Tag Archives: Tenterfield

Grab your maracas as Tenterfield Goes To Rio!

THE high country of the NSW New England region is renowned for its autumn colour, but one man who was born at Tenterfield is set to be remembered with an even brighter splash at the inaugural Peter Allen Festival this September.

Parkes celebrates Elvis, even though ‘The King’ never played that corner of NSW, and now Peter Allen fans are encouraged to find their way to Tenterfield to dress up in celebration of the town’s internationally famous son.

At the peak of Allen’s career his hit song ‘I Go To Rio’ topped the Australian charts for five weeks. This high-energy number was backed up by the flamboyant, maraca-shaking, Brazilian-shirted image that became synonymous with Peter Allen’s live performances.

Headlining Tenterfield’s three-day Peter Allen Festival is multi award-winning entertainer Danny Elliott, in a tribute show designed to get the feet tapping.

Danny has earned his Peter Allen stripes performing Tenterfield to Rio for a decade, and was awarded the Australian Entertainment Mo Award for Variety Entertainer of the Year.

“To be the headline act for the inaugural festival is an amazing honour,” he said. “I am so excited to perform the show in Tenterfield and to be a part of the celebration”.

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BOY’S BIOG The definitive biography of Peter Allen.

“Unlike the stage show The Boy From Oz — which is the story of Peter’s life — this show is me, celebrating the wonderful music of Peter Allen.”

The song list of any tribute act is always of great interest to fans, and a show built around the work of Australia’s Oscar-winning singer-songwriter raises the question of what Danny will be bringing to his cabaret-style performances.

“There’s so many! Where do you start?” he said. “‘I Go To Rio’ has those fun, great Latin rhythms. ‘Once Before I Go’ is a reflective song of life and love. ‘Bi-Coastal’ has a great story behind the story, but I love it for the great bass line.”

A perennial favourite of Peter Allen fans is the song he wrote as a gift to the town of his birth — ‘Tenterfield Saddler’ — regularly requested and performed by Allen’s friends Bette Midler and Olivia Newton-John.

“‘Tenterfield Saddler’ is just one of the best ever songs written,” Danny said.

“As an entertainer, performing Peter’s songs is incredible as every one has a great story.

“It’s my job to tell that story, which is what I love to do.”

Express yourself!

In honour of Tenterfield’s most famous son, the Peter Allen Festival plans to close the town’s main street to traffic and rename it Peter Allen Boulevard for the whole of Saturday September 8.

Throughout the day, the thoroughfare will be a celebration of music, art, culture and colour.

Visitors are encouraged to bring their best Peter Allen-themed looks to town and strut their stuff along the high street, which will host artisan markets, musicians and entertainment.

Danny Elliott will feature in three performances of Tenterfield to Rio at the Tenterfield School of Arts, situated right at the heart of Peter Allen Boulevard. The cabaret-style show has proved very popular with visitors, and due to popular demand there will be an extra show at 10am on Sunday September 9. 

“The energy and flamboyance of the shows are infectious,” Danny said. “But for me, it’s the connection Peter Allen made with people”.

“Whether in a giant stadium or an intimate cabaret, he connected with everyone in the room.

“I think Peter’s strength was to tell a story. What made him so popular was also the way these great stories were performed. With such high energy, even in ballads, he seemed to have an incredible electricity about him.”

Australian performers Todd McKenney and Hugh Jackman have stepped into Peter Allen’s shoes to perform The Boy From Oz in Australia and the United States, so what was it like for Danny to get to grips with the maracas?

“From an early age I played piano and sang, then went on to learn a variety of different musical instruments.” he said. “As a singer/musician, the two things I’ve had to work on to perform Tenterfield to Rio are the dance and movements, and the fitness to keep it up for a whole show!”

And why does he think people love dressing up? “I think it’s all about the escape. To get out of ‘normal life’ and have a bit of fun,” he said.

“To get out there and express yourself, and your likes, whether it’s a footy team or your favourite singer, it’s all fun!

“I’m already excited about it. Although I think it will be emotional when it comes to singing ‘Tenterfield Saddler’. To be right there, performing songs from Australia’s greatest singer/songwriter/entertainer Peter Allen, it already sends shivers up my spine. I can’t wait!”

The Peter Allen Festival September 7-9, 2018.

Peter Allen: the jazziest bush poet

WHEN he returned to Australia in 1971 after being based overseas across the late 1960s, performer Peter Allen would have been forgiven for wondering if his career was over. But an unexpected piece of family history became the inspiration this boy from the bush needed to succeed on the world stage.

