A REAL MIXER

“In a society which prides itself on being a melting pot, 17 per cent of Australia’s performing artists, and 14 per cent of artistic directors, claim a non-English speaking background, a new report says. The roles these performers are offered are largely ‘minor, tokenistic or stereotyped’.” – Sydney Morning Herald 11/06/00

PARSE THIS

A Ph.D student from the UK goes to Yale for courses in literary criticism and reports from the front lines: “I am struck by the thought that literary criticism – at least as it is practised here – is a hoax. And the universities that offer it, and the professors who in America earn large salaries teaching it, are fraudulent, wittingly or not.” – New Statesman

A TURNING TIED

Last week’s Giller Prize in Canada ended up in a tie between “Mercy Among the Children” by David Adams Richards and “Anil’s Ghost” by Michael Ondaatje. “Nobody likes a tie, except the co-winners; half a prize has got to be better than no prize at all. For the rest of us though, a tie is unsettling. Why can’t the judges make up their minds? Are they cowards, in thrall to their friends, or just plain lazy?” – The Globe and Mail (Canada)

BARENBOIM VS. BERLIN

Daniel Barenboim’s dispute with the Berlin government over funding of Barenboim’s Staatsoper has gotten out of hand. “Like the fracture lines of a smashed mirror, its ramifications have darted in every direction, raising sensitive questions about the way the arts are funded in Germany, about how much culture a reunified Berlin can afford, about the authenticity of German reunification and even about whether Barenboim, an Argentinian-born Jew, is the victim of an anti-semitic plot. At heart, though, it is a simple issue of conservation.” – The Guardian

BACH TO THE DRAWING BOARD

Melbourne just wrapped up a blow-out festival devoted to the music of JS Bach. “But did this 17-day program of events constitute a festival? Sadly, not really. A festival summons up images of a city caught under the spell of the performing arts: when shows are the talk of the town, where there is color and movement on the streets day and night, and there is such a flood of international artists that you might end up in a table-top tango with an Argentinian performance artist at five in the morning. Maybe that happens in Rio, or Adelaide, but not Melbourne.” – The Age (Melbourne)

SO WHAT’S THE POINT? “What is the charter of the multi-artform Melbourne Festival? To offer choice and take the odd gamble? Or to project the ideas and tastes of the artistic director charged with pulling the event together?” – Sydney Morning Herald