Concert Program

Fairy Tales

Thursday 11 Sep 2025 6pm
Federation Concert Hall, Nipaluna / Hobart

Looking for tickets? Go here.

Looking for fantasy and
whimsy? See you at 6pm.
A man with gray hair and glasses plays a double bass with focused intensity, wearing a deep blue dress shirt. The warm, wooden background and presence of sheet music suggest a live performance or rehearsal in an acoustically treated space.

The Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra acknowledges the traditional owners and continuing custodians of Lutruwita / Tasmania. We pay respect to the Aboriginal community today, and to its Elders past and present. We recognise a history of truth, which acknowledges the impacts of colonisation upon Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people and stand for a future that profoundly respects their stories, culture, language and history.

About the concert

Works

Ravel Mother Goose Suite (16 mins)

5 movements

  1. Pavane of the Sleeping Beauty
  2. Tom Thumb
  3. Laideronette, Empress of the Pagoda
  4. Conversations of Beauty and the Beast
  5. The Fairy Garden

Richard Mills Fantastic Bestiary: Concerto for Contrabass and Orchestra* (19 mins)
*world premiere performance
8 movements

  1. Emergence of the Giant Basilisk Near Bruny Island
  2. Flight of the Friendly Firedragons Observed on Cradle Mountain
  3. Complaint of the Melancholy Lebdrill (Large pink flightless bird, often found near Scottsdale)
  4. Frolics of the Juvenile Unicorns by the Hidden Lake of Shimmer Snakes
  5. Victorious Polka for Emu Heroes of the Emu Wars
  6. Les panthères noirs à six pattes
  7. La Crocadilla (In Tasmanian pre-history crocodiles enjoyed a dance)
  8. Magical Dance of the Sea Monsters: The Basilisk Returns to Primordial Regions

Vaughan Williams The Wasps, Overture (9 mins)

💡 FIRST-TIMER TIP

Longer pieces of music are often broken up into bite-size pieces called ‘movements’. It makes it easier to perform and provides contrast within the work. Find out more here.

Richard Mills

Richard Mills. Image credit: Bridget Elliott

Concert 101: Learn about the works being performed

For the enjoyment of all in the concert hall, please only watch Concert 101 before or after the performance. 

Uncover the stories behind the works.

Fairy-tale magic.

Mother Goose Suite

  1. Pavane of the Sleeping Beauty
  2. Tom Thumb
  3. Laideronette, Empress of the Pagoda
  4. Conversations of Beauty and the Beast
  5. The Fairy Garden

Composed by Maurice Ravel (1875 – 1937)

16 minutes

Maurice Ravel had a gift for creating music that seems to shimmer with colour and light. In 1908 he composed a set of five short piano pieces called Ma Mère l’Oye (Mother Goose), written for two children of close friends. Later, he arranged the pieces for orchestra, giving them the glowing textures and delicate colours that only an orchestra can provide.

The suite is inspired by familiar fairy tales and childhood stories. Ravel does not tell these tales in full; instead, he paints a series of musical pictures that capture their moods and characters.

The first movement, Pavane of the Sleeping Beauty, is a gentle lullaby just 20 bars long, as if the princess herself is peacefully dreaming. Tom Thumb follows, with wandering lines suggesting the boy scattering crumbs in the forest and getting hopelessly lost as birds eat his trail. Laideronnette, Empress of the Pagodas is full of bright, tinkling sounds. Ravel evokes a magical toy kingdom in Asia where even the dolls and pagodas come to life in music. Next is Conversations of Beauty and the Beast, where a graceful waltz for Beauty alternates with the gruff growls of the Beast, played by the contrabassoon. As the story unfolds, the Beast transforms into a prince and the music blossoms. Finally, The Fairy Garden brings the suite to a radiant close. Starting quietly, it gradually builds to a glowing climax, as if we are stepping into a magical garden filled with light and wonder.

Ravel’s Mother Goose Suite captures the innocence and imagination of childhood. Its charm lies not in grand gestures but in delicate detail – a reminder that the simplest stories can inspire the most enchanting music.

An imaginary menagerie.

