词条 | The Flying Fruit Fly Circus |
释义 |
The Flying Fruit Fly Circus is Australia's national youth circus and the only full-time circus school for young people aged between 8–19 in Australia. It is located on the Murray River in the twin cities of Albury-Wodonga on the Victoria/New South Wales border.[1] In partnership with the Victorian Department of Education, the students/young artists in years 3–9 attend the selective entry Flying Fruit Fly Circus School where they undertake academic studies to complement their circus training, which is uniquely incorporated into the curriculum. The Flying Fruit Fly Circus regularly performs in Australia and internationally at major arts centres, regional theatres, corporate events and festivals. HistoryThe Flying Fruit Fly Circus was one of the productions of the Murray River Performing Group, initially an ensemble of nine artists, set up mostly by graduates the Victorian College of the Arts Drama School, including Robert "Bomber" Perrier, who was the artistic director from the outset, Lloyd Suttor, Mark Shirrefs and Ian Mortimer (Mort). The group began full-time operations in 1979, the International Year of the Child. Within four months the group had conducted workshops and performed in over forty venues, written two shows, performed street theatre directed by Mort, organised 171 circus training sessions and produced the first Flying Fruit Fly Circus event involving 117 performers aged from seven to seventeen. Mark Shirrefs and Ian Mortimer went to local schools and introduced skills to local kids, some of whom are still active in circus, Michael Ling has spent 18 years with Circus Oz.[2] In 1979 On the Outside, a show about unemployed youth, was designed as a full-scale theatrical performance for high school. Lloyd Sutler, the Murray River Performing Group's resident writer, wrote the script. Performed inside an octagon made of three-inch agricultural piping on a big yellow mat, the show involved a mixture of naturalism, Brecht and satire.[2] In the same year Heap, written by Mark Shirrefs was performed by Mark, Boris Conley, Mort for the upper three grades of Primary School. Lloyd Sutter and Mark Shirrefs also worked with local writers Dotty Simmons and Barbara Connyngham. Three of the pieces developed by this work were produced in 1979 and 1980.[2] Mort continued teaching a small group in the craft of street theatre as sidewalk circus, these included Michael Ling, Mark Barlow (Strauss) Cathy and Herby, and many others. Once the kids had been introduced to Circus as a valid profession they did not want to stop. The second annual Flying Fruit Fly Circus event, in 1980, was seen by Chris Brookes, a Canadian playwright who visited at the suggestion of the Community Arts Board of the Australia Council. He suggested taking the Circus to the Vancouver Children's Festival in 1981. At that time the administration of the group was carried out by a core of five people with John Paxinos coming in as administrator. There was a performing group, responsible for writing and performing pieces for set venues. The next group was the clown group headed by Mort, for community involvement, instant theatre and schools. Finally, there was the semi-autonomous Flying Fruit Fly Circus. The Flying Fruit Fly Circus was the most durable of the activities and has sustained to the present day.[2] Following the successful Canada event at the Vancouver Children's Festival in 1981 there were successful seasons in Melbourne, Albury and Benalla. Tanya Lester won a Gold Medallion in Le Cirque de Demain Competition in Paris. In 1982 she was the recipient of the ‘Young Australian of the Year’ title.[3] In 1982 the Nanjing Acrobatic Troupe of China undertook a training project in Albury Wodonga with Flying Fruit Fly Circus performers, Circus Oz and other physical theatre artists. The outcome was the show The Great Leap Forward.[3] In 1984 on behalf of the company, artistic director Robert "Bomber" Perrier won the BHP Pursuit of Excellence Award in Arts and Literature.[3] In 1989–90, after 10 years of operation, Flying Fruit Fly Circus performed at the Sydney Festival, the Melbourne International Comedy Festival, Geelong Performing Arts Centre and were invited to join the nationwide tour of the Great Moscow Circus. The Flying Fruit Fly Circus represented Australia at Australia Week in Veneto, Italy and were awarded the Ros Bower Award for Outstanding Contribution to Community Arts.[3] In 1993 a sell-out season of Red Alert for the Sydney Festival (and half-time entertainment for the World Series Cricket) was followed by tours to Brisbane, Gippsland and Melbourne. In 1997 the Flying Fruit Fly Circus performed at the Melbourne Summer Live concert, the Fashion Spectacular and Moomba. In 1999 the Circus Festival transferred from its usual base in Tasmania to Albury Wodonga, where Flying Fruit Fly Circus's Outburst! performed. The Gift opened in New York, selling out a five-week season over Christmas New Year.