Festival Hellenika returns to Adelaide
Vamvakaris one of the greats of Greek laiko is celebrated at the FESTIVAL HELLENIKA
Adelaide is gearing up for a two-month program of Hellenic arts and cultural events as the annual FESTIVAL HELLENIKA returns in 2010.
The 2010 program will start with 'The Migration of Ideas: It's All Greek to Me' exhibition at the Immigration Museum and will finish with a night of local artists presenting their work on film as well as their creative writing and performances at the historic Scots Church in the city centre.
Another seven events will be on offer to Adelaideans in the course of the festival, including music workshops, a season of Greek films and am exhibition which will feature Adelaide's unrecognised and mostly unnoticed Hellenic inspired imagery.
Asked what new elements have been introduced into the Festival in 2010, festival spokesperson Stamatiki Kritas said:
"We try to introduce new and exciting elements into the festival every year.
Our annual music concert Music Hellenika® this year is dedicated to the GREEK DIVAS – Women in Greek songs. We are also delighted to present an exclusive screening of a documentary and a concert dedicated to the rebetika song writer Markos Vamvakaris."
In its 19th year FESTIVAL HELLENIKA is different from the major Greek Festivals in other major cities of Australia as it is not run by a major Greek community organisation.
The Festival is run by an independent organisation which represents Greek community organisations and regional brotherhoods.
Asked what are the challenges of presenting a Festival which is not aligned with a major community organisation, Stamatiki Kritas replied:
"It is not a challenge; it is an advantage and an opportunity to act as a uniting force as we are the only umbrella organisation with 24 members who are all community based organisations interested in the Arts and culture."
"We are not only open to participation but we actively invite participation from the Greek and broader community in its entirety."
As a result FESTIVAL HELLENIKA has been able to form partnerships and collaborations with mainstream art bodies and organisations such as the Adelaide Festival Centre, the Adelaide Symphony Orchestra, the Migration Museum, the Fringe Festival, the Tandanya National Aboriginal Cultural Institute and other for both one-off and ongoing projects.
The Festival also actively targets second and third generation Greek Australians and actively looks for ways of attracting the young Australian born.
They have invited representative of NUGAS onto the Board so that they can 'listen to what the second and third generation Greek Australians are interested in,' said Kritas.
"We always try to present topics and themes that are known to the youth.
For example, our main concert this year MUSIC HELLENIKA, focuses entirely on Women in Greek songs.
The great thing is that the artists who are participating are themselves young women of second and third generation Greek Australians from Adelaide."
The bottom line for the Festival is simple, according to Kritas: that Festival Hellenika® always supports, nurtures and promotes local artists.
For event information or the full and official programme of the festival please call: Stamatiki Kritas on 0402 072 741 or George Apostolou on 0417 844 140
Advertisement
-
We should accept gay marriage(7)
-
Greek lobby mixed efforts in Canberra(4)
-
Hellenic line in the sand(4)
-
The politics of transition in Greek Australian community organisations(4)
-
Greece Reaps the Fruits of Corruption(4)
-
Why can’t they flirt?(3)
More from this Section
- Flatmates miniseries grabs attention online
- The Swimming Club
- George Michael
- Festival Hellenika returns to Adelaide
- Kouzina at the Show
- Be There!
- Ο Μάκης Χριστοδουλόπουλος κοντά μας στις 31 Οκτωβρίου
- Την Τρίτη η πρεμιέρα της ταινίας του Κ. Γαβρά «Ο Παράδεισος Είναι Δυτικά»
- Arkaba goes Greek
- Migrant workers and ethnic communities
-
Greece’s U/19 mens basketballers had to settle for the silver medal at World Championships after they lost tense finale against USA.
-
Athens Airport has suffered a significant decrease in inbound tourism over the last 12 months.
-
The NATO-Russia and OSCE meeting on Corfu were a great success.
-
A single goal was the difference between the Greek womens water polo team playing in the finals of the water polo at the World Swimming Championships in Rome and playing in the bronze medal playoff match.
-
New Democracy has resolved who will be eligible to take part in the election of the new leader of the party which is expected to take place in early December.
-
Greek police have arrested one American, two Britons and a local citizen for twice torching a 600-year-old synagogue in Crete.
-
Three Greek Australian community leaders express their opinions on the issue of changing the Australian flag.
-
A Greek doctor will host a series of advocacy workshops for people with disabilities.
-
Reigning Euroleague basketball champion Panathinaikos lost at home to Partizan and Maroussi suffered a defeat away to Barcelona while Olympiakos produced a dynamic display to see off Caja Laboral in Spain.
-
One of the largest human trafficking rings in Eastern Europe and the Balkans was busted by Greek police last week.
-
The President of Cyprus, Dimitris Christofias, discussed the slow progress of the talks in Cyprus in the lead up to his address to the United Nations General Assembly in New York.
-
March 16 is the deadline set by European finance ministers both for Greece to show its plan is being rolled out effectively and for them to decide what should happen next
-
Its continuing deficit has seen the owner of the Olympiakos football club, Sokratis Kokkalis, have to make some difficult decisions.
-
Peter Tsoutouras shares his experience of running Spartan Electrical, Adelaide’s best retailer of kitchen, laundry and home entertainment appliances.
-
The Yarra Trio, led by Stefan Cassomenos, will be one of three Australian trios competing in the The Asia-Pacific Chamber Music competition in July.
-
Zoe Carides latest endeavor involves her premiering in an episode of a new U.S. miniseries called The Pacific.
-
The offices of New Democracy, PASOk and La.OS were firebombed last week but no one was hurt.
-
Harry Efthimiadis received a kidney transplant from an unexpected friend. National Kidney Week raises awareness of the disease.
-
Greece is the fourth most popular tourist destination in the European Union in 2010 according to the Eurobarometer survey.
-
A total of 20 Greek Australians are candidates in the South Australia elections which will take place on March 20.
-
Chris Fotinopoulos makes the case that people with faith emphasise the value of diversity yet view those who are free of faith as morally unfit to participate in their discussions.
-
A 40-metre drive by young gun Mitchell Stamatelis has salvaged Sydney Olympic a 2-2 draw against a determined Bankstown City Lions outfit.
-
PAS Ioannina stole a point, and perhaps should have had all three, while AEK has ended Kavala’s play-off hopes with a classy performance.
-
Northcote City earned its first VPL points in 19 years thanks to the exciting 3-3 draw with South Melbourne.
-
Bentleigh Greens earnt their first win of the season with a 1-0 victory over Altona, last year's VPL titleholder.
-
Twenty percent of Greece’s population are facing poverty according to a survey conducted by the National Statistics Service on living conditions and income earned in 2008.
-
The Greek Prime Minister, George Papandreou, spent two days in Washington last week meeting with US President Barack Obama and other senior figures in his administration.
-
The Greek academics and educators who are preparing a Greek community submission as part of the Victorian Languages Strategy Discussion Paper, are calling for the inclusion of the Greek language in the new national schools curriculum.




















