Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

Giant Coast Eisteddfod a true star

General manager Judith Ferber has helped nurture the beloved annual event into the roaring success it is today, revelling in generation­s of the city’s young performers strutting their stuff

- PAUL WESTON

THE Gold Coast’s biggest entertainm­ent success story remains largely unwritten, rarely getting the limelight or featuring in the headlines or reviews.

At 38 years old, three generation­s of Gold Coasters are touched by it, some recalling being a little frightened while others were hypnotised by the spotlight. Many have been inspired to pursue careers overseas.

General manager Judith Ferber is still lost in the magic of the Gold Coast Eisteddfod.

For seven weeks she watches as the heartbeats of waiting parents stop while their children’s begin to speed up as a performanc­e starts on stage at HOTA.

“People say to me what’s the best part of the eisteddfod,” Ms Ferber says.

“I say standing backstage watching a child who’s never been on stage, who has come from the front of the theatre to the back of the theatre. We put them in a dressing room and we take them on a stage and they go ‘Ooh!’

“That’s the thrill, that’s why we do it. They go outside their own sphere, outside the school, outside entertaini­ng for their parents. They’re on a big profession­al stage in front of an audience. It’s quite incredible.”

Photo galleries at the Bulletin reveal Gaven MP Meaghan Scanlon, the State’s youngest female MP, has been among the performers. She started at five and continued to perform until 17.

“I did all the speech and drama, and I definitely did all the dance events,” she says, chuckling at the thought of her mother driving to eisteddfod­s.

“It was a fantastic opportunit­y to get up on stage with so many of my friends and see so many other children from dance schools across the state.

“I think it’s a great opportunit­y for kids to step out on stage and get rid of those nerves and hone their craft, taking advice on board from adjudicato­rs and improving your performanc­e.”

But those moments could have been lost if Ms Ferber and the late entertaine­r and television personalit­y Paul Sharratt had decided not go on with the show.

Back in 1982 they ran Tropicarni­val, the city’s first festival which included a big street parade in Surfers Paradise, free concerts and teddy bear picnics.

It was a much friendlier time for staging events, when organisers rather than police directed floats to take left turns towards The Esplanade and the beach. The eisteddfod was attached to the program.

“Keith Hunt was the mayor and he proposed that the Gold

Coast needed a festival to bring the Coast together because we were a series of little villages,” Ms Ferber says.

“I hadn’t had much experience with eisteddfod­s. It grew each year. When the festival finished in 2000, the board and I thought it was too important not to continue.”

In that first year at Miami Hall, 600 students performed.

Ms Ferber hunts around her busy office, searching for the numbers for this year for the not-for-profit event. At several venues across the city there will be 350 bands, 175 choirs, 2500 solo dancers and 1100 dance groups.

Performers, aged 20 and under, will come from everywhere, including down south. About 40 dance soloists are booked from Singapore, Hong Kong and China.

City councillor Bob La Castra, who is a singer and, before his local government career, was an actor in television series, marvels at the Gold Coast Eisteddfod’s growth and standard of performanc­e.

“It’s getting bigger and better. It’s got to the point where it is so big it’s very hard to contain,” Cr La Castra says. “It’s spread out to other venues. It’s too much to hold at HOTA. It’s a very prestigiou­s thing now. The competitio­n is so high.

“It’s wonderful. Judith and Kerry (Watson) are iconic Gold Coasters. All too often people just get caught up with the negative about our youth. It encapsulat­es everything that is positive about them.”

Mr Watson, the founding chairman, has been on the musical journey with Ms Ferber from the start. They have visited Wales, the home of eisteddfod­s, returned and rated the Coast.

“I say the Gold Coast is the biggest in the world. Eisteddfod­s are made up of different things around the world. But in terms of the discipline­s or genre that we cover, there is nobody else in the world that has such a huge variety and over a length of time. When you think about it, for little old Gold Coast we haven’t done too bad,” he says.

Much like his successful involvemen­t in the Gold Coast Marathon and Pan Pacific Games, for Mr Watson the key had been assembling the right team.

“In all the things I’ve been involved with, my first thing is you get the right people, then the second thing you do is everything you touch is quality. With Judith, we were lucky to pick the right one there from day one,” Mr Watson says.

“Judith has run that place like a machine, with absolute discipline and quality, but also a clear understand­ing of the needs and wants of the people participat­ing.’’

Consequent­ly, people knew the eisteddfod was well run.

“And they know it’s not run on any snobbish styles or anything. Every square is equal. The reputation has just grown,” he says.

Judith Ferber is backstage. Her own heart, as a parent of this big show, skips a beat at the bright uniforms.

“Look at these kids, aren’t they fantastic,’’ she says.

“We’ve had a few kids who have fainted and felt sick and nervous and we have had the occasional wet floor.”

She laughs at the memories.

“That’s all part of it. I believe it’s totally underrated, people don’t understand how fantastic it is.”

 ?? Pictures: MOVE PHOTOGRAPH­Y ?? St Augustine’s speech choir (left) and (right) Guardian Angels Band, both performing at the hugely popular Gold Coast Eisteddfod. Students from Sheridan’s Studio 1 performing at the
Pictures: MOVE PHOTOGRAPH­Y St Augustine’s speech choir (left) and (right) Guardian Angels Band, both performing at the hugely popular Gold Coast Eisteddfod. Students from Sheridan’s Studio 1 performing at the
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? KOTB Performing Academy in action.
KOTB Performing Academy in action.
 ??  ?? Parents love watching their kids on stage.
Parents love watching their kids on stage.
 ?? Picture: MOVE PHOTOGRAPH­Y/RYAN KETTLE ?? Gold Coast Eisteddfod, which will feature 1100 dance groups.
Picture: MOVE PHOTOGRAPH­Y/RYAN KETTLE Gold Coast Eisteddfod, which will feature 1100 dance groups.
 ??  ?? Crystal O'Rourke, Megganne Smits and Meaghan Scanlon.
Crystal O'Rourke, Megganne Smits and Meaghan Scanlon.
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 ??  ?? Judith Ferber.
Judith Ferber.

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