Opera Australia is thrown a $4million lifeline amid Covid-19 lockdowns

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    Opera Australia is thrown a $4million lifeline as Covid-19 lockdowns cripple the arts industry

    As the fallout from Covid-19 lockdowns continue to wreak havoc on the performing arts sector, Opera Australia has been thrown a $4million lifeline by the federal government.

    Drawn from the $35million Covid-19 Arts Sustainability Fund, first announced in June 2020, the grant recognises Opera Australia as the nation’s largest performing arts company and largest arts employer.

    Federal Arts Minister Paul Fletcher said the organisation had more than 400 arts workers on its books, from costume makers to set designers.

    As the fallout from Covid-19 lockdowns continue to wreak havoc on the performing arts sector, Opera Australia has been thrown a $4million lifeline by the federal government

    As the fallout from Covid-19 lockdowns continue to wreak havoc on the performing arts sector, Opera Australia has been thrown a $4million lifeline by the federal government

    ‘In a normal year it presents a large number of high quality productions in Sydney, Melbourne and other cities, trains many people who go on to work elsewhere in the arts in Australia and globally, and it has specialised resources and capabilities that, if lost, would be a blow not just to this company but to Australia’s entire arts ecosystem,’ he said on Monday.

    Welcoming the news, Opera Australia’s CEO Rory Jeffes said the performing arts sector was in dangerous waters.

    ‘The latest cancellations … over the past weeks put real danger into the very future of the company as the largest provider of work for artists and artisans in the country,’ he said.

    ‘The desperately needed support through the sustainability fund … does not solve the difficulties we face but is certainly a boost to morale in these dark days, and allows us to be more confident of at least the immediate future,’ he said.

    A spokesperson for Opera Australia said the grant would be used to ensure the company stays afloat and maintains its skill base and critical role within Australia’s arts industry.

    The announcement follows the cancellation of its Sydney winter season and postponement of The Phantom of the Opera in Sydney (September) and Melbourne (November).

    Andrew Lloyd Webber’s 1986 musical phenomenon had already sold 100,000 tickets for both seasons, indicating a strong appetite among lockdown-weary audiences for live performance.

    Opera Australia remains hopeful that its much-anticipated Brisbane production of Richard Wagner’s Ring Cycle – the marathon of the opera world – will still go ahead in October and November.

    The company desperately needs to replenish its coffers after reporting a $6.4 million operating deficit and $63 million in lost revenue last year, when successive waves of lockdowns and restrictions crippled the performing arts and live music sectors.

    The Ring Cycle is scheduled to open at Brisbane’s Queensland Performing Arts Centre on October 29 and run until November 20, 2021.

    Ticket sales for the four-opera production, presented in three cycles, are currently on target, according to a spokesperson.

    Opera Australia previously received $1million from the Covid-19 Arts Sustainability Fund in May 2021.

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