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humanitix.com
About this concert
DAVID HELFGOTT truly is a living legend! We are over the moon that this iconic Australian pianist returns to his home on the Central Coast - Avoca Beach Theatre! He performs to huge audiences around the world, and yet out of his deep friendship with us, he returns to Avoca Beach Theatre for a very intimate performance. Whereas at times he performs to up to 40,000 people at a time, here it will be up close and personal with a sold out audience of just 280. This is an opportunity to get up close to the music and the man who has captivated the world with his extraordinary gift and leaves our audiences in raptures! He has been coming to the Theatre for quite some time and always quickly sells out. ‘It is a highlight of our year when David performs’ said Beth Hunter. ‘His energy seems boundless! His fingers fly across the keys and he plays from memory - he must have a veritable musical library stored in his head! And when the concert is finished and we have retired home for dinner, David sits at the piano and plays! His passion is music and the piano, closely followed by people...oh and of course - tea!’ David Helfgott is a virtuoso pianist who touches the hearts of all who hear him and brings joy to concert goers of all ages. The Oscar winning film Shine was made about him and books have been written about him too. He has toured to 37 countries, selling out some of the world’s most famous concert halls.
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About the venue

Avoca Beach Theatre begun in 1948 in front gardens of brothers Mervyn and Norman Hunter to raise funds to build the Avoca Beach rock pool. Projecting through a hole made ...
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David Helfgott Biography

David Helfgott was born in Melbourne, Australia, in 1947. He showed extraordinary pianistic ability from an early age, winning the state finals of the ABC’s Instrumental & Vocal Competition six times. At age 17, David began studying with Alice Carrard, a former student of Bartok and Istvan Thoman, himself a pupil of Liszt. Two years later, David went to London to study at the Royal College of Music with Cyril Smith, who described him as his most brilliant student in 25 years of teaching and likened him to Horowitz, both technically and temperamentally. David won a number of awards at the College, including the Dannreuther Prize for Best Concerto Performance for his triumphant performance of Rachmaninov’s Third Piano Concerto. However, towards the end of his time in London, David faced increased emotional instability and mental excitability, compounded by the death in Perth of his mentor, writer Katherine Susannah Pritchard. A period of frequent hospitalization followed during the 1970s, but by 1976 David had moved to a halfway house where he stayed for six years. The greatest crisis for David had been the loss of his inner music, but he remembers the day the music came back: “The fog lifted, I could hear again … I survived.” David was brought back to the public’s attention by Dr Chris Reynolds, who owned Riccardo’s wine bar in Perth, where David performed on Saturday nights. It was there he meet his future wife, Gillian, who, with the support of promoter Mike Parry, helped David gradually resume his concert career with concert performances in Perth and a sell-out tour of Australia’s eastern states in 1986. This was followed by a trip to Europe, with recitals in Germany and Denmark. David triumphantly returned to an active life of concert-giving and performance, and made a series of CDs, including the soundtrack of the Oscar-winning film Shine, which celebrates his remarkable and inspiring life. David’s recording of the Rachmaninov Third was the number one selling CD in Australia, the United States and the United Kingdom for many months. Both attained gold status. In October 1996, David played four sold-out concerts at the Sydney Opera House, an unprecedented occurrence. A challenging world tour followed the next year, with packed recitals and performances throughout the US and the UK, concluding with David’s return to the Royal Albert Hall in London, were he played the Rachmaninov Third to a capacity crowd and received a thunderous standing ovation. Over the next five years, David kept up his world touring, through Asia, Africa, Japan, New Zealand and Europe, while also maintaining a busy Australian schedule. David released four more CDs, including Brilliantissimo, Brave New World, and one featuring the Tchaikovsky Piano Concerto No.1 and Rachmaninov’s Variations on a Theme of Paganini, two of David’s favourite works. However, the highlight release for this year was In Viva, a disc containing two movements of the Mozart Piano Concerto No. 24 from David’s prize-winning performance in Perth when he was fourteen years of age. In 2002, David was invited to represent Australia at the Beijing Music Festival and in Guangzhou, while 2003 saw a triumphant tour of Europe – particularly of Austria, where he completely won the hearts of the Viennese. One of the major highlights of David’s career came in October 2004 when the Edith Cowan University in Western Australia awarded him an Honorary Doctorate of Music. His whole family was in attendance. David conquered Europe yet again in 2005 and 2006. In Italy, he played the Rachmaninov Third in Montecatini Terme, where both Verdi and Puccini lived and where David and Gillian were awarded the Key of the City. Then it was on to sell-out performances of the concerto in Vienna and Zurich, plus many recitals in Spain, Norway and Denmark. On 26 November 2006, David was inducted into The Australian Walk of Fame. In 2007 and 2008, David had extremely successful return tours of South Africa, New Zealand and Japan, and major European tours. But his recital in Sydney in November at the City Recital Hall gained the greatest accolades heard in the Hall in recent memory. The year 2009 opened with David receiving a huge honour when a 2.7 metre sculpture by the internationally recognized sculpture, John Van Der Kolk, was dedicated to David and placed in the Bellingen Council Park in recognition of David’s courage, contribution to music and his work in the community. In June, David performed in Israel for the first time in both Jerusalem and Tel Aviv as part of the Australian-Israel Cultural Exchange, and then toured Turkey and Europe, with a very successful recital in Vienna receiving one of the greatest ovations of David’s career. He will return there in October 2010, as well as play in Luzern and Denmark. This extraordinary artist is continuing to receive the worldwide recognition that his remarkable technical and interpretative genius deserves. His continuing success comes as no surprise to David’s legion of devoted admirers everywhere. They have long regarded his recitals as transcending mere music-making. They are an affirmation of the tenacity of the human spirit and imagination. David Helfgott is an Australian concert pianist. Helfgott's life inspired the Oscar-winning film Shine, in which he was played by Geoffrey Rush.
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