The gritty countercultural designers taking on the Australian fashion industry
As IMG abandoned the event and the Australian Fashion Council took over, Chung and her partner, cultural strategist Daniel Neeson, came up with the idea for WINGS.
Billed as 'Australia's Inaugural Fashion Festival', WINGS is a direct response to fashion week's slimmed down schedule – a guerrilla, countercultural romp of a show that has set its sights beyond the traditional catwalk.
'With IMG leaving Fashion Week and the AFC taking over, they have expressed that they've gone more wholesale, and we did see a cut in a few conceptual designers that took more risks,' says Chung, who presented her designs at AFW in 2023 and 2024.
'It's a very pointed message to send someone ... that the industry doesn't support you. So we wanted to create a space emerging designers can look forward to,' says Neeson.
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Five designers – Catholic Guilt, Speed, Joteo, Amiss and Jody Just – will present their collections this week at Sydney's Plaza Hotel, in an immersive environment including live music, large-scale installations and performance art across three levels.
Designer Gail Sorronda has been left off the AFW schedule, while TAFE Fashion Design Studio will not show for the first time in 25 years.
Neeson, who spent two decades working in London's music industry, sees the hybrid event as a way to revitalise Sydney's nightlife scene.
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ABC News
9 hours ago
- ABC News
Theatre Jobs
JACK EVANS, REPORTER: It's not every day you get to see what goes on behind the scenes of a big theatre production. Unless, of course, you work behind the scenes of a big theatre production. Either way, I'm here to find out what happens on and off stage of the Australian production of Beauty and the Beast. BEAUTY AND THE BEAST MUSICAL: Be our guest, be our guest. Our command is your request. There are hundreds of people doing all sorts of jobs to make a show like this come to life. But let's start with perhaps the more obvious, the actors themselves. BRENDAN XAVIER, ACTOR: My name is Brendan Xavier and I play the Beast. BEAUTY AND THE BEAST MUSICAL: No pain could be deeper. SHUBSHRI KANDIAH, ACTOR: My name is Shubshri Kandiah and I play Belle. BEAUTY AND THE BEAST MUSICAL: And I... ROHAN BROWNE, ACTOR: Hi My name is Ron Brown, I play Lumiere in Disney's Beauty and the Beast. How did you get the role of Lumiere? ROHAN BROWNE: I auditioned like anybody else. You know, I've been in this industry for 27 years and you know it, it doesn't, you know, your resume counts for a lot. But you still have to prove yourself in the room every time. BRENDAN XAVIER: I didn't really know where I'd fit in the show. But I, I knew that I I wanted to be a part of it. But then I auditioned anyway and then it turned out to be the right choice. Once the shows been cast, it's time for rehearsals. BRENDAN XAVIER: Well, it's a little over a month. Then we sort of workshop the show, we talk about the characters, we talk about the intentions of every scene. ROHAN BROWNE: We go into the process, I mean you know, you learn the script, you read through it, you kind of try and get an understanding of your character and your version of that character because you don't want to replicate what somebody else has done. SHUBSHRI KANDIAH: I think my favourite thing about what I do is getting to pick apart a character and kind of get to perform it, but feel like every night I get to try and make it that little bit better. As for backstage, well that's a whole other show. SHUBSHRI KANDIAH: If you think there are a lot of people on stage, there's like three times the amount of people backstage kind of making sure that the show runs as smoothly as it does. Speaking of, let's go meet some of them. Starting with Benjamin Osborne, the Resident Director. BENJAMIN OSBORNE, RESIDENT DIRECTOR: So my job is being the eyes for our director in New York here in Australia. And so that entails a lot, that is maintaining the show on a day-to-day basis. And just making sure the production is as it was on opening night in Sydney 2 years ago. In a similar role is Emma Dominico-Smith the Resident Choreographer. EMMA DOMINICO-SMITH, RESIDENT CHOREOGRAPHER: So I started as a dancer. And with that, I just fell in love with looking at the technique of how dancers perform on stage and then maintaining it sort of just came from, I had a, I guess, a good eye. So when the show's happening, usually I'm out front watching and I note the shows. So every time there's a dance routine on I look for different