Adelaide Festival Centre’s Festival Theatre is welcoming back audiences in spectacular style with two new entrances unveiled today, featuring the reinstatement of significant artworks, and a program of exciting light shows, entertainment, and free events over the coming weeks.
To celebrate, from this weekend Adelaide Festival Centre will present seven unmissable weekends of live performances, and a dramatic light show that will illuminate the iconic building and enliven the precinct. Welcome Back to Festival Theatre will feature live bands on an outdoor stage outside the Dress Circle foyer, along with pop-up bars, food trucks, family activities, free exhibitions, and performances by more than 200 local artists and musicians from Saturday, February 12 through until the end of March.
This weekend, audiences can enjoy pre-performance outdoor entertainment by acclaimed local musicians Alana Jagt, Ryan Martin John, Jen Lush and Kelly Menhennett.
The highly anticipated reopening of Festival Theatre features two beautifully redeveloped and spacious entrances - the King William Road Entrance and Festival Plaza Entrance, both displaying significant artworks. The new areas open to the public tonight, ahead of Adelaide Symphony Orchestra’s John Williams at 90 concert, bringing the 2000-seat theatre back to looking its best!
Tomorrow, a Welcome to Country and smoking ceremony performed by Senior Kaurna Man Uncle Mickey Kumatpi O'Brien and First Nations dancers from Tjarutja Dance Theatre Collective will mark the official unveiling of the significant Kaurna Reconciliation Sculptures at their new home, visible from King William Road. Other key artworks have also been reinstated including Sir Sidney Nolan’s striking Rainbow Serpent work, the brass sculpture Sundial by Owen Broughton and steel Sculpture No. 2 by Bert Flugelman (who also created The Spheres, best known as the Malls’ Balls’).
Patrons can also wander around one of the many exhibitions on offer in new expansive galleries in Festival Theatre foyer, including Bravo Festival Theatre!, which features untold stories through artworks, costumes, and objects from Adelaide Festival Centre’s Works of Art and Performing Arts Collections.
This weekend will also feature Adelaide Festival Centre’s Students Got Talent show in Dunstan Playhouse and the sold out The Stones’ Sticky Fingers concert in Festival Theatre, bringing Aussie rock legends together to celebrate the music of one of the greatest rock bands of all time.
On the long weekend of March 11-14 new areas of Festival Plaza are set to officially open and Adelaide Festival Centre will help celebrate with the grand opening of Children’s Artspace gallery plus workshops, installations, roving performers and family friendly activities programmed by the creative team behind Families at Adelaide Festival Centre.
The first stage of Festival Theatre back of house upgrades has also been completed in the last 7 months, including dressing rooms, the Orchestra Assembly Room, Stage Door, and production offices. The second stage of these upgrades is in planning.
The Festival Plaza public realm upgrade is part of the larger $993 million Festival Plaza redevelopment, which has been undertaken by the State Government in partnership with SkyCity Casino and Walker Corporation.
All persons aged 16 and over will need to show evidence of full COVID-19 vaccination or have a valid medical exemption to gain entry to Adelaide Festival Centre venues and spaces and Her Majesty’s Theatre.