It had been a very long journey home for the ‘Boy From Oz’. Work offers were getting scarce for Peter Allen by the early 1970s. His mentor Judy Garland, who’d opened doors on both sides of the Atlantic for the young performer, was dead. His wife, Garland’s daughter Liza Minnelli, had asked for a divorce.

Allen had been performing for two decades and was at the age when many former child stars find themselves washed up. Even Australia didn’t appear to have many work prospects looming on the horizon for him that year.

His first self-titled album had bombed and gigs to promote it had been hosted by a Manhattan venue known as The Bitter End, which would have seemed terribly ironic to the man who’d been introduced to enormous audiences in the company of iconic musicians throughout the late 1960s.

BOY’S BIOG The definitive biography of Peter Allen.

According to Allen’s biographer, journalist Stephen MacLean (author of The Boy From Oz) it was an offer to perform in Australia that led Peter to “look his past in the eye”.

Ensconced at his mother Marion’s Bondi unit in that 1971 winter, Allen spent hours writing on the rooftop overlooking the ocean.

“One day, while Marion was out at work,” MacLean wrote, “Peter found himself fossicking about the flat. In the course of this he came upon an aged newspaper clipping from his near-forgotten birthplace of Tenterfield.”

The snippet recorded that Peter’s grandfather George Woolnough, whose High Street saddlery was already renowned, had a library at the University of New England named after him.

Memories came rushing at the 27-year-old performer. Key to his life experience to that point was the shooting suicide of his father and the grief that led to his immediate family’s gradual departure from the Australian bush. The fast-paced city had been Allen’s home since the mid 1960s, but his country roots held the seeds of an idea for this budding songwriter.

Emboldened by his modest start in New York, Peter Allen took this family history up to that Bondi rooftop and penned a new song.

‘Tenterfield Saddler’ was the result, a ballad that has bridged Australian bush poetry and international show-business ever since he recorded it in 1972.

‘Applause rolled on and on’

Mixing lyrical rhymes in a tale about long journeys down a country track replete with kangaroos and cockatoos, ‘Tenterfield Saddler’ is every inch a bush ballad in the tradition of Banjo Paterson.

It brings to the fore a lesser-known character in the cast of bush legends: the saddler, responsible for the safety and comfort of your ride, but also a storyteller.

Like all the best bush yarns, ‘Tenterfield Saddler’ has a dark side. In his grandson’s lyrics, the saddler holds the key to everyday life in a country town, but what George Woolnough couldn’t unlock were the reasons his son had died at his own hand.

It is the suicide at the heart of ‘Tenterfield Saddler’ that gives it a place alongside one of Australia’s most enduring ballads ‘Waltzing Matilda’. In that song’s climax, the hero of the story, a swagman, drowns himself to avoid capture for sheep rustling.

When Allen recorded his song for the 1972 album of the same name, it made a small splash in the American music industry, which labelled the track a folk song. But what this quirky ballad did, according to Stephen MacLean, was get Peter Allen noticed as a songwriter.

After a move to California in the early 1970s, despite having the barest of credentials, Peter Allen kept penning songs. He worked hard at his craft with other emerging writers and allowed the results to be recorded by artists on the brink of bigger singing careers.

In 1974, he eventually landed a hit when Olivia Newton-John released ‘I Honestly Love You’, co-written with Jeff Barry. The track garnered Allen his first of two Grammy Award nominations.

GOLDEN BOY Peter Allen (right) with co-writers Burt Bacharach, Carole Bayer Sager and Christopher Cross at the 1982 Oscar ceremony.

When he trialled the song at a live performance, long before Newton-John’s international number one single, Allen recalled: “Everything stopped. Even the waiters didn’t move. The air was still and when I finished you could have heard a pin drop. Then they all began to applaud and the applause rolled on and on.”

Allen went on to write with a range of collaborators, including Carole Bayer Sager. The two were part of the team that won the 1981 Academy Award for Best Original Song with ‘Arthur’s Theme’ from the soundtrack of the Dudley Moore film Arthur.

Yet Allen’s bush ballad ‘Tenterfield Saddler’ eventually took its place in the annals of songwriting. As fame saw him tour internationally, it became an audience favourite and graced the Australian charts multiple times. Bette Midler reputedly requested the song every time she saw him perform, and sang it at his memorial service.

By the end of his life in 1992, a result of AIDS-related throat cancer, lyrics about travelling had become a Peter Allen hallmark. Even his Oscar-winning track has at its heart the memorable chorus, “When you get caught between the moon and New York City”, a line Allen dreamed up while his flight was in a holding pattern over John F. Kennedy Airport, according to MacLean.

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But it was his enduring 1980 homecoming ballad ‘I Still Call Australia Home’ that saw the boy from the bush – who’d spent his life wandering – finally embraced by a nation.

