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Telstra Australian Ballet Awards

Telstra Australian Ballet Awards

Who will win the Telstra Australian Ballet Awards?

Riley Lapham

 La Bayadere Riley Lapham Photo Daniel Boud
La Bayadere Riley Lapham Photo Daniel Boud

Who will win the 2023 Telstra Ballet Dancer Awards?

Riley Lapham was only three when the Telstra Australian Ballet Dancer awards were inaugurated in 2003 but she was already bitten by the ballet bug. A home video shows her dancing on tip toes in front of the television to the Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairies with fluffy pink feather antennae on her head.

Barbie Nutcracker

“I used to be OBSESSED with Barbie Nutcracker,” she says. “I’d watch the sugarplum scene on repeat for literal years.”  It was no passing phase. She has footage doing the exact same thing considerably younger.

Practice did eventually make perfect although there were a few slips along the way at eisteddfods also captured in hilarious footage worthy of Australia’s Funniest Home Videos.

At age six she started classes at the Beverley Rowles School of Ballet which was literally held in a corrugated tin shed. On the weekends, the little girl from the Gong and her mum would drive one and a half hours up the road to Sydney until the majestic sails of the Opera House came into view.

 The Vow Jett Ramsay Riley Lapham Photo Daniel Boud
The Vow Jett Ramsay Riley Lapham Photo Daniel Boud

The Sydney Opera House and Ballet

‘For me, ballet was always about the Opera House,’ she says. She laughs as she remembers a photo taken on its steps, the Harbour bridge behind her, her ballet program in one hand and a packet of Maltesers in the other. The image perfectly contrasts the grandeur of her dreams and her refreshing Aussie simplicity.

TAB Alice in Wonderland Riley Lapham Photo Lynette Wills 2019 eb36
Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland

At 11 or 12 she realised that ballet could be a job, that she could get paid to dance. Her training became even more intense and at age 15 she moved to Melbourne to join the Australian Ballet School. Everything was going smoothly until, In the final year of her four-year training, she suffered tenosynovitis in her ankle which causes intense pain and required enforced rest. She missed the all-important audition to join The Australian Ballet, which only comes once a year, the end of year performance and the regional tour. Things looked bleak. Then, out of the blue, she got a phone call from the artistic director of The Australian Ballet David McAllister and the director of The Australian Ballet School Lisa Pavane.  A dancer was retiring so they were able to offer Riley a six month contract and supervise her recovery. Once she got her (injured) foot in the door, she didn’t look back. “After what has been the most testing and challenging year of my life thus far, I could not be more excited for the year ahead,” she wrote on Instagram.

Rehearsal Riley Lapham Jett Ramsay Photo Isabella Elordi
Rehearsal Riley Lapham Jett Ramsay Photo Isabella Elordi

Telstra Ballet Dancer Awards

It took two years to fully recover but in 2021 she was promoted from the corps de ballet to coryphée, the rank below soloist. She was now one of four women dancing on stage, rather than one of 12. Only two years later she has been nominated for the Telstra Ballet Dancer Awards. The nominees were selected by the ballet’s artistic team, principal artists, and past award winners.

Riley Lapham
Riley Lapham

‘The joy is simply in being nominated,’ she says. It was mortifying for her not to be able to dance properly when she first joined the company so after all that it is really special for her to be chosen now by these people who she admires so much. 

Five dancers are in the running for the prizes; Adam Elmes and Lilly Harvey who dance in the corps de ballet, Isobelle Dashwood, who is a soloist and a third time nominee, and Riley Lapham and Katherine Sonnekus who are both coryphée. The judges have been picking winners for two decades – eleven have gone on to become Principal Artists of The Australian Ballet – but everyone in Australia can vote in the people’s choice awards. On five occasions the judges and the people chose the same person. On four occasions, a dancer has won the people’s choice twice. And the breathtaking Amy Harris won the people’s choice award twice before the judges gave her the Ballet Dancer Award.

Who will win the 2023 Telstra Ballet Dancer Awards?

Don Quixote Riley Lapham Amy Ronnfeldt Photo Rainee Lantry
Don Quixote Riley Lapham Amy Ronnfeldt Photo Rainee Lantry

Who will win the 2023 Telstra Ballet Dancer Awards? We won’t know until after the closing performance of George Balanchine’s Jewels on 20 May when the the winners will be announced on stage. Whoever does win the Ballet Award will get a $25,000 and the winner of the People’s Choice Award will get $15,000. To cast a vote for Riley or any of the other nominees go to www.telstra.com/ballet. And if you miss the closing night performance, The Australian Ballet will be touring internationally for the first time since the pandemic struck with a season in London at the Royal Opera House in Covent Garden at the beginning of August. It will be the first time they have performed there in 35 years and they will be celebrating their 60th anniversary. And almost certainly, the winner of the 2023 Telstra Ballet Awards will be there too as well as many former winners. It should be a night to remember.


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