logo
Sew good: Exhibition to honour Rose Chong, Melbourne's legendary costume designer

Sew good: Exhibition to honour Rose Chong, Melbourne's legendary costume designer

After labouring 12 hours a day, helped by talented colleagues, and with her academic husband Min Chong's support at home, Chong delivered the costumes – ranging from regal robes to fake blood-stained peasants' garb – on Wednesday.
Chong says she didn't want Chaundy to be left in the lurch. In addition, 'I get off on the idea of being a white knight', she says.
Having just turned 80, Chong is busier than ever. 'Honestly, it's so impressive for anyone of any age to undertake that workload but especially at 80,' says her longtime employee, Hannah Cuthbertson.
In March, at Fitzroy Town Hall, 170 guests wearing Chong's favourite colour, pink, attended an appropriately outrageous birthday party. Some of her cheeky friends dressed as parodies of Chong.
Up next is that for two weeks from June 4, Chong's work will be recognised at the Rising festival.
An entire shop in Howey Place, in Melbourne's CBD, will showcase some of her costumes and paintings, plus artist Rebecca Armstrong's revealing portrait of her.
Chong doesn't seek the spotlight. Her colleague, Cuthbertson, informed The Age about the octogenarian's latest projects.
Of the Rising festival, Chong says: 'It's an incredible honour and I'm thrilled to bits.'
Chong's paintings derive from the COVID-19 pandemic when her business closed.
Loading
She completed a visual arts diploma, and in a Zoom class she wore a cactus costume, with an oval for her face, which made her classmates laugh.
She painted a cactus image with acrylic on board, and then painted quirky portraits of people and household items – everything from a washing machine to a stapler – and signed each with a tiny image of her face.
Rising festival co-artistic director Hannah Fox says Chong is 'an icon of Melbourne' and her stop has dressed thousands of artists, so it's fitting to celebrate her colourful legacy with the showcase in Howey Place.
Chong says her irreverent staff – 'Chongettes' – and work duties won't let the tribute go to her head.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

After 60 years, even Mick Jagger can finally get some satisfaction
After 60 years, even Mick Jagger can finally get some satisfaction

Sydney Morning Herald

time5 hours ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

After 60 years, even Mick Jagger can finally get some satisfaction

As rock anniversaries go, 60 years is quite the milestone. Consider what the world looked like on June 4, 1965, the day (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction was released by the Rolling Stones: humanity yet to set foot on the moon, communism ruling Eastern Europe, war escalating in Vietnam, and it would be two years until the Beatles released Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction turned the big 2-0 as then UK prime minister Margaret Thatcher stared down striking coalminers in 1985, and space shuttles orbited the planet, Uluru was handed back to traditional owners and MTV took over a generation. On its 40th anniversary, in the wake of September 11, the 'Axis of Evil', Iraq and Afghanistan, we spoke of the song on the internet (that's what we called it then) and wondered how the Rolling Stones' lead singer, Mick Jagger, could still do it. Could still do anything, really. A few years later, we shared clips – originals, live performances, tributes – using these new little phones we kept in our pockets that were 100,000 times more powerful than the computer that landed that spacecraft on the moon a generation earlier. And the world kept on changing, moving, relentlessly pushing forward: Trump, COVID, more Trump. But 60 years on – we're still singing the song and humming that riff.

After 60 years, even Mick Jagger can finally get some satisfaction
After 60 years, even Mick Jagger can finally get some satisfaction

The Age

time5 hours ago

  • The Age

After 60 years, even Mick Jagger can finally get some satisfaction

As rock anniversaries go, 60 years is quite the milestone. Consider what the world looked like on June 4, 1965, the day (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction was released by the Rolling Stones: humanity yet to set foot on the moon, communism ruling Eastern Europe, war escalating in Vietnam, and it would be two years until the Beatles released Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction turned the big 2-0 as then UK prime minister Margaret Thatcher stared down striking coalminers in 1985, and space shuttles orbited the planet, Uluru was handed back to traditional owners and MTV took over a generation. On its 40th anniversary, in the wake of September 11, the 'Axis of Evil', Iraq and Afghanistan, we spoke of the song on the internet (that's what we called it then) and wondered how the Rolling Stones' lead singer, Mick Jagger, could still do it. Could still do anything, really. A few years later, we shared clips – originals, live performances, tributes – using these new little phones we kept in our pockets that were 100,000 times more powerful than the computer that landed that spacecraft on the moon a generation earlier. And the world kept on changing, moving, relentlessly pushing forward: Trump, COVID, more Trump. But 60 years on – we're still singing the song and humming that riff.

Gillan Anderson: Sex scenes are never a joy
Gillan Anderson: Sex scenes are never a joy

Perth Now

timea day ago

  • Perth Now

Gillan Anderson: Sex scenes are never a joy

Gillian Anderson had admitted that sex scenes are "never a joy". The 56-year-old actress shares an intimate scene in a tent with co-star Jason Isaacs in her new movie 'The Salt Path' - based on the true story of couple Raynor and Moth Winn who embark on an epic walk in the UK after a bad health diagnosis and homelessness - and says such things are part and parcel of acting. Gillian told The Sun: "That is something you just expect as an actor. "That's part of what one does. I had an experience for many, many years working with the same actor every day. "I've also done sex scenes on the very first day of working, which is never a joy at any time during filming. "So you're thrown stuff all the time and just show whatever you're given." 'The X-Files' star added that it was straightforward to film the raunchy scenes with her "amenable" co-star Isaacs. She said: "Jason makes it very easy. He's very amenable, he's very likeable. "And certainly physically, we feel like we're the same language - certainly by the end. "We feel like our journey is baked into us, and we feel like we're part of the same conversation." Gillian explained that she became desperate to play Raynor after reading her book of the same name and being "profoundly affected" by the story. She recalled: "I read the book and I couldn't speak for days. I was really profoundly affected by it. I think I might have threatened them with an inch of their lives to hire me!" Gillian explained that starring in the movie has changed her thoughts on homelessness. The 'Sex Education' actress told the i paper: "It haunted me in a way that I think was good. "In America, you would stop at a light, and two or three people might surround the car and wash your windscreen and then ask for money, which I'd never seen happen here (in the UK) before. Post Covid, suddenly that was happening. "It was an opportunity to change how I thought about it, period. And to have more compassion and understanding. It's fascinating to observe in oneself the different emotions that come up as a result of being face-to-face with it."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store