet:

Fem Belling, Xani Kolac, Esther Henderson, Kalina Krusteva

The Talbingo Band:

Monique diMattina, Cat Canteri, Adrian Perger, Sam Lemann, Ben Robertson

Although the Miles Franklin Award is Australia’s most prestigious literary prize, most Australians are unaware that Miles was a woman, let alone the details of her extraordinary life.

Weaving together songs, gossip and Stella Miles Franklin’s own words, the show brings audiences on an epic journey from Franklin’s Snowy Mountains childhood to fame as the young author of My Brilliant Career, years battling for women’s suffrage and labour rights in the USA and UK, WWI field work, creative struggles and legacy as a trailblazing champion of Australian art, conservation and culture.

STELLA: The Miles Franklin Story will make you laugh, cry and love what Stella called ““our unique, inebriating, laughing, haunting, wistful, brooding, ancient, ageless, siren land”




Shows (Silver & Bronze Membership)
26/05/2024 2.00pm | Admin Fee $26.90 | Book Tickets

Brunswick Ballroom
314 Sydney Road
BRUNSWICK
Melbourne, Victoria
3056
Australia

Mick Pacholli

Mick created TAGG - The Alternative Gig Guide in 1979 with Helmut Katterl, the world's first real Street Magazine. He had been involved with his fathers publishing business, Toorak Times and associated publications since 1972.  Mick was also involved in Melbourne's music scene for a number of years opening venues, discovering and managing bands and providing information and support for the industry. Mick has also created a number of local festivals and is involved in not for profit and supporting local charities.