This article appears in Michael’s eBook Pluck: Exploits of the single-minded

A country welcome for same-sex couples

THE northern NSW town of Tenterfield is opening its heart to four same-sex couples for an affordable and unique pop-up wedding event in September.

‘One of many rural electorates that voted in favour of altering the Australian Marriage Act to allow equal access to same-sex couples.’

To celebrate the arrival of marriage equality in Australia, a group of local businesspeople has created a fun, intimate wedding experience in this colourful corner of the New England country region.

Say I Do in Tenterfield is an initiative of Amanda Rudge, Sharon Julius, Desley Roos, Kim Thompson and Wendy Roots.

According to the group, the pop-up wedding concept was inspired by locals noticing a trend, but also a major shift in national politics.

“In the past 12 months our town has become a very popular wedding destination for city and coastal brides and grooms seeking to have their wedding in a beautiful, relaxed country town,” the group said in a statement.

BOY’S BIOG The definitive biography of Peter Allen.

“As 2017 rolled to a close, Australia voted yes for marriage equality! The group of experts behind Say I Do in Tenterfield wanted to celebrate, so we’ve teamed up with the 2018 Peter Allen Festival to launch something special.”

Immortalised as the birthplace of Grammy-nominated and Oscar-winning singer-songwriter Peter Allen in his single ‘Tenterfield Saddler’, the town is an LGBTIQ-friendly destination.

Tenterfield is situated in one of many rural electorates that voted in favour of altering the Australian Marriage Act to allow equal access to same-sex couples, and local LGBTIQ have been taking their vows ever since.

Constituents in this region didn’t have much leadership on the issue. Held by the National Party at federal level by the staunchly anti-marriage equality Barnaby Joyce MP, assisted by the similarly opposed Senator John ‘Wacka’ Williams, the wider community rallied during the marriage equality survey to show how out of touch its Canberra representatives are on LGBTIQ equality.

Michael Burge and Richard Moon outside the Tenterfield Saddlery.

I should know, because it was here that I finally got to marry my long-term partner,  silversmith Richard Moon. We tied the knot in the New England in May this year, after more than a decade of pushing for a change in the law.

I was born at nearby Inverell, and after living and working throughout the world in the four decades since I left, it was a touching experience to be able to marry in the place which has become my homeland once again.

Richard was born at nearby Toowoomba, so these two country boys have been able to come home and get married in the border country where we hale from.

And since moving to the region from southeast Queensland in 2017, we have found the New England community very LGBTIQ-friendly. We know of two lesbian weddings in the New England region this year, in fact Richard created the wedding rings for one couple.

Better than Eloping

According to the Say I Do in Tenterfield team, their pop-up wedding event will be “better than eloping”.

“If you’ve always wanted to get married but you don’t want to deal with all the fuss and fluff, let us take care of it and create an intimate wedding for you to enjoy!”

The group underlined that the Say I Do in Tenterfield consortium has all bases covered for stress-free and affordable nuptials, without putting couples through a media circus.

“From published photographers and first-class stylists, to a world-renowned wedding cake creator, let us take care of the lot for under $10,000!”

COLOURFUL COUNTRY Tenterfield is known for its seasonal beauty. (Photo: Tenterfield Tourism)

The Say I Do team includes Amanda Rudge, co-owner and manager of Tenterfield’s Our Place Wine and Espresso Bar; Sharon Julies and Desley Roos, business partners of Inspired By You wedding style and hire; Kim Thompson, owner of The Bungalow and Ivy Leaf Chapel and Tenterfield Topiary Hire, and Wendy Roots, owner of Tenterfield Weddings.

“We look forward to holding more themed pop-up weddings and renewals in the very near future,” the group said in a statement.

“Our aim is to include as many local and regional businesses, services and products as we can.

“Come and experience first-hand what other brides and grooms have already experienced and loved! Taste, smell, see and feel our exceptional regionally-produced products, services and our soulful town.

“Tenterfield has so much history: beautiful old buildings, picturesque landscapes and is central for wedding guests to meet.”

According to the Say I Do in Tenterfield team, the cost of a wedding in the country is considerably less than city prices, and much more stress-free.

“Couples can’t believe the value you get for your money, and how relaxed and easy it is to deal with our local businesses and services, with nothing too hard to put together,” they said.

“You can make your wedding rings in one day with Richard Moon; have a private Yogalates session for you and your family and friends; get gourmet picnic packs sent out with you as you explore our magical national parks, and there’s many more little secrets to come!”

If you’re interested in being one of the four couples at this pop-up wedding email idotenterfield@outlook.com.au or go to the Say I Do in Tenterfield Facebook page.