What To Do

FITZROY TOWN HALL, MELBOURNE
ARTIST TBC

Cate Blanchett thanks Gough Whitlam for free education

“It’s Time”: Little Pattie reflects on Gough Whitlam’s song


MELBOURNE RECITAL CENTRE
GEORGE TELEK AND DAVID BRIDIE | NOT DROWNING, WAVING

A Moment Set Aside (2025) | Max Cooper & Rob Clouth (Official Video by Dimitri Thouzery)

Old-growth forests are not just ecosystems—they are living ancestors, knowledge systems, and life-support, life-giving networks. As Bill Neidjie reminds us, “The earth, I never damage. I look after. The earth looking after me.” This is not metaphor. It is a law of survival. When we damage ancient forests, we break a relationship that has sustained life for tens of thousands of years.

For Aboriginal Australians, Country is not a resource to be used and discarded. It is identity, spirit, and law. Galarrwuy Yunupingu said, “The land is our mother. The land is our backbone. The land is our foundation.” Ancient forests are part of that foundation—complex, irreplaceable systems that hold biodiversity, regulate climate, and store the memory of the land itself.

Yet today, those forests are being treated as commodities. Patrick Dodson warns us that “Country is not a commodity… it is a living entity with a yesterday, today and tomorrow.” When old-growth forests are cleared, we are not just removing trees—we are severing a continuum that links past, present, and future to now.

This destruction carries consequences. Bob Randall put it plainly: “If we don’t look after the land, the land won’t look after us.” Climate instability, biodiversity loss, ecological collapse—these are not distant threats but the direct result of neglecting this responsibility.

At its core, the crisis is about disconnection. Tyson Yunkaporta explains, “If you don’t have a relationship with the land, you will destroy it.” Modern systems that see forests only in terms of profit fail to understand their true value—and in doing so, put all life at risk.

But there is another way to see the world. As Miriam-Rose Ungunmerr Baumann teaches, “We are part of the land and the land is part of us.” Protecting ancient forests is not just environmental action—it is an act of restoring balance, respect, and responsibility.

The message is clear: if ancient forests fall, we do not stand apart from that loss. We fall with them.


FAIRFAX STUDIO ARTS CENTRE MELBOURNE
NONI HAZLEHURST | THE LARK WORLD PREMIERE 2025

Down Under | William Barton and the Sydney Symphony Orchestra, Hawke Memorial (2019)


COMEDY THEATRE MELBOURNE
RICHARD ROXBURGH, DAMON HERRIMAN, TOBY SCHMITZ | ART (2026)
PLAYHOUSE, ARTS CENTRE MELBOURNE
MISS BEHAVE 2019 (AMY SAUNDERS)

Where Have All The Flowers Gone (1968) | Peter Seeger (Live in Sweden)

Julia Gillard | Misogyny Speech (2012)




HAMER HALL | ARTS CENTRE MELBOURNE
DAN SULTAN AND THE MELBOURNE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA (2024)

FORTYFIVE DOWNSTAIRS MELBOURNE
BARRY JONES 92ND BIRTHDAY, OCTOBER 2024

The Journey Towards Human Rights (2023) | Narrated by Morgan Freeman

Fred Rogers inducted into the Academy Of Television Arts & Sciences Hall Of Fame (1999)



CHAPEL OFF CHAPEL MELBOURNE
MOIRA FINUCANE | THE EXOTIC LIVES OF LOLA MONTES (2024)

Work For Peace (1994) | Gil Scott-Heron


Moira Finucane is a genre-defying Melbourne performance artist who merges burlesque, theatre, and activism into bold, visually rich works about humanity and the planet. Emerging from the city’s underground and queer performance scenes in the early 1990s, she has developed a distinctive style combining visual spectacle with emotional intensity.

As co-founder of Finucane & Smith, she has created acclaimed works including The Burlesque Hour, Carnival of Mysteries and Glory Box. Her performances blur the boundaries between cabaret, theatre and ritual, and have been staged in venues such as Arts Centre Melbourne as well as independent spaces.

A defining aspect of Finucane’s work is its engagement with environmental and social themes. Drawing on her background in environmental science, she explores ecological crisis alongside questions of gender, power and desire. Across her career, she has remained a key figure in Melbourne’s performance scene, known for pushing the expressive possibilities of cabaret and live art.


THE SHOWROOM | ARTS CENTRE MELBOURNE
RALPH MCCUBBIN HOWELL | THE BOOKBINDER (2026)

Maya Angelou Live at the Lewisham Theatre London (1987)

Maya Angelou Interview



The Redfern Address (1992) | Paul Keating

We Didn’t Know We Were Ready (2025) | Olafur Arnalds, Eoin French, Niamh Regan, Ye Vagabonds & Friends


FORTYFIVE DOWNSTAIRS
MARK YEATES | CYRANO DE BERGERAC (2026)

David Foster Wallace on Fame, Writing, and Why Success Didn’t Make Him Happy l Charlie Rose Rewind

Unforgiven | I’m Here to Kill You, Little Bill | Warner Classics



THE CAPITOL THEATRE MELBOURNE
KUTCHA EDWARDS | WUIGADA-GAGADA (2024)

Kevin Rudd’s speech at the 15th Anniversary of the National Apology at Parliament House in Canberra

From Little Things Big Things Grow (2014) | Paul Kelly & Kev Carmody pay tribute to Gough Whitlam


HAMER HALL | ARTS CENTRE MELBOURNE
BAKER BOY


Patou: In Black And White (2022) | Directed by Fiona Cochrane [Trailer]

Play It Safe | Sydney Opera House 50th Anniversary


HAMER HALL, ARTS CENTRE MELBOURNE
TAYLOR MAC, COSTUMES BY MACHINE DAZZLE
MELBOURNE FESTIVAL 2017

A Performance: Man On The Run | Keiynan | TEDxSydney

Mark Watson’s 27-Hour Comedy Marathon (2015) featuring Ali McGregor singing Radiohead’s CREEP with Tim Minchin on the piano


MAX WATTS MELBOURNE
BETTY GRUMBLE | RISING OPENING NIGHT 2024

Sit Around The Fire (2021) | Music by Jon Hopkins with Ram Dass, East Forest. Music Video by Tom Readdy and Lucy Dawkins.