QUT students show off their acting chops in graduation showcase
First published 21 November 2024
Final year QUT acting students will tread the boards next week in a play written specifically for them by one of the rising stars of Australian drama.
Very Fine People, commissioned by QUT from emerging Brisbane-based playwright Grace Wilson, who was a finalist last year for the Sydney Theatre Company’s Patrick White Playwright’s Award, features 27 students in their graduation performance on opens on Tuesday November 26.
Directed by the QUT Indigenous Chair in the Creative Industries Professor Wesley Enoch, internationally acclaimed playwright and artistic director, the play runs for four nights in the QUT Gardens Theatre and gives an insight into the strength of the QUT acting course.
Associate Professor Andrea Moor, nationally acclaimed teacher within the acting program in the QUT School of Creative Arts and a well-known stage and screen actor, said the performance would serve to highlight how QUT acting students are stage ready on completion of their studies.
“In the eight years I have been at QUT, we have had a 100 per cent success rate for our acting students achieving agent representation,” said Dr Moor who has a lead role in the just-released film A Royal Proposal: A Royal in Paradise II and is currently starring in Yoga Play, a co-production with La Boite Theatre Company and National Theatre of Parramatta
“Our acting students are so experienced and ready to hit the ground running with their ability to do self-tests and more. This makes them unique compared to many coming out of other acting programs and the industry laps them up for that.
“I believe a key point of difference at QUT is that the acting students are working closely with leading professionals like Wesley Enoch.
“We also have strong connections with arts organisations like La Boite, Queensland Theatre, The Brisbane Powerhouse and others, while our students get to meet with the leading casting directors and agents which is a huge advantage for them as they launch their careers.”
Dr Moor said Very Fine People explored the experiences of young people growing up in the Australian schooling system, through the lens of student politics and connection with the adult world.
“Playwright Grace Wilson is an extraordinary talent. We commissioned her to write the play because she is one of the most exciting young writers in the country. Although just 20 years of age, she was last year shortlisted for the Patrick White Playwright’s Award, the most prestigious award Australia has to offer for playwrights,” Dr Moor said.
“Very Fine People is a really thought-provoking, ambitious piece that really speaks to young people and tackles what matters to them, including the areas of sexual politics and identity.”
The opening night is being presented as a free preview for any high school or university student who can book via gardenstix@qut.edu.au or by calling 3138 4455.
The ongoing vinyl record revival is well and truly in the house at Vermilion Records, the not-for-profit, student-run record label at QUT, with its first efforts to press a physical record now available.
QUT creative arts students have had the chance to work alongside some of the best-known faces on Australian stage and TV by participating in rehearsals for the new production from acclaimed theatre company Dead Puppet Society.