Fantastic Bestiary: Concerto for Contrabass and Orchestra*

*World premiere performance

  1. Emergence of the Giant Basilisk Near Bruny Island
  2. Flight of the Friendly Firedragons Observed on Cradle Mountain
  3. Complaint of the Melancholy Lebdrill (Large pink flightless bird, often found near Scottsdale)
  4. Frolics of the Juvenile Unicorns by the Hidden Lake of Shimmer Snakes
  5. Victorious Polka for Emu Heroes of the Emu Wars
  6. Les panthères noirs à six pattes
  7. La Crocadilla (In Tasmanian pre-history crocodiles enjoyed a dance)
  8. Magical Dance of the Sea Monsters: The Basilisk Returns to Primordial Regions

Composed by Richard Mills (b. 1949)

19 minutes

💡 FIRST-TIMER TIP

The names of movements in symphonies often follow traditional conventions that give insight into the character, tempo, and sometimes the form of each section.

These terms not only instruct performers on the tempo and mood of each movement but also guide listeners through the emotional and narrative arc of the symphony. For example, ‘Allegro’ refers to tempo and ‘molto’ translates to very, so: very fast!

From the composer –

I have long been a devotee of Dada (an avante garde movement in art circles that emerged in Switzerland in 1916, where artists embraced satire and absurdity as a reaction against the horrors of war). My fourth string quartet ‘Glimpses from My Book of Dada’ with movements like ‘Reve Circulaire du Wombat’ and ‘Scheming and Latte Drinking’ is complimented by my ‘Ear Ticklers for the Radio’ suite for piano with titles like ‘Waltz of the Opinion Makers’ and ‘Tango for the Left Foot Alone’. Both these works and this new concerto are examples of my enduring fascination with Dadaist tropes which somehow lend themselves to my musical expressions.

The medium of bass and orchestra presents a particular opportunity for symphonic storytelling. So it was engaging to invent a series of fanciful titles which would serve to reveal the wide range, rich palette of colour and the characterful articulations of the solo bass while preserving the integrity of the special features of the instrument – its low registers, its sonorous pizzicato and its natural harmonics – hence my eight short movements.

Emergence of the Giant Basilisk near Bruny Island
The Basilisk stirs from the primordial depths to desport itself on the beach and rest in the sun.

Flight of the Friendly Fire Dragons Observed on Cradle Mountain
These were seen by the composer on a summer eve, sparkling, weaving in formations before a sudden disappearance.

Complaint of the Melancholy Lebdrill - a large pink flightless bird often found near Scottsdale
The Lebdrill laments its inability to fly, wistfully imagining life with wings.

Frolics of Juvenile Unicorns by the Hidden Lake of Shimmer Snakes
In central Tasmania there is a secret lake illumined at dusk by a race of shining small serpents. By the shore, unicorns graze on tessellated foliage as their offspring play before bedtime.

Victorious Polka for Emu Heroes of the Emu Wars
Never one to dwell on things for extended periods, I now visit the memory of the heroic WA Emus who defeated plans by the military to round them up and execute them with machine guns. The Emus used diversionary tactics and thus evaded an unpleasant end, dancing a neo-colonial polka of victory on September 11, 1932 – 93 years ago today.

Les pantheres noirs a six pattes
Meanwhile in the jungles of far north Queensland the six-footed panther roves erratically, its post prandial belch emitting a captivating, sweet perfume which entrances small prey and lures them to sudden doom.

La Crocodilla
A short visit to Tasmanian pre-history reveals dance loving crocodiles which snap delightedly in quadrille formations.

Magical Dance of Sea Monsters: The Basilisk Returns to Primordial Regions
Again a vista of Bruny Island. Sea Monsters provoke the somnolent Basilisk with a sensuous ballet. The Basilisk stirs and enters the blue waters at dawn, quietly returning to his ancestral lair.

Buzzing with warmth and wit.

The Wasps, Overture

Composed by Ralph Vaughan Williams (1872 – 1958)

9 minutes

In 1909, Ralph Vaughan Williams was asked to write incidental music for a production of The Wasps, a satirical play by the ancient Greek dramatist Aristophanes. The play pokes fun at the Athenian legal system, comparing argumentative jurors to swarming wasps. Vaughan Williams composed a full score for chorus, soloists and orchestra, but the music soon took on a life of its own. Today, the concert hall usually hears the lively Overture and a suite drawn from the longer score.

The Overture opens with a buzzing figure in the strings and woodwinds – Vaughan Williams’ witty way of conjuring a swarm of wasps. The effect is both humorous and slightly mischievous, immediately drawing listeners into the spirit of the play.

