Australian Elizabethan Theatre Trust

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The Australian Elizabethan Theatre Trust (AETT) was set up in September 1954 under the guidance of H. C. ‘Nugget’ Coombs, Governor of the Commonwealth Bank, Sir Charles Moses General Manager, Australian Broadcasting Commission and John Douglas Pringle, Editor of The Sydney Morning Herald. It aimed to establish drama, opera and ballet companies nationally. Named to commemorate Queen Elizabeth II's visit to Australia, the Trust raised £100,000 by a public appeal. [1][2] Since 1999 the Trust has offered overseas music scholarships; 80 scholars have been supported, with grants totaling over A$1 million. The Trust is also the owner/proprietor of the Independent Theatre, North Sydney.[3]

The Trust played a key role in establishing high culture in Australia through its involvement in setting up:

It has also supported:

Following the establishment of the Australian Council for the Arts (later the Australia Council) in 1968, it ceased to be a funding body for opera and ballet in 1970.

During the 1980s the Trust scaled back its operations and in the 1990s had a Sydney focus and operated a ticketing agency and organised theatre parties.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ MS 5908 Records of Australian Elizabethan Theatre Trust at the National Library of Australia
  2. ^ Annual Report 1957, The Australia Elizabethan Theatre Trust
  3. ^ Chairman’s Address for 2005, The Australia Elizabethan Theatre Trust
  • The Australian Elizabethan Theatre Trust: the first year, Sydney: The Australian Elizabethan Theatre Trust, 1956
  • Stephen Alomes, The search for a National Theatre, Voices, Spring 1993, pp. 21-37.

[edit] External links

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