TARYN FIEBIG SCHOLAR

The Taryn Fiebig Scholar was founded in honour of Taryn’s extraordinary abilities, her legacy, and the significant effect that she had on Pinchgut Opera. The scholar program will encourage development opportunities for emerging Australian opera singers of special potential to enable them to develop the dramatic, expressive, and musical qualities that made Taryn a leading exponent of 17th and 18th century opera.
ABOUT THE TARYN FIEBIG SCHOLAR PROGRAM
Taryn Fiebig Scholars will usually be a few years into their professional careers and may have already performed with Pinchgut Opera. They should demonstrate clear potential for a career as a solo vocalist and should already have some experience in performing 17th or 18th century music.
One Scholar will be selected annually, to be in place for a two-year period. The Scholar will be mentored by Artistic Director Erin Helyard, and will engage in coaching sessions with directors, language coaches and principal singers, and other identified development opportunities exploring elements including:
  • the importance of text and expression;
  • the creation and projection of vocal beauty;
  • approaching a musical score and libretto as a singing actor;
  • posture, dance, gesture and movement to portray a character;
  • how and when to stand forward and claim the limelight; and
  • fostering a collegiate approach with respect to every member of the company and their unique contribution to a performance of excellence.

Performance opportunities will be identified on a case by case basis, with the hope that the Taryn Fiebig Scholar will perform in a Pinchgut performance during their time in this role.

Pinchgut Opera would like to thank Jud Arthur and James Beck for their generosity and  invaluable assistance and support in helping create this program.

The Taryn Fiebig Scholar has been made possible by the generosity of its supporters, to whom we send our heartfelt thanks.
HOW TO DONATE TO THE TARYN FIEBIG SCHOLAR PROGRAM
If you would like to donate toward the program, please click the button below, or contact Ilona Brooks by email ilona@pinchgutopera.com.au. 
For general enquiries, please email info@pinchgutopera.com.au.

DONATE

OLIVIA PAYNE


 TARYN FIEBIG SCHOLAR 2023


Sydney born mezzo-soprano Olivia Payne was selected as
the current Taryn Fiebig Scholar in August 2023.

With the announcement of Olivia Payne as the next Taryn Fiebig Scholar, Artistic
Director Erin Helyard said: “I’ve been watching Olivia’s career with interest and
pleasure for a few years now. She first sang with us as a sunflower in our production
of Cavalli’s Loves of Apollo & Daphne! Olivia is a young coloratura mezzo of style and
substance with a beautifully even voice of appealing flexibility. She is musical and
imaginative, curious and methodical. I know Taz would have adored working with
Olivia and I’m delighted to announce her as the next Taryn Fiebig Scholar.”


As the Taryn Fiebig Scholar, Olivia will participate in Pinchgut Opera performances
and engage in development sessions with directors, language coaches and principal
singers, and other identified opportunities.

The current Taryn Fiebig Scholar, Olivia Payne, with Artistic Director Erin Helyard.

OLIVIA PAYNE

Mezzo-soprano
"I am just delighted to have been selected as the next Taryn Fiebig Scholar. Taryn has left behind an incredible legacy and I am honoured to have the opportunity to learn from and be guided by that. I am looking forward to developing my singing, performing and storytelling skills throughout the next few years with Pinchgut." 

Olivia Payne is a young mezzo-soprano with a Bachelor of Music Performance and Master of Music Studies (Opera Performance) through the Sydney Conservatorium of Music as well as an ATCL Diploma (Trinity College London)

With the Sydney Conservatorium of Music, Olivia has performed the roles of La Libelulle (L’Enfant et les Sortilèges), Hermia (A Midsummer Night’s Dream) and Papagena (Die Zauberflöte). 

In 2021, she made her debut with Pinchgut Opera in the chorus of The Loves of Apollo and Dafne then performed again with the chorus in Charpentier’s Médée in 2022. Other roles include Nancy in Pacific Opera’s production of Albert Herring and Karen in the new recorded Australian Opera, Percy.

In 2022, she was a finalist in the Sydney Eisteddfod Opera Scholarship. She made her debut with Cantillation and Sydney Symphony Orchestra in Mendelssohn’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream under the baton of Simone Young. She also sang with the Young Stars of Australian Opera at Woolworths Carols in the Domain.