After this energetic opening, the music relaxes into a slower, lyrical theme where Vaughan Williams demonstrates the influence of his teacher Ravel. Here we hear the folk melodies that would later define so much of his music, evoking the gentle contours of the English countryside. The contrast between the playful “wasp” music and this expansive tune gives the overture its special charm.

As the piece unfolds, the buzzing figures return, mingling with dance-like rhythms and bursts of orchestral colour. The overture ends in high spirits, with Vaughan Williams combining humour, energy and warmth in equal measure.

Although the music was originally written for a comedy, the Wasps Overture quickly became a concert favourite. It showcases Vaughan Williams’ gift for characterful orchestration, his ability to balance wit with lyrical beauty, and his talent for writing music that feels both entertaining and deeply rooted in his English heritage.

With its mix of buzzing energy and sweeping lyricism, the Wasps Overture remains one of Vaughan Williams’ most engaging early works – a piece that stings and soars in equal measure.

Enjoying the concert?

Rewatch all your favourite moments on TSO On Demand.

Streaming sixteen concerts from Federation Concert Hall, this is the full orchestra at its brilliant best.

Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra on stageTasmanian Symphony Orchestra on stage
Start Watching

Musicians

Richard Mills

Conductor

Richard Mills. Credit Bridget Elliott.

Image credit: Bridget Elliott.

Richard Mills AO is one of Australia’s most distinguished composers and conductors, with a career spanning more than four decades. He has worked with nearly every major music organisation in the country, serving as Artistic Director of West Australian Opera (1997–2012) and Victorian Opera (2013–2023), as well as Director of the Australian Music Project with the Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra (2002–2008). In 2007/08 he was awarded an Ian Potter Foundation Fellowship, and in 2008 was named Musica Viva’s Composer of the Year.

Mills’ reputation as both conductor and composer is built on his versatility. He has led acclaimed performances for Opera Queensland, State Opera South Australia, Opera Australia, Victorian Opera and all major Australian symphony orchestras. His wide repertoire ranges from the classics to contemporary opera and new commissions, including his own works. Among these are Summer of the Seventeenth Doll (1996), Batavia (2001, winner of multiple Helpmann and Green Room Awards), and The Love of the Nightingale (2007). His recent operas include Galileo (2023).

Alongside opera, Mills’ orchestral and vocal works are frequently performed in Australia and abroad. Notable compositions include the Organ Concerto (2011), Passion According to St Mark, Songlines of the Heart’s Desire (premiered at the Edinburgh Festival), music for The Australian Ballet’s Snugglepot and Cuddlepie, and numerous concertos. His works have been championed by leading soloists such as James Galway and Evelyn Glennie.

Mills has also held significant artistic leadership roles, including directing Musica Nova festivals in the 1980s and commissioning dozens of new Australian works. His recordings with ABC Classics and other labels include award-winning sets of both his own compositions and film scores by Franz Waxman.

Today, Richard Mills continues to compose, conduct and mentor, contributing profoundly to Australia’s musical life and its international reputation.

Stuart Thomson

Double Bass

Supported by Anonymous

Stuart Thomson. TSO Principal Double Bass

Born in Edinburgh, Stuart Thomson began playing the double bass at age nine and later joined the Hampshire County Youth Orchestra, which inspired him to become a professional musician. He studied at the Royal Northern College of Music in Manchester with Duncan McTier and Corin Long, and began working professionally with the Royal Northern Sinfonia, Hallé, BBC Philharmonic and Royal Liverpool Philharmonic orchestras while still a student.

In 1999, after freelancing for a year with the London Symphony and Philharmonia Orchestras he joined the Hong Kong Philharmonic and in 2001 moved to Australia to play with the Sydney Symphony Orchestra. The following year he was appointed Associate Principal of The Queensland Orchestra and in late 2003 took up the post of Principal Double Bass with the Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra.

In 2005 he made his solo debut with the TSO playing alongside Alex Henery in Bottesini’s Passione Amorosa for two double basses. Further solo appearances with the TSO include Eduard Tubin’s Concerto for Double Bass in 2011 and the Australian première of Tan Dun’s Double Bass Concerto, Wolf Totem, in 2015. In January 2017 he appeared again with the TSO in 9 performances of the Tan Dun concerto in Hobart and on their tour of China, giving the mainland Chinese premiere of the work. He has also performed the Tan Dun with the Darwin Symphony Orchestra, Suzhou and Shenzhen Symphony Orchestras in China. In 2021 he played the Bottesini Gran Duo with TSO concertmaster Emma McGrath.

