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Leanne Benjamin to leave Queensland Ballet

Leanne Benjamin. Photo courtesy of Queensland Ballet.
Leanne Benjamin. Photo by Jakob Perrett. Photo soure: Queenslandballet.com.au

Queensland Ballet’s sixth Artistic Director, Leanne Benjamin OBE AM, will leave Queensland Ballet, with Assistant Artistic Director Greg Horsman to act in the role with the focus on finalising the 2025 season.

The company made the following statement on their website:

Early this year, Queensland Ballet was thrilled to welcome Benjamin, following her vibrant career on the world stage. Her return to Queensland after an absence of 43 years was much anticipated and widely celebrated. Over the past six months, Benjamin has been getting to know the dancers, wider team, government stakeholders, collaborators, donors and corporate partners who make up the Queensland Ballet family. She has also been engaging her networks across the world stage, curating the first articulation of her artistic vision: Queensland Ballet’s 2025 Artistic Season.

Despite the best intentions from both parties, the current economic environment has posed challenges, making it difficult to realise Benjamin’s vision, and it has been mutually agreed for Benjamin to depart Queensland Ballet as Artistic Director on 2 August.

Executive Director Dilshani Weerasinghe reassured donors, partners, audiences, community and Academy families that Queensland Ballet will still have a full complement of productions, engagement programs and training opportunities next year.

“Our 2025 Season productions and offerings are artistically vibrant in true Queensland Ballet style, with more exciting works for our audiences, including our youngest fans, as well as innovative use of spaces, and there will be new adventures for our Academy and Van Norton Li Community Health Institute,” she said.

Weerasinghe added, “Queensland Ballet’s circumstances are such that Leanne has not been able to infuse our 2025 offerings with her own artistic aspirations as much as she was hoping. This has been understandably dispiriting for Leanne and, although she might not be sitting with us as our Artistic Director in 2025, we will most certainly feel her legacy in Queensland Ballet’s investment in Australian and female voices, amongst other elements that she has inspired.”

Weerasinghe said the company has no option but to work within its financial constraints.

“Although Queensland Ballet’s management team has workshopped several scenarios for the 2025 Season, it is evident that the company needs to lean heavily into its existing repertory in the near future, while also in-housing more activity into our newly revitalised home, the Thomas Dixon Centre,” Weerasinghe said.

“It is with great sadness that we have shared the news this week with the Queensland Ballet team,” Benjamin said. “Ultimately, as we have worked together to design a vibrant season for 2025, it has become very clear that my artistic aspirations for our company, including the opportunity to engage diverse choreographic voices, both international and Australian, and venture outside of the traditional theatre environment with immersive opportunities, is not immediately possible within the funding constraints faced by the company.”

She added, “Queensland and Queensland Ballet will always have a very special place in my heart, and I look forward to our continued relationship. I have had a wonderful time getting to know the amazing dancers, staff, stakeholders, audiences and supporters of Queensland Ballet over the past six months, and I feel privileged to have led this wonderful company. I wish the Queensland Ballet family and all our arts colleagues in Queensland the very best as they continue to channel excellence despite the odds. I will miss them but will see them soon.”

Queensland Ballet Chair, Brett Clark AM thanked Benjamin for her contribution.

“Although Leanne has only been with us for a short time, we are deeply grateful for her invaluable contribution including her artistic leadership, creativity, positivity and the ideas she has brought to the company over the past six months, and we hope to welcome her back to enjoy some of the 2025 Season with which she is so familiar,” he said.

He reiterated that Queensland Ballet will have an enduring legacy. “We know that we are in good hands. As we prepare for her departure on 2 August, we thank Greg Horsman for accepting the role of Acting Artistic Director as the Queensland Ballet team comes together to finalise Season 2025, due to be launched in October. Greg has been with us since 2013, and was promoted to Assistant Artistic Director in 2023, recognising his immense contribution and alignment. We know our artists and artistic team will be in great hands, he has a long-standing affinity with our behind-the-scenes and business teams, and our audiences will continue to enjoy the world-stage ballets to which they are accustomed. This year, audiences showed strong appetite for Greg’s Coppélia, and his Sleeping Beauty still holds our box office record.”

Clark concluded, “This company has stood as an iconic Queensland cultural institution for 64 years and we will continue to move forward with confidence.”

Queensland Ballet will launch its 2025 Season in late October.

Source: www.queenslandballet.com.au

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