This year, Olivia is a Young Artist with Opera Queensland and has been a featured soloist at Government House and in the Sunset Opera Concert Series at South Bank.  

As the current Taryn Fiebig Scholar, Olivia is very much looking forward to working with Pinchgut Opera and through Taryn’s legacy, having the opportunity to turn music into stories. 



LOUIS HURLEY


THE INAUGURAL THE HUMANITY FOUNDATION TARYN FIEBIG SCHOLAR

Pinchgut Opera is delighted to announce an expansion to the Taryn Fiebig Scholar program, in partnership with Melbourne-based private philanthropic organisation The Humanity Foundation becoming a key supporter of the program.

Director of The Humanity Foundation, Talya Masel, said "I could think of no other way to celebrate the extraordinary craft of performing that was Taryn's hallmark than via this partnership with Pinchgut Opera,” Talya explains. Her love of imparting her skills to students was the great joy of her life. This scholarship program embodies all of these things and more, and I am very excited to work with Pinchgut in helping prepare the next generation of opera singers through the work and memory of Taryn.

Pinchgut Opera’s artistic team, in consultation with Talya, have selected Perth-born, Sydney-based tenor Louis Hurley as the first Humanity Foundation Taryn Fiebig Scholar.

"She was such an encouraging figure to me as I was making my transition out of university, and was just the most gorgeous, generous and talented person. So this is very special to me indeed.” Louis Hurley

Louis Hurley, the inaugural The Humanity Foundation Taryn Fiebig Scholar is pictured, with The Humanity Foundation's director Talya Masel, and Pinchgut Opera's Artistic Director Erin Helyard.

'I AM ABSOLUTELY OVER THE MOON, AND SO LOOKING FORWARD TO THE NEXT COUPLE OF YEARS WITH EVERYONE AT PINCHGUT OPERA.'

Louis Hurley is a Sydney-based tenor. He is a passionate operatic and concert performer in repertoire spanning the Baroque through to the 21st Century.

After completing a Bachelor of Music and Graduate Diploma of Music at the Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts (WAAPA), Louis furthered his studies, as a Hazell Scholar, with a Master of Music at the Guildhall School of Music & Drama, London under the tutelage of Adrian Thompson. Whilst in London, Louis performed at both the Wigmore Hall and the Barbican Hall.

In 2022, Louis will make a number of important debuts including Messiah with the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra, 1st Prisoner (Fidelio) with the Sydney Symphony Orchestra under the baton of Simone Young and in Haydn’s ‘Nelson Mass’ with Sydney Philharmonia Choirs. He will also return to Pinchgut Opera to perform the roles of Acis (Acis and Galatea) and Tibrino (Orontea).

Most recently Louis has been heard at the Adelaide Festival in the role of Flute in Neil Armfield’s production of Britten’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream, and in the Montverdi Vespers with Pinchgut Opera.

The recipient of numerous awards and scholarships, Louis was the winner of the 2019 Royal Melbourne Philharmonic Aria Competition and the Hans & Petra Henkell Award at the 2019 National Liederfest. A Melba Opera Trust Scholar in 2020 & 2021, as the recipient of the Joseph Sambrook Opera Scholarship, he is also an alumnus of Melbourne Opera’s Richard Divall Emerging Artist Programme, where he was recently made an Associate Artist.

TARYN FIEBIG


SOPRANO

Helpmann Award-winning soprano Taryn Fiebig was considered one of Australia’s most popular and versatile artists. Her association with Pinchgut Opera began in 2009 as Sicle in Ormindo; this was followed by three roles in 2017’s triple bill Rameau: Anacréon & Pigmalion (The Priestess of Bacchus in Anacréon, The Statue in Pigmalion and Erighetta in Erighetta e Don Chilone) and the role of Selinde in Vivaldi's Farnace in 2019. Taryn took lead roles for Pinchgut during the 2020 pandemic year in the short film series Seconda Prattica and in the 60-minute opera film A Delicate Fire, which featured music by Barbara Strozzi.

