Royal South Street Eisteddfod Explained

Not to be confused with the historical Ballarat Welsh Eisteddfods.

The Royal South Street Eisteddfod, also known as The Grand National Eisteddfod of Australasia, is held annually in Ballarat, Australia and is administered by the Royal South Street Society. It began as a debating competition run by the South Street Society in 1891 and attained "Royal" status in 1962.[1] It soon grew and now includes public speaking, acting, singing, music, dance and calisthenics.[2]

The Aria section, "competition for The Sun trophy, representing a prize of 23 guineas for an aria from Grand Opera, to be sung in English", was sponsored by The Sun News-Pictorial, a Melbourne newspaper, from 1924, and continued independently as the Melbourne Sun Aria.

Since 1965 it has been held in Her Majesty's Theatre, Ballarat, Australia's oldest continually operating theatre. Situated on Lydiard Street, it was earlier known as the Academy of Music, and was purchased after the South Street Society ran an appeal. Today Her Majesty's is the main venue for the Eisteddfod, but it was gifted to the City of Ballarat in 1987 to enable government funding for major upgrades, restorations and maintenance work.

Virtual competitions only were held from 2020 due to COIVID-19 precautions, but were scheduled to resume in 2022.

Competitors

Notable competitors past eisteddfods include:

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 125 Years of Royal South Street competitions . Studio Arc . 24 April 2021 . en-AU . 20 January 2016.
  2. 2009 Annual Report, Royal South Street Society