Anthony Steel (arts leader)

Last updated

Anthony Steel is an English arts administrator who was the first general manager of the Adelaide Arts Festival.

Career

Steel was educated at Oxford and Cambridge universities and started his career in the arts in the early 1960s as general manager of the London Mozart Players. [1] He became assistant general secretary of the London Symphony Orchestra and then the first planning manager of the South Bank Concert Halls [2] before moving to Adelaide in 1972 as the first general manager of the Adelaide Festival Centre and artistic director of the Adelaide Festivals of 1974, 1976 and 1978. He returned to Adelaide to direct two more festivals in 1984 and 1986, [3] after a spell as general manager of the Los Angeles Philharmonic [1] and another as director of the Singapore Arts Festival. [1]

In the 1990s Steel was the founding director of two other Australian festivals – the National Festival of Australian Theatre in Canberra [4] (1990 and 1992) and the Brisbane Biennial Music Festival [1] (1991 and 1993). He was producer of World Expo on Stage (the performing arts program of World Expo 88 in Brisbane) and director of the Sydney Festivals of 1995 to 1997.

He has served as a member of the Australia Council and as the inaugural chair of that body's Performing Arts Board. In 1978 he was appointed a Member of the Order of Australia for services to the arts. [5]

In late 1997 he returned to Adelaide to live. During this last decade Anthony Steel has been engaged in projects for, amongst others, the Hong Kong Arts Development Council, the South Australian and Tasmanian governments and the Sydney Opera House Trust. In 1999 he undertook a six-month engagement as executive producer for the Meryl Tankard Australian Dance Theatre and in 2000 acted as executive chair of the Barossa Music Festival. He recently completed a term as chair of the advisory board of the Arts Management Program of the University of South Australia, and is a member of the Board of Leigh Warren & Dancers. From 1999 to 2002 he served as a board member of the Adelaide Festival.

In 2001 he was head of school at the Flinders Street School of Music, negotiating the school's merger with the Elder Conservatorium at Adelaide University, which took effect on 1 January 2002. For the rest of that year he acted as a consultant to the resultant Elder School of Music for its capital works program.

In 2005 he was awarded a fellowship from the Theatre Board of the Australia Council to write a memoir. In 2006 he was music director of the Coriole Music Festival and has recently been engaged in projects on behalf of The Confederation of Australian International Arts Festivals and Leigh Warren & Dancers. He was president of Recitals Australia from 2007 until 2014, [6] a member of the boards of Leigh Warren & Dancers and the Adelaide Symphony Orchestra and a visiting research fellow at the University of Adelaide. In 2007 he received the premier's lifetime achievement award at the Ruby Awards, [1] South Australia's annual arts and cultural awards. He wrote a series of articles about the 2008 Adelaide Bank Festival of Arts for the Independent Weekly and chaired all ten of the festival's lunchtime forums with visiting artists.

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Brett Sheehy (8 September 2007). "AdelaideNow... The big Steel". The Advertiser . Archived from the original on 13 August 2011. Retrieved 21 July 2008.
  2. Campbell, Lance (1998). By Popular Demand: The Adelaide Festival Centre Story. Wakefield Press. p. 25. ISBN   1-86254-456-5.
  3. Milne, Geoffrey (April 2004). Theatre Australia (un)limited: Australian Theatre Since the 1950s. Rodopi. p. 376. ISBN   978-90-420-0930-1.
  4. Milne, Geoffrey (April 2004). Theatre Australia (un)limited: Australian Theatre Since the 1950s. Rodopi. p. 380. ISBN   978-90-420-0930-1.
  5. "Anthony Gerald Steel". honours.pmc.gov.au. Archived from the original on 12 December 2019. Retrieved 12 December 2019.
  6. Louise Nunn (19 December 2007). "AdelaideNow... Anthony Steel heads Recitals Australia". The Advertiser . Archived from the original on 12 January 2008. Retrieved 21 July 2008.

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Adelaide Festival</span>

The Adelaide Festival of Arts, also known as the Adelaide Festival, an arts festival, takes place in the South Australian capital of Adelaide in March each year. Started in 1960, it is a major celebration of the arts and a significant cultural event in Australia.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Alex Dimitriades</span> Australian actor

Alex Dimitriades is an Australian actor and DJ. He is perhaps best known for his roles as Nick Polides in the 1993 romantic comedy film The Heartbreak Kid, and Nick Poulos in the 1994 television teen drama spin-off Heartbreak High.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Aberdeen International Youth Festival</span>

Aberdeen International Youth Festival was a festival of performing arts and one of Scotland's major international cultural events, which ran from 1981 to 2017.

David Branson was an Australian theatre director, actor, and writer.

