Song Quest a Perfect Fit with Festival
10 FEBRUARY, 2004
Song Quest a Perfect Fit with Festival
“In the 20th year of presenting the country’s premier arts festival, the New Zealand International Arts Festival is delighted to be adopting the country’s premier singing competition,” according to Fran Wilde, Chair of the NZ International Arts Festival.
Mobil Oil New Zealand, the founder and organiser of the Mobil Song Quest, has announced that it will be handing the ownership and management of the Song Quest to the New Zealand International Arts Festival.
“The Mobil Song Quest has become an icon in the New Zealand cultural landscape and we salute Mobil for their nurturing of this great event and the young singers involved in it over the last 48 years,” says Wilde.
“We believe there is a perfect fit between the quality of the Song Quest and the events that the Festival presents. The Festival has the infrastructure, artistic and production expertise, and the vision to ensure that this event lasts and prospers for its next half century.”
Mobil Song Quest winners and finalists have been prominent performers in Festival programmes since the Festival’s inception. Leading roles in the two opera productions being presented in the 2004 Festival are taken by Mobil Song Quest alumni – Linden Loader (winner 1981) is in Quartet and Paul Whelan (2nd 1987) is in The Elixir of Love.
The New Zealand International Arts Festival will announce the details of the next Song Quest in late April.
(ends)
Country Music Honours: 2026 Country Music Honours Finalists Announced
Mana Mokopuna: Children’s Commissioner Welcomes New Youth Mental Health And Suicide Prevention Services In Te Tai Tokerau
New Zealand Kindergartens: 100-Years On - Investing In Teacher-Led, Quality Early Childhood Education Is Investing In Aotearoa’s Future
Dry July: Thousands Set To Go Alcohol Free This July As Cancer Diagnoses Continue To Rise Across Aotearoa
New Zealand College of Midwives: Celebrating Midwives Across Aotearoa This International Day Of The Midwife
PPTA Te Wehengarua: Building The Secondary Curriculum On Broken Drafts Is A Serious Risk