Stuart enjoys teaching double bass and chamber music, drawing as a hobby and his Golden Retriever.

Jonathan Békés

Cello

Supported by Anonymous

Jonathan Békés

Jonathan Békés is one of Australia’s leading cellists and is a renowned solo artist, chamber musician, orchestral musician and educator.

Békés began playing the cello at the age of 10. He studied at the Sydney Conservatorium of Music and the Australian National Academy of Music (ANAM) learning from some of Australia’s leading cellists including Howard Penny, Julian Smiles and Susan Blake.

Currently, Békés is Principal Cello of the Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra, a position that he has held since 2021. He plays regularly with the Australian World Orchestra and the Southern Cross Soloists and has appeared as soloist with the Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra, Willoughby Symphony Orchestra and Sydney Youth Orchestra. As an educator Békés has worked closely with Musica Viva Australia and Australian Youth Orchestra and is a passionate advocate of music for all people in all walks of life.

In his spare time (not much these days), Békés is a keen sportsman and an outdoors enthusiast. He is an overly passionate golfer, crazed squash player and an AFL fanatic. He follows the Sydney Swans and the Hobart Hurricanes and loves to go on hiking adventures across Tasmania with his family.

Konstantin Shamray

Piano

Supported by Anonymous

Konstantin Shamray

Described as an exhilarating performer with faultless technique and fearless command of the piano, Russian-Australian concert pianist Konstantin Shamray performs at an international level with the world’s leading orchestras and concert presenters.

Konstantin was born in Novosibirsk and commenced his studies at the age of six with Natalia Knobloch. He then studied in Moscow at the Russian Gnessin Academy of Music with Professors Tatiana Zelikman and Vladimir Tropp, and the Hochschule fuer Musik in Freiburg, Germany, with Professor Tibor Szasz.

In 2008, Konstantin burst onto the concert scene when he won First Prize at the Sydney International Piano Competition. He is the first and only competitor to date in the 40 years of the competition to win both First and People’s Choice Prizes, in addition to six other prizes. He then went on to win First Prize at the 2011 Klavier Olympiade in Bad Kissingen,Germany and has performed at the Kissinger Sommer festival. In July 2013, following chamber recitals with Alban Gerhardt and Feng Ning, he was awarded the festival’s coveted Luitpold Prize for “outstanding musical achievements”.

Since then, Konstantin has performed extensively throughout the world in recitals, as a soloist with orchestras and as a chamber musician. In Australia, highlights have included engagements with the Adelaide, Queensland, West Australia, Tasmanian and Sydney Symphony Orchestras, as well as tours with the Australian Chamber Orchestra and ANAM Orchestra. Outside of Australia, he has performed with the Russian National Philharmonic, the Mariinsky Theatre Orchestra, Moscow Virtuosi, Orchestre National de Lyon, Prague Philharmonia, Belgrade Philharmonic Orchestra and the Calgary Philharmonic amongst many others. He has enjoyed collaborating with distinguished conductors such as Kirill Petrenko, Vladimir Spivakov, Dmitry Liss, Tugan Sokhiev and Nicholas Milton.

Chamber music plays a strong role in Konstantin’s musical career and collaborations have included tours with the Australian String Quartet, Southern Cross Soloists, Richard Tognetti, Natsuko Yoshimoto, Alban Gerhardt, Kristof Barati, Andreas Brantelid, Li Wei Qin and Leonard Elschenbroich. Konstantin has performed as part of the International Piano Series in Adelaide, and at the Melbourne Recital Centre and Ukaria Cultural Centre. He has enjoyed critical acclaim at the Klavier-Festival Ruhr, the Bochum Festival in Germany, the Mariinsky International Piano Festival and the White Nights Festival in St. Petersburg, Adelaide Festival, Musica Viva Sydney and Huntington festivals. Konstantin has recorded albums with the labels Naxos, ABC Classics and Fonoforum.

Konstantin was formerly Lecturer in Piano at the Elder Conservatorium of Music at the University of Adelaide and was awarded his PhD in 2020 for his performance-based project ‘The piano as Kolokola, Glocken and Cloches: performing and extending the European traditions of bell-inspired piano music’. He is currently Senior Lecturer in Piano at the University of Melbourne. Konstantin is open to research supervisions, with particular areas of interest being Russian piano music of the 20th century and bell-inspired piano performance traditions.