Patch Theatre Company, formerly New Patch Theatre, is an Australian theatre company founded in 1972 and based in Adelaide, South Australia, which performs works for young children.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Australian Dance Theatre</span> Australian contemporary dance company

Australian Dance Theatre (ADT), known as Meryl Tankard Australian Dance Theatre from 1993 to 1999, is a contemporary dance company based in Adelaide, South Australia, established in 1965 by Elizabeth Cameron Dalman. The ADT was the first modern dance company in Australia, and drew on the techniques of Martha Graham for its inspiration.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Dance Hub SA</span>

Dance Hub SA, formerly Leigh Warren & Dancers or Leigh Warren + Dancers (LWD) and then LWDance Hub, is a contemporary dance company based in the South Australian capital of Adelaide. Formed in 1993 by Leigh Warren, the company toured internationally and won several awards.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Joseph Stanislaus Ostoja-Kotkowski</span>

Joseph Stanislaus Ostoja-Kotkowski AM, FRSA was best known for his ground-breaking work in chromasonics, laser kinetics and 'sound and image' productions. He earned recognition in Australia and overseas for his pioneering work in laser sound and image technology. His work included painting, photography, film-making, theatre design, fabric design, murals, kinetic and static sculpture, stained glass, vitreous enamel murals, op-collages, computer graphics, and laser art. Ostoja flourished between 1940 and 1994.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Feast Festival</span> Annual LGBT event in Adelaide, South Australia

Feast Festival is a LGBTI Festival held annually in the South Australian capital of Adelaide. The event is one of Australia's four major queer festivals, alongside Perth's Pride Festival, Melbourne's Midsumma and the Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras.

'The Adelaide Repertory Theatre is an amateur theatre company in Adelaide, South Australia. It is the longest surviving amateur theatre company in the Southern Hemisphere. It celebrated its centenary in 2008 having been set up in 1908 by students from the Elder Conservatorium.

Robyn Archer, AO, CdOAL is an Australian singer, writer, stage director, artistic director, and public advocate of the arts, in Australia and internationally.

Leigh Warren is an Australian contemporary dance choreographer and Artistic Director of Leigh Warren & Dancers (LWD) having previously been at the Australian Dance Theatre. He choreographed and directed the Portrait Trilogy of operas by Philip Glass performed by LWD, the Adelaide Vocal Project and the State Opera of South Australia.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Splinters Theatre of Spectacle</span>

Splinters Theatre of Spectacle was an Australian Performance Troupe formed in Canberra in 1985 by David Branson, Patrick Troy, Ross Cameron, and John Utans, that was known for large outdoor spectacles. Between 1985 and 1996, Splinters produced more than 20 works that played at Australian theater festivals. In 1992, they produced Cathedral of Flesh which won the Best Promenade Theater Performance Award, at the Adelaide Fringe Festival.

Contemporary dance in Australia is diverse with dance companies performing a broad range of what elsewhere may be termed contemporary and modern dance styles.

Phyllis Babette Stephens AM MBE was an Australian actress, director, artistic director, TV game show panelist and acting teacher. A leading theatrical pioneer, she also appeared in film and television, and hosted talkback radio.

Frank John Ford was an Australian freelance writer, director, dramaturg and drama lecturer.

The Popular Theatre Troupe was an agitprop ensemble formed in Brisbane, Queensland in 1974 as part of a radical movement against Premier Joh Bjelke-Petersen's conservative Queensland's government of the day. The troupe toured Australia with a total of 25 original shows between 1974 and 1983. The key players in the ensemble organised ten large community events and were behind many community arts projects.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Street Arts</span>

Street Arts Community Theatre Company was a theatre company in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. It was founded in October 1982 in West End, Brisbane, by Denis Peel, Pauline Peel, Steve Capelin and Andrea Lynch. Street Arts was preceded in Brisbane by the agitprop ensemble the Popular Theatre Troupe. While continuing in the Popular Theatre Troupe's tradition of satire and radical political commentary, the Street Arts approach was to create theatre and circus by enabling disadvantaged communities. This became the dominant community arts methodology in Queensland in the mid-1980s, attracting funding from Australian arts boards including the Community Arts Board and Performing Arts Board. In 1997 it changed its focus to interdisciplinary public art and renamed itself The Arterial Group Inc. Arterial produced a substantial number of projects with urban and regional Queensland communities from 1996 to 2004.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Spare Parts Puppet Theatre</span> Puppet theatre in Fremantle, Western Australia

The Spare Parts Puppet Theatre is located at 1–9 Short Street, Fremantle, Western Australia, in Pioneer Park, opposite the Fremantle railway station.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Brett Sheehy</span>

Brett Joseph Sheehy AO is an Australian artistic director, producer and curator. He is currently Artistic Director and CEO of the Melbourne Theatre Company (MTC), and is the only person to be appointed to direct three of the five international arts festivals in Australia's State capital cities being Sydney Festival, Adelaide Festival and Melbourne Festival.