Ms Bezzina said, adding that more than half of the events are free.
Over 23 days in September, Brisbane Festival will commission 18 new works, stage 15 world premieres, deliver 139 productions – and present events in a staggering 223 locations across the city.
Brisbane Festival Indigenous Advisory Group chair Michelle Tuahine said this year’s Festival would spotlight unique and untold stories.
“This year, 168 First Nations artisans, performers and creatives share their intensely personal narratives through ceremony, smoke, songline and performance,” Ms Tuahine said.
“We look forward to sharing our world with you,” Ms Tuahine said.
The Festival commences with a Jumoo, a smoking ceremony at South Bank on 3 September.
Led by Yuggera and Turrbal man Shannon Ruska, Jumoo connects Brisbane Festival and its visitors to Country and cleanses the pathway for a peaceful journey into September.
Northshore, Hamilton will be one of two ports of call for the Festival highlight, Brisbane’s Art Boat, a new floating art experience cruising between South Bank and Northshore, Hamilton immersing audiences in a glowing world and bathing the Brisbane River in a new light.
Airship Orchestra, a multisensory inflatable installation up to six metres high sets sail on Brisbane’s Art Boat from 3 – 12 September with Sky Castle, an interactive dreamscape of inflatable, luminous arches and ethereal symphonies taking to the water from 16 – 25 September.
Created by art and technology studio ENESS each installation will alternate between its home at Northshore, Hamilton while the other floats down the river hosting live performances and a pop-up bar on Brisbane’s Art Boat.
A major Australian contemporary performance work is also playing at the industrial riverside precinct of Northshore, Hamilton.
From 8 – 12 September, RED is a contemporary dance piece from Townsville-based Dancenorth Australia that is both epic and intimate. In a breathtaking statement on survival, two dancers perform inside a transparent bubble as the air they breathe slowly runs out.
Brisbane Festival unveils BOQ Festival Garden, a wondrous world of food, wine, entertainment and discovery, popping up in South Bank.
Free and open to all, the brand-new Festival hub features live entertainment, roving performers, school holiday fun, food, bars and a mysterious interactive adventure.
The Festival opens with two stellar events led by the keenly anticipated world premiere season of Trent Dalton’s Boy Swallows Universe, adapted for the stage by Tim McGarry and presented by Brisbane Festival, Queensland Theatre and QPAC.
This world premiere season will run for an extended fifth-week from 30 August to 3 October to meet insatiable audience demand.
Another opening night scene stealer, transforming the South Bank Piazza into a haven of hip, is award-winning singer and all-round entertainer David Campbell bringing his Back in the Swing big band show to Brisbane for one night only.
South Bank Piazza is also home to a remarkable design performance event First Nations Fashion: Walking in Two Worlds, cabaret delivered on a grand scale in Skyfall, Casus Circus’s heart-warming and celebratory Auntie’s Fiafia Night and many more artists and acts infusing the new precinct with appealing shows to suit a broad range of audiences, including late night revellers who love to party, Festival style.
Enter Silver City, an immersive world of wonder and delight at BOQ Festival Garden’s Rainforest Green throughout the Festival.
The daring new collaboration between Brisbane-based Circa and UK architects AL_A takes place inside an eye-popping structure comprising a constellation of chrome bubbles, where acrobats tumble and leap as the performance unfolds.
Vibrant inflatable installations also take root in West Village with Lost, an enchanting garden of extinct and endangered floral illuminations created by Australian artist Amanda Parer.
The free outdoor exhibition runs the duration of the Festival and is accompanied by a weekend and school holiday program of art activities.
Storytelling and live music combine in Heart is a Wasteland, a cross-country, whisky-fuelled love story playing QPAC’s Cremorne Theatre from 15 – 18 September.
Reimagined by ILBIJERRI Theatre Company Artistic Director Rachael Maza, the powerful piece cuts to the country’s heart as it examines an individual’s right to love.
Wiradjuri man Joel Bray takes audiences on a flirty and passionate look at sensuality in Considerable Sexual License at The Block, QUT Kelvin Grove from 10 – 15 September.
Queensland premiere dance piece plenty serious TALK TALK is a wickedly sharp and gleefully funny commentary on the complexities of negotiating culture across disciplines, genres and eras, playing La Boite’s Roundhouse Theatre from 11 – 15 September.
The provocative Queensland premiere performance blends cabaret, comedy and choreography as it skewers conservative sexual politics.
Brisbane Festival Artistic Director Louise Bezzina thanked the Indigenous Advisory Group and First Nations curators for shaping and guiding the delivery the Festival’s First Nations program.
“Critical to the spirit of Brisbane Festival is a program where diverse voices have a platform to tell stories and share their culture in this grand celebration of connection and community,” Ms Bezzina said.
A standout smash in 2020, Street Serenades hits the road again presented by Brisbane City Council to dazzle audiences across all 190 Brisbane suburbs with big-name artists including Boy & Bear, Christine Anu, Montaigne and Queensland Ballet and showstopping performances spanning circus, cabaret, dance, DJ sets and live music.
Additionally, Street Serenades: At Our Place is a new public program working with neighbourhood and community centres in Inala, Acacia Ridge, Wynnum, Ellen Grove, Cannon Hill, Nundah, Mitchelton and Coopers Plains to bring people together through music and movement.
Proudly presented by the Queensland Government, Street Serenades: At Our Place engages artists including Common People Dance Project and RakoPasefika for a month-long series of workshops and residencies.
At QPAC’s Concert Hall, Buŋgul, an exquisite celebration of the talent and musical legacy of Gurrumul Yunupiŋu, makes its Queensland debut from 24 – 25 September.
Yolŋu dancers, songmen and musicians from the Queensland Conservatorium Griffith University and Camerata – Queensland’s Chamber Orchestra bring to life the songs, dances and paintings that inspired Gurrumul’s album Djarimirri (Child of the Rainbow).
Karul Project’s Weredingo entertains as it challenges what audiences think they know about shapeshifting in its world premiere season at Metro Arts from 3 – 11 September.
The Tivoli is home to a First Nations-led program of music including the world premiere of Restless Dream on 19 September, a large-scale musical production with cinematic soundscapes and dance.
The new production is a collaboration between Kamilaroi elder Uncle Bob Weatherall, Brisbane band Halfway and Digi Youth Arts telling the story Uncle Bob’s ongoing social justice work.
Brisbane Festival and Brisbane Powerhouse dust off the wrecking ball for the world premiere of Polytoxic’s Demolition, an explosion of physicality, theatre and social activism in a mind blowing large scale production from 4 – 11 September.
The arts venue then goes to the dogs in Let’s Be Friends Furever, a crowd-sourced homage to our four-legged friends turning Powerhouse Theatre into Brisbane’s artiest off-leash area from 16 – 25 September.
All eyes turn to Brisbane’s skies when Sunsuper Riverfire makes a bold return on Saturday 25 September to add the final big-bang sparkle to Brisbane Festival 2021.
Presented in association with Channel 9 and Triple M, Sunsuper Riverfire provides a glittering crescendo after COVID-19 forced the pyrotechnic spectacular into hiatus in 2020.
Ms Bezzina said September is Brisbane Festival, bringing the city alive with art, dance, music and joy for all ages and interests, from young families to late-night revellers.
She invited visitors to make the most of their Festival experience by checking out the curated Festival Itineraries at brisbanefestival.com.au.
“Block out your September because you are going to want to be part of this party!” she said.
Brisbane Festival returns to fill the city with art, music and joy from 3 – 25 September 2021.
All Brisbane Festival events comply with Queensland Health’s COVID Safe Events framework and health authority directions.