[3] In 2009, 30 years on, Flying Fruit Fly Circus performed The Promise at the Sydney Festival and Albury. Federal Minister Peter Garrett announced $3.75m government contribution to redevelop Flying Fruit Fly Circus training space.[3] In 2010 a major touring exhibition Step Right Up! The Circus in Australian Art developed through a partnership between Albury City and the Flying Fruit Fly Circus toured nationally from early 2010 through to January 2011 at venues including Mosman Art Gallery, Horsham Art Gallery, Port Pirie Regional Art Gallery, Bunbury Regional Art Gallery and Lake Macquarie City Art Gallery. The exhibition featured paintings, drawings, photographs, sketchbooks, prints and sculptures by Tom Alberts, David Archer, Monique Auricchio, George Baldessin, Dorrit Black, John Brack, Robert Campbell, Margaret Cilento, Ray Cook, Robert Dickerson, Vincent Drane, Graeme Drendel, Ian Fairweather, Cedric Flower, Donald Friend, Joe Furlonger, James Guppy, Ponch Hawkes, Euan Heng, Petrina Hicks, Lorraine Jenyns, Warren Langley, Nerissa Lea, Michael Leunig, Stewart MacFarlane, Noel McKenna, Kevin Mortensen, John Olsen, Alexander Seton, Andrew Sibley, Jeffrey Smart, David Strachan, Albert Tucker, Ken Whisson, Arthur Wicks, Fred Williams, Anne Zahalka and Salvatore Zofrea.[4] In its 30+ year history the company has toured internationally to Japan, Canada, Hawaii, Singapore, New Zealand, Italy, China, the UK and the US. In Australia the circus regularly performs at festivals including the Melbourne Festival, Melbourne International Comedy Festival and Sydney Festival. Special appearances include the 2000 Sydney Olympics Opening Ceremony and Cultural Festival and the closing Ceremony of the XVIII Melbourne Commonwealth Games in 2006.[3] The Flying Fruit Fly Circus is currently the resident youth circus at Sydney Opera House and has an ongoing partnership with the Arts Centre Melbourne and other key performing arts venues around Australia. In 2014 the company celebrated 35 years with sell-out seasons at Sydney Opera House, Melbourne International Comedy Festival, a major nine-week tour to VIC, NSW and QLD, performances and workshops at the Barunga Festival in NT and Lorne Festival in VIC and a re-connection with the landmark cultural exchange that changed the face of contemporary circus in Australia, Nanjing Project III, in a collaboration with NICA and the Melbourne Festival. A new weekend festival of circus and theatre was launched, BORDERVILLE, to celebrate the legacy of the Flying Fruit Fly Circus and neighbours HotHouse Theatre and the region's culture. In 2015 it became a company in residence at Sydney Opera House with a three-year partnership and established a collaboration with the Vietnam School of Circus Arts and Vaudeville in Hanoi.[5] It also travelled to Turkey for a two-week engagement in Istanbul as part of the Australia in Turkey Festival. The company's recent shows have included Control Alt Delete, Circus Under My Bed and JUNK, with tours embracing international engagements in Istanbul and Auckland and in Australia; Sydney Opera House, Arts Centre Melbourne, Canberra Theatre Centre and regional theatres throughout the country. Awards and nominations{{Refimprove section|date=June 2018}}
References1. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.cultureandrecreation.gov.au/articles/circus/ |title=Circus in Australia at the Australian culture and recreation portal |accessdate=2006-07-20 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20060823095203/http://cultureandrecreation.gov.au/articles/circus/ |archivedate=2006-08-23 |df= }} 2. ^1 2 3 Perrier, Robert, Finding an Audience: The Murray River Performing Group, Meanjin, Vol. 41, No. 1, Apr 1982: 29–38 3. ^1 2 3 4 5 6 7 {{cite web |url=http://www.fruitflycircus.com.au/about-us |title=Flying Fruit Fly Circus web site |accessdate=2011-05-04 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110706104658/http://www.fruitflycircus.com.au/about-us |archivedate=2011-07-06 |df= }} 4. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.alburycity.nsw.gov.au/resources/documents/Step_Right_Up_catalogue_FOR_FINAL_APPROVAL.pdf |title=Step Right Up! The Circus in Australian Art |accessdate=2011-05-05 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=http://webarchive.loc.gov/all/20090525171234/http://www.alburycity.nsw.gov.au/resources/documents/Step_Right_Up_catalogue_FOR_FINAL_APPROVAL.pdf |archivedate=2009-05-25 |df= }} 5. ^Tahlia McPherson, (21 October 2014), Fruit Flies plan Vietnam exchange in international first, Border Mail, Albury-Wodonga See also
6 : Australian circuses|Circus schools|Performing arts education in Australia|1979 establishments in Australia|Companies established in 1979|Performing groups established in 1979 |
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