Taryn was also a Principal Artist with Opera Australia, featuring most recently as Musetta in La Bohème (2017), The Mother in Metamorphosis (2018) and Despina in Cosi fan tutte (2019). Other roles for Opera Australia included Susanna (The Marriage of Figaro), Zerlina (Don Giovanni), Pamina and Papagena (The Magic Flute), Servilia (La clemenza di Tito), Oscar (Un ballo in maschera), Clorinda (Cenerentola), Lisa (La sonnambula), Belinda (Dido and Aeneas), Aphrodite (The Love of the Nightingale), Karolka (Jenůfa) and The Woodbird and Gutrune (Der Ring des Nibelungen). Her performance as Lucy Joy in Bliss earned her a Helpmann Award. For New Zealand Opera, she has sung the role of Esmeralda in The Bartered Bride.

A musical theatre highlight for Taryn was over 200 performances opposite Richard Grant as Eliza Dolittle in Opera Australia’s National Tour of My Fair Lady.

Taryn's other memorable performances included Michal (Saul) for the Adelaide Festival and the title role in The Merry Widow for West Australian Opera. In concert, she appeared as soloist with Sydney Philharmonia Choirs, Auckland Philharmonia and the Opera Australia Orchestra.

Taryn performed with all the major Australian opera companies, the Australian Chamber Orchestra, Australian Brandenburg Ensemble and the Sydney, West Australian, Adelaide and Queensland Symphony Orchestras.

Internationally, she appeared at the Edinburgh Festival (as Lucy Joy in Opera Australia’s production of Bliss), in America for the LA Ear Unit and in the UK with the English Chamber Orchestra and for BBC Radio.

MAX RIEBL ARTIST AWARD


Pinchgut Opera is thrilled to announce a new award, designed to provide support to identified artists who require specific areas of training or development. This new program will be known as the Max Riebl Artist Award, named in memory of the brilliant countertenor who sadly passed away in 2022. Max Riebl made his debut with Pinchgut Opera in Vivaldi’s Farnace (2019), then cemented his place in audiences’ hearts as the love-struck Apollo in The Loves of Apollo & Dafne by Cavalli (2021). 

The inaugural recipient of the Max Riebl Artist Award is Stephanie Dillon.

STEPHANIE DILLON

Mezzo-soprano

Mezzo soprano Stephanie Dillon was born and raised in Moree, NSW, and is now based in Sydney. Stephanie is a versatile singer, showcasing her “distinctively edged sound” and “full-bodied mezzo warmth” in repertoire ranging from the Baroque to contemporary periods. Stephanie enjoys a varied career, both as a soloist and ensemble singer. 

Stephanie has been a member of the Choir of St James’ King Street, Sydney since 2017, and is a Principal Artist with The Song Company. Stephanie enjoys regular collaborations with professional organisations in Australia, including Bach Akademie Australia, The Song Company, Pinchgut Opera, Cantillation, St Mary’s Cathedral Choir, Sydney Antiphony and Luminescence Chamber Singers. Stephanie is also the co-Artistic Director of new vocal ensemble, CASTALIA Vocal Consort.

Recent engagements include various programs with Bach Akademie Australia and The Song Company. Stephanie’s pre-pandemic performance credits include Arvo Pärt’s Passio at the Tapestry of Sacred Music Festival in Singapore, performances of Pergolesi’s Stabat Mater, performances at the 2020 Adelaide Festival with The Song Company, Bach’s Widerstehe doch der Sünde BWV 54 at St James’ Church King St., and performances of Handel’s Messiah with Canberra Choral Society and Sydney Chamber Choir.

Stephanie looks forward to engagements with CASTALIA Vocal Consort, Pinchgut Opera, the Song Company and the Australian Chamber Orchestra later in 2022.

In addition to her work as a performer, Stephanie has worked in arts administration and arts education in some of Australia’s leading arts organisations. In 2022, Stephanie will complete her studies towards attaining a Master of Teaching (Primary).

MAX RIEBL

Countertenor

Countertenor Max Riebl had performed with Pinchgut Opera, Australian Brandenburg Orchestra, Vienna Chamber Opera, La Cetra Baroque Orchestra, London Handel Orchestra, the Song Company and Orchestra Victoria. He performed regularly at the Melbourne Recital Centre, Hamer Hall, the Athenaeum Theatre and Sydney’s City Recital Hall. Career highlights included performances at the Vienna Concert House, Musikverein and the Royal Albert Hall.

Max studied baroque performance in Switzerland, at the Schola Cantorum Basiliensis. During this time, he worked with Gerd Türk, Jörg-Andreas Bötticher and Andrea Marcon. He studied voice with Silvia Purcar (Vienna) and long-time singing teacher Dermot Tutty (Melbourne). Max attended middle-school at the Vienna Musikgymnasium. During this time, he sang in the Hofburg Chapel Choir and the Clemencic Consort.