things in that. If there's mistakes or if there's people not doing things correctly that needs to be fixed I note take that. Meanwhile Luke Hunter is the Musical Director. LUKE HUNTER, MUSIC DIRECTOR: If you go and see a musical and often the orchestra or the band are living in the orchestra pit, down in the hole in the front of the stage, you often might see the back of someone's head and their arms waving around with a stick. You know, that's me. That's you! LUKE HUNTER: So I'm conducting the orchestra most shows of the week. There are also a lot of people working to make sure the actors look the part. Like Sophie Webber who is the Deputy Head of Wardrobe. That's the Beast, that's the Beast costume. SOPHIE WEBBER, DEPUTY HEAD OF WARDROBE: Our job is to look after the costumes. The day-to-day washing, laundering as well as the changes that happen with all the performers during the show. And making everyone look pretty basically and comfortable and able to perform. Then you have Emily Griffiths, who is Deputy Head of WHAM! EMILY GRIFFITHS, DEPUTY HEARD OF HAIR & MAKEUP: So WHAM is what we call wigs, hair and makeup. In our building it's just more, more fun to be like we're in WHAM, you know. So we come in and we do some maintenance on the wigs, we might need to like redress something. And so that's usually like a few hours before the hour call for the show and then we go into the hour where we each have like a plot that we do helping out, like the cast, the principles, that kind of thing. So how does a piece like this get onto the stage? TROY LEENARDS, PRODUCTION TECHNICAL SWING: So this one we call the castle stairs... Backstage there are also a stack of technical roles, like Troy Leenards who is the Production Technical Swing. TROY LEENARDS: It's not a very well known position. But the way I like to think of it is I'm kind of like an understudy for all the crew roles that we need to make the show happen every night. So if somebody's sick or they're away on holiday, I can jump into cover their show responsibilities, so that the show goes on. Sounds like a very important job. TROY LEENARDS: Yeah, it can be a very stressful job. Speaking of stressful jobs, it's up to the Stage Manager, Grace Benn, to make sure all the different moving parts of the production happen. GRACE BENN, DEPUTY STAGE MANAGER: What we do is we basically facilitate the creatives needs, which is a fancy way of saying that we make the show look how it should every night. One of the many things on the show we do is we call from what we call the calling desk. So we watch the show every single night. So if you see like a bit of lighting change or if you see a set piece move, if you see sound change or anything like that, like any of those things that you see change on the stage that's technical. It's kind of like conducting the technical parts of a show basically, yeah. LIAM McEWEN, HEAD OF SOUND: My principal inputs, my female ensemble and my male ensemble... One of the many people Grace communicates with is Liam McEwen, the Head of Sound. LIAM McEWEN, HEAD OF SOUND My job is out here to maintain the sound design and mix the show as the primary operator. I have two other operators who come out, big part of my job is quality control with them. Do you, if you don't like someone, are you just like turn down. LIAM McEWEN: No, that's not my job. And So what advice would you have for a young person watching this who wants to be doing what you're doing? LIAM McEWEN: Be persistent. The, the, this, this getting, particularly getting out to say on on a console can take time. Like a lot of people think this is where you start, this is this is the end game. With everybody and with a lot of the other departments you'll start by helping with set up, pack down but be pleasant be and be persistent. ROHAN BROWNE: Stand out, be unique, be different. Go and train. Listen to everybody. Take on all of the information and absorb it all because we are shards of everything that we've learned over time. BRENDAN XAVIER: There's no one way to come into this industry. There's no one way to find where you fit in this job. SHUBSHRI KANDIAH: Some advice that I have is just get involved in as much as you possibly can. Take every opportunity to learn to work with different people, to hear about what their jobs are maybe in the industry, even if it's not what you want to do, I think the knowledge of like how the industry works as a whole is really interesting and it's important to know about. It sure does take a village, doesn't it? SHUBSHRI KANDIAH: It really does, yeah. BEAUTY AND THE BEAST MUSICAL: Gaston, Gaston! Gaston, hey!