Tonight’s orchestra

Eivind Aadland Conductor

James Ehnes Violin

Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra

Violin

Emma McGrath Concertmaster 

Ji Won Kim Associate Concertmaster 

Jennifer Owen Principal Second

Yue-Hong Cha Principal First

Miranda Carson

Tobias Chisnall

Frances Davies

Michael Johnston

Christine Lawson

Elinor Lea

Susanna Low

Christopher Nicholas

Rohana O'Malley

Hayato Simpson

 

💡 FIRST-TIMER TIP

Did you know our Concertmaster plays a violin hand-crafted by one of the finest and most important luthiers (a string-instrument maker) of the nineteenth century, Jean-Baptiste Vuillaume (1798–1875).

He crafted 3000+ instruments in his time and we’re very proud to have a violin made in 1845 on loan from two of our generous Tasmanian patrons.

Viola

Caleb Wright Principal

Sandra Ionescu

Anna Larsen Roach

William Newbery

Cello

Jonathan Békés Principal

Ivan James

Nicholas McManus

Martin Penicka

Double Bass

Matthew McGrath Guest Principal

Stuart Riley

Adrian Whitehall

Flute

Lily Bryant  Guest Principal

Lloyd Hudson  Principal Piccolo

Oboe

Rachel Bullen Guest Principal

Dinah Woods Principal Cor Anglais

Clarinet

Andrew Seymour Principal

Eloise Fisher Principal Bass Clarinet

Bassoon

Timothy Murray Guest Principal

Melissa Woodroffe Principal Contrabassoon

Horn

Greg Stephens Principal First

Claudia Leggett Principal Third

Roger Jackson

Julian Leslie

Trumpet

Fletcher Cox Principal

Mark Bain

Trombone

David Robins Principal

Iain Faragher

Bass Trombone

James Littlewood Principal

Tuba

Rachel Kelly * Principal

Timpani

Matthew Goddard Principal

Percussion

Gary Wain Principal

Stephen Marskell

Jamie Willson

Harp

Melina van Leeuwen Guest Principal

Celeste

Jennifer Marten-Smith Guest Principal

Saxophone

Jabra Latham Guest Principal

Benjamin Price Guest Principal

Organ

Nathan Cox Guest Principal

Harpsichord

Nathan Cox Guest Principal

Theorbo

Simon Martyn-Ellis Guest Principal

Chorus List

Warren Trevelyan-Jones Chorus Master

Karen Smithies Repetiteur

Soprano

Christine Boyce

Emma Bunzli

Christine Coombe

Felicity Gifford

Yuliana Hammond

Kasia Kozlowska

Bernadette Large

Loretta Lohberger

Sophia Mitchell

Schuya Murray

Shaunagh O’Neill

Joy Tattam

Lesley Wickham

Alto

Claire Blichfeldt

Sally Brown

Carmelita Coen

Beth Coombe

Elizabeth Eden

Ann Godber

Sue Harradence

Caroline Miller

Sally Mollison

Rosemary Rayfuse

Louise Rigozzi

Georgie Stilwell

Meg Tait

Gill von Bertouch

Beth Warren

Tenor

Helen Chick

Phillip Clutterbuck

Michael Kregor

Bill MacDonald

Tony Marshall

Simon Milton

Dianne O’Toole

David Pitt

James Powell-Davie

Alexander Rodrigues

Peter Tattam

Bass

Geoffrey Attwater

John Ballard

Tim Begbie

Peter Cretan

Jack Delaney

Greg Foot

Sam Hindell

Reg Marron

Michael Muldoon

David Ovens

Tony Parker

Grant Taylor

*Correct at time of publishing

Return to Navigation →

Federation Concert Hall

Our Southern Home

Federation Concert Hall has been our home since 2001. It's distinctive curve, golden Tasmanian timber, contemporary design and deep red seats set the tone for the ultimate concert experience. 
 
In 2020, major acoustical enhancements were made to the hall, amplifying the venue's, and the TSO's, reputation as world-class. 

Photo credit: Fin Matson

💡 FIRST-TIMER TIP

A 'movement' is a longer piece of music broken up into bite-size pieces. It makes it easier to perform and provides contrast within the work. Find out more here.

