As part of our focus on ageing, we’re presenting a number of elders in conversation. They’ll each share their experiences of a life that spans several decades, as well as social and personal change.
What have they learned along the way? What are they passionate about? And what does the accumulated wisdom of their past have to teach us about the future?
Noel Tovey AM is an actor, director, choreographer and was the artistic director for the Indigenous welcoming ceremony for the Sydney Olympics.
His roots are in Melbourne’s slums, where he was sexually abused from age four, abandoned by his parents aged six, bashed for being black, and ended up on the streets as a thief and ‘rent boy’. Arrested and incarcerated for buggery at the age of 17, he contemplated suicide – but the voices of his ancestors prevented him and turned his life around, and he achieved his dream of being a dancer and actor, becoming a principal dancer with Sadler’s Wells Opera Ballet and an acclaimed choreographer. Noel returned to Australia in 1991 to contribute to the Indigenous community; he frequently speaks out for the rights of LGBT elders.
Noel has suffered crippling discrimination and seen – and agitated for – significant social change, expanding the rights of Indigenous and LGBT people. He will share and reflect on what he’s learned.
Featuring
Noel Tovey
Noel Tovey AM has had a career spanning 60 years in Europe and Australia as an actor, dancer, singer, director, choreographer, designer, writer and teacher. He is Australia’s first male ballet dancer of Indigenous heritage.
He studied ballet with Madame Borovansky in Melbourne and Drew Hardy in London, Afro Cuban with Katherine Dunham, jazz with Matt Mattox, and singing with Joan Arnold at the Melbourne Conservatorium and Rita Godfrey in London. He studied acting with Hayes Gordon.