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Otago Daily Times
09-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Otago Daily Times
World War 2 tribute in song
Violinist Orla Dunlop Soprano Erin Connelly-Whyte Central Otago Regional Choir is performing in Arrowtown this Saturday in a tribute concert to mark the 80th anniversary of the end of World War 2. Among the numbers will be favourites the audience will even be invited to join in, including the choruses in The White Cliffs of Dover, It's a Long Way to Tipperary and Land of Hope and Glory. Other standards being sung include Now is the Hour, A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square and We'll Meet Again. Under the baton of Richard Madden, the accompanists include Peter Doyle (drums), Ariana Knudson-Hollebon (double bass) and Alison Frude (piano). Also appearing are two talented young artists Orla Dunlop (violin), who'll play a movement from Saint-Saens' Violin Concerto No 3 in B minor, and Erin Connelly-Whyte (soprano), last year's ODT Aria Competition winner, who'll sing Franz Lehar's aria, My lips kiss with such heat. Both will be accompanied by pianist Cameron Monteath. Tickets for Saturday's concert, 7.30pm at the Arrowtown Athenaeum Hall, are $30 from choir members, Arrowtown's Lakes District Museum, Arrowtown Pharmacy, Queenstown's Life Pharmacy Wilkinsons and Frankton's Summerfield's Pharmacy.


Otago Daily Times
27-04-2025
- Entertainment
- Otago Daily Times
Autumnal celebration draws thousands
These stilt walkers captivated the crowds during the Arrowtown Autumn Festival street parade. PHOTO: GUY WILLIAMS A glorious autumn day brought thousands of people into Arrowtown on Saturday for the high point of the township's annual autumn festival. The street parade is the signature event of the four-day festival, now in its 39th year, which started on Thursday. Festival co-ordinator Vanessa Williams said "magical" weather on all four days meant the schedule of over 40 events went without a hitch. She estimated 15,000 people packed into the township for Saturday's parade and other events, including the market day on Ramshaw Lane, providing a roaring trade for the arts, crafts and food stalls, and local cafes and restaurants. "It was a great day for the stallholders, great for local businesses and community groups raising money," Ms Williams said. Following a vintage car display on Buckingham St, free street performances kept crowds entertained for several hours, including Mullet Man and Mim and an aerial cabaret show on Library Green. The crowd came to a standstill before 2pm to watch as the street parade made its way from Wilcox Green and along Centennial Ave, Buckingham St and Ramshaw Lane. About 40 community organisations and businesses took part in the parade, including the Southern Lakes Highland Pipe Band, Lakes District Museum, Arrowtown junior rugby players riding in a Sunrise Balloons basket — which intermittently let off flames — and the cast of Showbiz Queenstown's upcoming season of Into the Woods. Adding to the cacophony of sound and colour were stilt walkers, fairies and Latin dancers, ice hockey players on rollerblades, a unicyclist, and a traction engine belching smoke and steam. The Arrowtown kea, cub and scout group won the prize for best community float, with Bush Creek Ice getting second prize. The day was capped off by a comedy show at the Athenaeum Hall.