Orchestra performing in Federation Concert Hall.

Getting THere & Accessibility

Everything you need to know about Federation Concert Hall.

Find Out More
Hadley's Orient Hotel

Make it an experience

Hotel Offers from Hadley's Orient Hotel

Nestled among other architectural masterpieces in Hobart's city centre, this heritage-listed hotel plays host to almost two centuries of stories, scandals and secrets. The floor boards whisper of the hotel’s rich and often tumultuous history.

Federation Concert Hall

💡 FIRST-TIMER TIP

What are acoustics and how do they affect my concert experience?

Acoustics are the science of sound, or the way a venue can deliver the thunderous feeling of strings and brass, or the ring of the triangle over all the other instruments.

Read more about the acoustics of the Hall here.

Karen Gomyo

Coming up

Karen Gomyo

Sparks will fly, featuring Karen Gomyo.

Delius The Walk to the Paradise Garden
Dvořák Violin Concerto in A minor, Op 53
Robert Schumann Symphony No 1 in B-flat, Op 38, ‘Spring’

This image shows two female opera singers perform side by side on stage. Both wear elegant evening gowns—one in silver and the other in royal blue—and hold open black music folders. They sing with expressive focus against a warm, wood-panelled concert hall backdrop.

Coming up

A Night at the Italian Opera

Featuring soprano Eleanor Lyons, mezzo-soprano Sian Sharp, tenor Matteo Desole, bass baritone Jeremy Kleeman and the TSO Chorus, with conductor Valentina Peleggi.

Puccini Preludio sinfonico
Verdi La traviata, Prelude to Act I
Verdi Macbeth, ballet music
Rossini Stabat mater

Find Out More

Our supporters

Whether sponsoring a musician in the orchestra, or supporting our invaluable community programs, so much of what we do relies on you. We offer our deepest thanks to all our Partners, Patrons and Friends.

Support the TSO and connect with our orchestra beyond the concert hall.

Donate Now
5G Networks

Huon Pine Patrons

John Cauchi AM & Catherine Walker Chair Patrons

Anne & Don Challen AM Chair Patrons

Jane Drexler

Rob & Tricia Greenwell Chair Patrons

David & Catherine Hamilton Chair Patrons

Marie Heitz Chair Patron

In Memory of Ian Hicks Chair Patron

Belinda Kendall-White Chair Patron

Patricia Leary Chair Patron

Penny Le Couteur & Greg Dickson

Ang Madden Chair Patron

Emma & Dom McNamara

Mountain Air Foundation Chair Patron

R H O'Connor

Andrew Parker & Caroline Sharpen Chair Patrons

Chris & John Sandow Chair Patrons

Dr Peter Stanton Chair Patron

TasPlates

Dr Hilary Wallace Chair Patron

Anonymous (2)

 

TSO Concertmaster Emma McGrath plays an 1845 Jean-Baptiste Vuillaume violin on loan from two of our generous Tasmanian patrons.

Sassafras Patrons

Cath Adams & Steve Craft Chair Patrons

Damian Bugg AM & Jenny Bugg

John & Marilyn Canterford

Emeritus Stephen Crump and Professor Kitty te Riele

Dr Joanna de Burgh

Marc & Susan Duldig Chair Patrons

Richard & Harriett England

Emeritus Prof Andrew Glenn & Dr Odile Glenn Chair Patrons

Elizabeth Haworth & John Diment Chair Patrons

Suzanne Kirkham

John Langford

Diane Matthews

Anthony G McGee AM Chair Patron

Louise & Tim Mooney AM Chair Patrons

Bruce Neill & Penny Clive Chair Patrons

Bill Oakley OAM Chair Patron

Jan & Alan Rees Chair Patrons

Dr David & Mrs Glenys Rich Chair Patrons

Dr John & Mrs Barbara Roberts

James and Jacqueline Roberts-Thomson Chair Patrons

Rotary Satellite Club of Sandy Bay, Battery Point

Dr Di Stow Chair Patron

Michelle Warren

Deirdre & Trevor Wise

Anonymous (3)

