Categories: News

Arts Centre Melbourne announce Midsumma Festival season

Arts Centre Melbourne is thrilled to present a kaleidoscope of life-affirming performances and events as part of Midsumma Festival 2020 in January and February.

The diverse line-up will feature The Rise and Fall of Saint George, an electronic choral celebration of resilience and community, Daddy, a delicious confection of dance and storytelling, BOOBS, an inspiring tale of body autonomy and the Midsumma Extravaganza, an ultra-glamourous gala returning for its third year. For the 2020 program Arts Centre Melbourne will also present two free events, Escape Velocity: We Are Who We Are, a vital film project made with transgender and gender non-conforming young people and  a staged reading of Flat-Earthers, an emerging musical comedy.

The Rise and Fall of Saint George

The 2020 season will be Arts Centre Melbourne’s seventh year presenting performances and events as part of the Midsumma Festival program.

“We are thrilled to present a series of diverse, honest and inspiring Australian works as part of the Midsumma Festival this year. These performances and one film project celebrate and sweat the multilayered lived experiences of LGBTQIA + people,” says Arts Centre Melbourne Director of Programming Edwina Lunn. “Our Midsumma program is a carefully curated collection of voices and projects that both document queer history and explore new ideas.”

In The Rise and Fall of Saint George (23 and 24 January) Australian music icon Paul Mac teams up with playwright Lachlan Philpott and director Kate Champion to tell a story of community solidarity and freedom through song and electronica. The work was inspired by a much-loved mural of George Michael in Sydney’s Inner West that was destroyed in a series of attacks the day after the YES result in the Marriage Equality campaign.

Award-winning cabaret artist, acclaimed musician and celebrated musical comedian Selina Jenkins tells the story of a life-changing decision in BOOBS (29 January – 1 February). Jenkins chose to have a voluntary double mastectomy, not as the result of illness but as a conscious decision about her own body and self-image.

The all-star variety show of epic proportions Midsumma Extravaganza (1 February) will return to Arts Centre Melbourne for the third year with a line-up like no other. Hosted by dazzling TV star Bob Downe and feel-good comedian Kirsty Webeck, they will be joined by Pangina Heals “The RuPaul of Thailand”, national stand-up superstar Tom Ballard, Melbourne cabaret icon Dolly Diamond and winner of the 2018 Adelaide Fringe Weekly Best Comedy Award Nath Valvo.

The Midsumma Extravaganza

Wiradjuri artist Joel Bray uses his trademark confection of conversation, dance and all-you-can-eat audience participation in his immersive work, Daddy (4 -8 February). Exploring themes such as connection to culture and a quest for love in the Grindr era, he probes one of the paradoxes of our age: when so much is on offer, why are we left so hungry? From the sugar-coated idyll of childhood reminiscence to the glazed excesses of queer adulthood, his story proves that a sweet tooth is a dangerous thing.

Within the 2020 Midsumma Festival season Arts Centre Melbourne will also present two works in The Channel, Arts Centre Melbourne’s education hub.-

St Martins in collaboration with Minus18 will present Escape Velocity: We Are Who We Are (8 February), a series of micro films produced by trans and gender non-conforming young people based in Melbourne. Presented in three phases over a year, Escape Velocity is a multi-disciplinary art project calling for society to build a collective momentum and become allies to trans and gender non-conforming young people.

The artists behind Romeo is not the only Fruit (Green Room Award Best Writing Nominee) and Lou Wall’s Drag Race, (Melbourne Fringe Best Performance Nominee, Best Emerging Artist Winner) will give a staged reading of an excerpt of a brand new musical Flat-Earthers: The Musical (31 January). The work brings together the world’s most iconic conspiracy theories in a brand new electropop musical comedy about how far we’re willing to go in search of #truth.


Midsumma at Arts Centre Melbourne | 23 January – 8 February 2020
Tickets and more information are available at
artscentremelbourne.com.au

Gabi Bergman

Gabi Bergman (she/her) is a Melbourne-based performer and educator, and the current Deputy Editor-in-Chief of AussieTheatre.com. She holds a double degree in Theatre Studies and Film/Screen Studies, along with a Master of Teaching (Secondary Education). A passionate advocate for inclusion and diversity in the arts, Gabi brings her deep love of storytelling to the stage, the page, and the classroom. A lifelong lover of theatre, she spends more on tickets than she’d like to admit. Her most prized possession is her ever-growing collection of theatre programs.

Recent Posts

Interview with Gary Abrahams

Fresh from presenting Yentl in London and now celebrating the success of Eurydice at forty…

11 hours ago

The Tony Awards Are Not About Numbers, They Are About The Story Broadway Wants To Tell

The Tony Awards are never just about who gave the best performance or which production…

17 hours ago

30 years in the making, Opera Australia’s milestone tour of a Mozart masterpiece: Don Giovanni

Marking three decades of Opera Australia’s national touring program, the 2026 tour of Michael Gow’s…

19 hours ago

Paul Capsis and Adam Noviello unite for Grey Gardens-inspired HOUSE OF ROT

Australian stage luminaries Paul Capsis (The Who’s Tommy) and Adam Noviello (Hedwig and the Angry…

2 days ago

Les Femmes at The Grand Electric

What happens when some of the greatest songs ever made famous by male artists are…

2 days ago

First Look – Sierra Boggess in Concert at Theatre Royal Drury Lane

Producers Darren Bell and Cuffe & Taylor for Live Nation are proud to announce that…

2 days ago