Leanne Benjamin AM OBE to lead Queensland Ballet

Leanne Benjamin AM OBE to lead Queensland Ballet

Queensland Ballet have announced Leanne Benjamin AM OBE as the company’s new Artistic Director. Named Australian of the Year in the UK 2023, this is a homecoming for Ms Benjamin, a Queenslander who has been a vibrant voice in ballet, vocational development, advocacy, and governance on the world stage for many years.

Ms Benjamin will be the sixth Artistic Director to take the helm at Queensland Ballet and the first female to assume the role. In a natural balance to her international accomplishments, she started life in Rockhampton, so Queensland runs through her, strong and vibrant.

“This exciting appointment has been made following an extensive global recruitment search, which attracted unprecedented interest from candidates all around the world,” shares Queensland Ballet Chair, Brett Clark. “The selection committee comprised of Board Directors, internal leadership, and external sector experts from Australia and abroad, including Director of The Royal Ballet, Kevin O’Hare CBE. Throughout the process, Leanne stood out with an innate currency of our artform, an uncanny alignment with our strategic cornerstones which have been developed significantly throughout Li’s tenure, and a visceral passion for Queensland.”

“As Vice Chair of the Board of Governors for the Royal Ballet Companies, Leanne has been influential in key sector developments relevant to The Royal Ballet, Birmingham Royal Ballet, and the Royal Ballet School which translate across to us as we consider our cornerstones of Artistic, Academy and Community. This is indeed a unique qualification in our incoming Artistic Director, overlaying extensive on-stage experience working with ballet lighthouses such as Margot Fonteyn, Rudolf Nureyev, Kenneth MacMillan, Mikhail Baryshnikov, Darcey Bussell and Carlos Acosta. She’s a formidable force, only retiring from the stage at the age of 49, as The Royal Ballet’s longest-serving ballerina”, Clark adds.

In 2005, Ms Benjamin received an OBE in recognition for her services to dance. In 2015, she was appointed a Member of the Order of Australia and in 2014, she received an Honorary Doctorate of Performing Arts from Central Queensland University. In 2019, Leanne was the recipient of the inaugural Agent-General Queensland Day Award.

Director of The Royal Ballet, Kevin O’Hare said, “I am thrilled for Leanne embarking on this next exciting venture and seeing her life coming full circle back to her roots in Queensland. Leanne has been an extraordinary force of the British ballet scene, lauded first as a ballerina and then as a coach and passionate advocate for dance. During all these phases of her career, I have hugely admired her artistry and work ethic and have loved working with her.”

Leanne will be working alongside longstanding Queensland Ballet Executive Director, Dilshani Weerasinghe. It’ll be a reunion for the pair, who worked together at the Royal Opera House, and home to The Royal Ballet, for eight years.

Ms Benjamin is thrilled with the appointment, saying, “I couldn’t be more excited to be returning home to Queensland – as Queensland Ballet’s sixth Artistic Director. It’s an incredible honour. Ballet has been part of my life since I was a three-year old in Rockhampton. If you had told that wide-eyed girl that she would go on to have a vibrant career as a ballerina for 30 years, 20 of which would be as a Principal with The Royal Ballet and then return home as Artistic Director to a world-class company in Queensland, I’m not sure she would have believed it.”

She paid tribute to outgoing Artistic Director, Li Cunxin AO who is leaving Queensland Ballet after 11 years at the helm.

“Li, Mary and I have been friends for many years, and I want to pay tribute to what Li has built at Queensland Ballet. He has transformed the company, on and off the stage, with truly world-class facilities and an exceptional training Academy which further deepens its impact in our sector and community. I loved my time with Queensland Ballet in 2019, coaching MacMillan’s Romeo and Juliet, and cannot wait to strengthen my connection with the dancers and the wider teams.

“It’s an absolute honour to take on this prestigious role, and to be able to return to Queensland. I love Australia, and throughout all my travels it has always remained home.

Mr Li welcomed the announcement and suggested that Queenslanders will be excited about the appointment.

“Leanne brings an extensive experience on and off the stage, and I’m thrilled that I’m handing on my artistic guardianship to her. The last 11 years have been an absolute privilege and there is always a niggle around preserving one’s legacy. Leanne’s experience across stage, student pathways, and her passion for our Queensland community is going to stand Queensland Ballet in great stead as we move forward. I know you’ll all welcome her with the same generosity and support you showed me when I first arrived all those years ago. Queensland Ballet is in inspired hands,” he said.

Leanne will commence in her role early next year.

“I’m mostly excited about meeting and working with the people who make up Queensland Ballet. I am impatient to meet our dancers, our artistic team, our students all those behind the scenes whose talents make everything possible, our audiences and all those supporters and believers without whom dancing just stands still. Ballet is a beautiful coming together of all these contributors and to be a part of this, as an artistic guardian, is a privilege,” she says.

Image: Leanne Benjamin, by Jason Bell. Photo source: queenslandballet.com.au