Leatherwood Patrons

Andrew Bennett

Suzanne & Martin Betts

Peter Brooks

Elizabeth Bugg

Janet Carding

Helen Carrig

George & Jan Casimaty

Dr Josh & Wendy Cocker

Prof Mike Coffin

Beth Coombe

Stephanie Cooper

Simon Coultas

Vicki Cowles & Josef Neuschwanger

Nick & Janet Cretan

David Davey & Annick Ansselin

Allanah Dopson

Roger Fisher

TJ Foster

Giameos Constructions & Developments

Mr Tony Hagar

Amelia Hagger

Ms Keri Handley & Mr Frank Martin

Susan Hawick AM

Dr Donald Hempton

Peter & Jeanne Hepburn

Janet Holmes à Court AC

Dr David & Donna Humphries

Don & Christine Jeffrey

Prof Matthew Jose

Paavo Jumppanen

Veronica Keach

Judith Ker

Yury Kudryavtsev

Betty Kuhl

Harvey Lennon

David Lloyd

Marilla Lowe

Linda & Martin Luther

Dr Katherine Marsden

Maggie McKerracher

Margret Monks

Sarah Morrisby

Professor Robert Morris-Nunn

Alison Nadebaum

Jan Nicholas

Sindi O'Hara & Peter Pickett

Alison E Parsons

Catherine Prideaux

Helen Ross & Margaret Whiteside

Margaret Sallis

Deirdre Schoe

Dr Johannes Schonborn

Jenny Scott

Dick & Sue Shoobridge

Christopher Spiegel

Tony Stacey AM & Mrs Jeanette Stacey

Mr Ken Stanton

Janet Tomlinson

Rowland Turner

Frances Underwood

John Usher OAM

Hank & Elizabeth van Herk

Kim Waldock

Jacqui Walkden

Dr Michael Wilkinson

Geoff & Vicki Willis

Lindsay & Rae Young

Jane Zimmerman

Anonymous (7)

Blackwood Patrons

Simon Allston & Janeil Hall

Jacqui Blowfield

Kim Boyer

Dr Nicholas Brodie

Robert and Lisa Brodribb

Deborah Brook

Cameron Bryer

Jenny & Ian Burleigh

Victoria Burley

Roger Carrington

Dr Helen Chick

Heather & Christopher Chong

Gail Cork

Janet Crane

Amy Crosby

Jane Edmanson OAM

Ms Gail Friesen

Dr Brita Hansen & Frank Halley

Susie Harrison

Shirley Honeysett

Peter Hordern

Ross Kelly

Mary Ellen i m Kerensa

Richard & Julia Metcalf

Gisele O'Byrne AM

Tony Purdon

School for Seniors Rosny

John Sexton

Dr Tanya Stephens

Priscilla Travers

Jeanette Tremayne

Residents of Vaucluse Gardens

Judith Waldock

Jane Wilcox

Polly Woods

Dr Rosemary Yeoland

Anonymous (9)

Silver Wattle Patrons

Trevor & Barbara Abbott

Michael Alchin

Chris Andrews & Jill-Maree Geeves

May Backhouse

Dennis Bewsher

Dixie Brodribb

Elizabeth Chelkowska

Christine Coombe

G. D. Couninis

Tony & Kate Dell

Heather Ebbott

Sam Finlay

Sari Goddam

John Heathcote & Mary Feeley

Sharron Hewer

Ann Hopkins

Linda Jackson

Peter Jarvis & Ans van Heijster

Louise Klein

Sue Kremer

Ted Lefroy

Chris & Dot Lloyd-Bostock

William Lo

Rose & Thomas Marwick

Sandra Michael

Jane Monaghan

Dr Robyn Munro

Meriel Owen

Leone Paget

Shefali Pryor

Springhaven Lifestyle Village

Grant & Elizabeth Taylor

Diane & Neville Truskett

Judith and Rod Tudball

Julian Type

Dr Johanna Wadsley

Dr Roland Warner

Christopher Waterhouse

Anonymous (12)

Government Support
Australian Government
Creative Australia
Tasmanian Government
Premier Partners
AWM Electrical - Metal Manufactures Pty Limited
D&W - Metal Manufactures Pty Limited
City of Devonport
TasPlates.com
Wine Partner
Bangor Vineyard
Partners
AWM Electrical - Metal Manufactures Pty Limited
Tasmanian Government
AWM Electrical - Metal Manufactures Pty Limited

Questions & Tech Support

Chat with one of our friendly staff at the TSO Box Office.

We value your feedback

Let us know your thoughts and ideas on the new digital programs here.