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Humphrey Bower's award-winning adaptation of Wish for his company, Night Train, had subsequent seasons with the Perth Theatre Company, [24] and in Canada with Edmonton's Northern Lights. [25] Petra Kalive's adaptation of Three Dog Night was premiered at fortyfivedownstairs in Melbourne, and also performed in the Adelaide Festival Centre's Space ...
The Ruby Awards were introduced in 2006 by the Government of South Australia, [1] named in honour of the late arts patron Dame Ruby Litchfield. [2] [3] She was the first woman appointed to the Board of the Adelaide Festival Centre Trust, a founder member of Festival City Broadcasters, and a board member of numerous other organisations, including the Adelaide Festival of Arts, the South ...
As of 2021, the company's administration offices are based at the Lion Arts Centre, on the corner of Morphett Street and North Terrace, Adelaide. [16] [17] The company's main venue is the Dunstan Playhouse, but it also uses the Space Theatre, the Royalty Theatre in Angas Street, and the Thomas Edmonds Opera Studio at the Adelaide Showground.
The opera production of Le Grand Macabre by György Ligeti, the Wayne Shorter Quartet; Good Morning Mr Gershwin (Montalvo-Hervieu); The Sound and the Fury (Elevator Repair Service); and The Walworth Farce (Druid); an expansion of Northern Lights; Groupe F's pyrotechnic spectacle A Little More Light, and Mahler 8 featuring the Adelaide Symphony ...
The cinema's street address is 181–193 O'Connell Street, [1] [2] with the building situated on the corner of O'Connell Street and Childers Street in North Adelaide. [16] The company that owns it is registered as Piccadilly Cinemas, and its trading name is Piccadilly Cinema. [24] It is part of the Wallis Cinemas family-owned chain.
Illuminate Adelaide is an annual winter event held each July in Adelaide, South Australia.It includes free and ticketed events presented by local, national, and international artists and companies, encompassing "art, light, music, and technology".
Adelaide Festival Centre houses several theatres and galleries, as well as function spaces and the administrative hub of the Festival Centre. Festival Theatre is the largest proscenium arch theatre in Adelaide, seating close to 2,000 people. It was designed as both a lyric theatre and concert hall, and is used not only for theatrical ...
19 February 1894 The Squatter's Pardon by J. H. Lyons at the Bijou Theatre; 24 May 1895 Blow for Blow by H. J. Byron at the North Adelaide Institute in aid of the North Adelaide Lacrosse Club; 25 August 1896 Our Regiment by Henry Hamilton, at the North Adelaide Institute, later to an almost deserted Theatre Royal. [6]