Sydney Morning Herald
14 hours ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
Small bump up for Kyle and Jackie O as Melbourne crowns new ratings winner
Classic hits station Gold has beaten 3AW* to claim the title of Melbourne's No. 1 radio station for the first time since 1992. Gold recorded an overall audience share of 12.1 per cent in the fourth ratings survey of this year, putting it just ahead of 3AW on 11.9 per cent. But 3AW's Ross Stevenson and Russel Howcroft maintained a whopping lead of 16.6 per cent in the crucial breakfast slot – well above Nova's Jase & Lauren on 10.8 per cent and Gold's The Christian O'Connell Show on 10.1 per cent. ABC Melbourne continues to underperform, falling by 0.3 percentage points to 5.9 per cent – while Gold's sister station, Kiis, is languishing in eighth place overall on 5.5 per cent. It is important to note that survey time slots do not always correspond precisely with program time slots. Gold was launched in October 1991, replacing 'hits and memories' format KZ-FM. It surged to No. 1 the following year, but despite its strength on the FM band, it took more than three decades to repeat the achievement. Loading It's welcome news for parent company ARN, given the continued underperformance of its Kiis station in Melbourne. Last year, Kiis axed its Melbourne breakfast presenters, Jason Hawkins and Lauren Phillips, to make way for a networked version of its Sydney-based show, hosted by Kyle Sandilands and Jackie O. ARN splashed a reported $200 million to secure the pair for the next decade – with their entry into Melbourne rumoured to be the first step of a national roll-out. But so far, Kyle and Jackie O has proven to be an expensive flop in the Victorian capital, despite climbing 0.5 points to 5.6 per cent in the latest survey. Meanwhile, Hawkins and Phillips, who were hired by rival network Nova, are now the top-rating FM breakfast show.

The Age
14 hours ago
- The Age
Small bump up for Kyle and Jackie O as Melbourne crowns new ratings winner
Classic hits station Gold has beaten 3AW* to claim the title of Melbourne's No. 1 radio station for the first time since 1992. Gold recorded an overall audience share of 12.1 per cent in the fourth ratings survey of this year, putting it just ahead of 3AW on 11.9 per cent. But 3AW's Ross Stevenson and Russel Howcroft maintained a whopping lead of 16.6 per cent in the crucial breakfast slot – well above Nova's Jase & Lauren on 10.8 per cent and Gold's The Christian O'Connell Show on 10.1 per cent. ABC Melbourne continues to underperform, falling by 0.3 percentage points to 5.9 per cent – while Gold's sister station, Kiis, is languishing in eighth place overall on 5.5 per cent. It is important to note that survey time slots do not always correspond precisely with program time slots. Gold was launched in October 1991, replacing 'hits and memories' format KZ-FM. It surged to No. 1 the following year, but despite its strength on the FM band, it took more than three decades to repeat the achievement. Loading It's welcome news for parent company ARN, given the continued underperformance of its Kiis station in Melbourne. Last year, Kiis axed its Melbourne breakfast presenters, Jason Hawkins and Lauren Phillips, to make way for a networked version of its Sydney-based show, hosted by Kyle Sandilands and Jackie O. ARN splashed a reported $200 million to secure the pair for the next decade – with their entry into Melbourne rumoured to be the first step of a national roll-out. But so far, Kyle and Jackie O has proven to be an expensive flop in the Victorian capital, despite climbing 0.5 points to 5.6 per cent in the latest survey. Meanwhile, Hawkins and Phillips, who were hired by rival network Nova, are now the top-rating FM breakfast show.