Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

Inspiring swell of support

With politician­s and Hollywood A-listers among its fans and a Helpmann Award, this local arts company is making waves around the world while growing the Gold Coast brand

- With Ann Wason Moore

It’s late at night, with just the stars reflecting off the surface of the otherwise pitch black Currumbin Creek. But there’s something out there in the water … a strange sandbank playing host to a desk, some office chairs, a filing cabinet and two men in suits. And it’s about to get a whole lot weirder.

As the tide waters rise, none other than Gold Coast Mayor Tom Tate can be spotted barefoot on this odd island office, dancing atop the desk and cutting loose in the moonlight with these newfound friends.

This is not some strange fantasy, but the magical reality of pure art.

Indeed, the scene came courtesy of Bleach* Festival back in 2015, when brand new contempora­ry dance and theatre company The Farm made its first foray on to Gold Coast turf, or sand, with TIDE.

Co-artistic director Gavin Webber, moonlighti­ng as an office-worker and partying with the mayor all those years ago, said the company had since collected accolades around the world for its work, including a Helpmann Award – Australia’s answer to a Tony – for TIDE, with the city its greatest support.

Born and raised in Adelaide with profession­al roots in Germany, Webber admitted he was at first sceptical of choosing the Gold Coast as an artistic base, but said it was a genius move, with The Farm since becoming the first local arts company to receive national funding.

“Kate (Harman, fellow codirector) and I were living in Germany and pregnant with our first child when we decided it was time to move back to Australia,” said Webber, whose other Farm co-director colleagues are Grayson Millwood, Michael Smith, Merinda Davies and Chloe Ogilvie.

“Kate had previously worked with (Bleach* founder) Louise Bezzina and when I saw what she was doing on the Gold Coast, I was blown away.

“Not to mention being able to bring up our child in such a beautiful place. I was still a little worried but once we arrived I realised this is not the Gold Coast I thought I knew.

“What’s even better is being able to be in at the beginning of this arts culture, to help build it, rather than trying to wedge yourself into the establishm­ent like in Sydney or Melbourne.

“I knew it was different here

we“’

I feel like ve been looked after by the community … because this city believes in us

when I first heard the mayor speak when launching Bleach*. I was so inspired hearing him talk about the arts, I realised that this city was somewhere that culture and art was really being valued. Everywhere else, the arts were just haemorrhag­ing money at that time.

“Then I actually met him on the sandbank that first night of TIDE and he was so into it, dancing and laughing, he embraces the weird and wonderful.”

It wasn’t only the Coast’s politician­s that impressed Webber, he said the people of the city were engaging and supportive from The Farm’s very first performanc­e.

He said the company’s incredible success, with funding now from council, state and federal government­s, meant many of his colleagues in the arts were eyeing up a move to the city.

“When we first performed TIDE in 2015, it was such a deliberate act of stupidity – to live in an ‘office’ on a sandbar for 49 hours with no food or water, pretending to sell real estate and asking the community to look after us … crazy,” he said.

“We had guitarist Ben Ely on the shore playing improv the whole time and he had warned us that when his band Regurgitat­or did their Band in a Bubble experiment in Melbourne’s Federation Square, the public got a little chaotic and threatenin­g.

“So we were prepared for that, but we weren’t prepared for how incredible the people of the Gold Coast were. People were swimming fresh fruit juices out to us, keeping watch overnight to make sure we were OK, cheering us on, it really moved me.

“I feel like we’ve been looked after by the community in the same way ever since, and that’s why we’re the first Gold Coast arts company to get federal funding – because this city believes in us.

“The perception­s of the city have also completely shifted.

All of those people who were wondering why on earth we’d base ourselves here are now asking us for jobs.

“They’ve realised the support that’s here, and we love overturnin­g the idea that art has to be based in a capital city. That’s such a limiting idea.”

Indeed, one of The Farm’s biggest supporters was a new local resident himself, with Alist film director Baz Luhrmann a regular at Webber’s shows and a self-declared fan.

“Having found myself as a member of the audience at many of The Farm’s innovative and always inspiring production­s, I find it so exciting that Gavin and Kate are enriching the creative fabric of the city and creating artistic work at a world-leading standard right here in the Gold Coast,” said Luhrmann.

The growing arts community has had an impact on Webber’s work too, with The Farm’s next big thing a show inspired by the film world, titled Stunt Double.

Webber said the show was a combinatio­n of dance, theatre, film and stunts set within the chaos of a B-grade action Ozploitati­on film set, with audience members filling roles, stars stepping out of wardrobe into the limelight, and stunt doubles being “used and abused”.

Stunt Double will be performed at HOTA for onenight only, on March 9, which coincides with the 10th anniversar­y of The Farm.

“Film is really becoming a huge industry here, and we’ve been so lucky to have Baz Luhrmann and Catherine Martin come to a lot of our shows, they’ve been huge supporters. Baz actually said what we’ve done is some of the greatest work he’s seen – and he’s seen a lot, so we are incredibly flattered,” Webber said.

“What he’s trying to do in this city y is amazing, g, it’s putting p g us on the internatio­nal map, but also really increasing awareness of the arts among locals.

“Film was a big reference point for Stunt Double, which is the biggest work we’ve ever made. We had a $1 million budget supported through the Major Film Initiative and it was booked as a national tour before we even finished the show.”

Webber said while the show had already been met with huge acclaim in Perth and Darwin, and has won three Queensland theatre Mathilda Awards, it was extra special to perform it on the Gold Coast.

He said local casting had been ”unbelievab­le” because there was such a wealth of talent here, thanks in part to the legacy of Movie World’s legendary stunt show.

Despite the national and internatio­nal applause, Mr Webber said The Farm was firmly rooted on the Gold Coast.

Gavin Webber

The Farm co-artistic director

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 ?? ?? Kate Harman and Gavin Webber rehearse at HOTA for The Farm’s production of Stunt Double and (right) Webber during the 2015 TIDE performanc­e at Bleach* Festival. Main picture: Glenn Hampson
Kate Harman and Gavin Webber rehearse at HOTA for The Farm’s production of Stunt Double and (right) Webber during the 2015 TIDE performanc­e at Bleach* Festival. Main picture: Glenn Hampson

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