Max’s 2021 concert season included principal roles with the award winning Pinchgut Opera company, performances with the Melbourne Digital Concert Hall, solo appearances in the iconic Chapel Off Chapel, Athenaeum Theatre and Recital Centre and lead roles with Victoria Opera, Adelaide Baroque and the Song Company.

He had participated in many vocal competitions including the Herald Sun Aria (winner), the IFAC Australian Singing Competition (winner), the Chicago Classical Singer Competition (third place), the London Handel Competition (finalist) and the Royal Melbourne Philharmonic Aria (winner).

Max had curated and performed contemporary-baroque shows for the Adelaide Festival, the Melbourne Cabaret festival and the Melbourne Fringe Festival. He had recorded with The Cat Empire (EMI), the Australian Brandenburg Orchestra (ABC) and featured in the soundtrack for the critically acclaimed Australian film ‘Remembering the Man.’

Max Riebl made his debut with Pinchgut Opera in Vivaldi’s Farnace (2019), then cemented his place in audiences’ hearts as the love-struck Apollo in The Loves of Apollo & Dafne by Cavalli (2021).

TARYN FIEBIG SCHOLAR PROGRAM PARTICIPANTS

2023  OLIVIA PAYNE - Mezzo-soprano

2022–2024  LOUIS HURLEY - Tenor (Humanity Foundation Taryn Fiebig Scholar)

2021–2023  CHLOE LANKSHEAR - Soprano



CHLOE LANKSHEAR

Soprano and inaugural Taryn Fiebig Scholar Chloe Lankshear  enjoys a varied career of performative media from operatic productions to classical contemporary recitals and premieres of commissioned works, and is soon to relocate to Germany.

Chloe has performed with South Australia State Opera, Pinchgut Opera, Australian Brandenburg Orchestra and Bach Akademie Australia, and is a Principal Artist with The Song Company and a permanent member of the Choir of St James’ Church, King St in Sydney.

PINCHGUT PERFORMANCE HIGHLIGHTS:

Giustino (2023), Medée (2022), The Spiritual Forest (2022), A Delicate (2020) Fire, Women of the Pieta, Plateé (2021), Vespers (2021), Messe de Minuit (2020),  Seconda Prattica

APPLY FOR THE TARYN FIEBIG SCHOLAR PROGRAM
APPLICATIONS HAVE NOW CLOSED FOR 2023

An exceptional opportunity exists for a young singer to further their abilities as an opera singer. 

The Taryn Fiebig Scholar is a professional development program established by Pinchgut Opera in honour of the late Taryn Fiebig. The Scholar will be mentored by artistic director Erin Helyard and will engage in coaching sessions with directors, language coaches, and principal singers associated with the company. Additional performance opportunities will exist within Pinchgut Opera’s annual subscription series of operas and concerts. Singers will be expected to either be resident in Sydney for the duration for the scholarship or alternatively make their own arrangements to be in Sydney for the specific activities related to the development programme.

The program is designed for vocalists who have a natural affinity and appreciation for music of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Applicants are expected to have already had some professional experience, and should provide evidence of such on their CV.

Please refer to the specific application requirements listed below.

In the first instance, applications are invited for consideration.

Applications should be directed to auditions@pinchgutopera.com.au and include the following:

  1. Links to 2 (two) contrasting audio recordings of the applicant singing music from the seventeenth or eighteenth centuries. Ideally one recording will demonstrate beauty of tone and legato, and the other will demonstrate agility and virtuosity.

  2. A curriculum vitae of no more than one page, detailing professional and educational experience. Include a paragraph explaining why the Taryn Fiebig Scholar is ideally suited for you, a headshot, and contact details of two referees.

The Taryn Fiebig Scholar will be selected from applications received, and approved by the Board of Pinchgut Opera, on recommendation by the Artistic Director.

If you have any further queries about the Taryn Fiebig Scholar program or your application, please contact
Pinchgut Opera’s Artistic Director via email at info@pinchgutopera.com.au


We acknowledge the traditional owners of the land on which we work and perform, the Gadigal people of the Eora nation – the first storytellers and singers of songs.
We pay our respects to their elders past and present.
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