<?xml version="1.0"?><rss version="2.0" xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><channel><title><![CDATA[Blog - Jamie Redfern Entertainment - schools of entertainment, snging, dancing and acting]]></title><link>http://www.showbusiness.net.au/</link><description><![CDATA[The official website of legendary Australian entertainer and performing arts educator Jamie Redfern, including information on exciting dance singing ballet hip hop Jazz tap & jazz funk classes. Jamie is an Australian music Icon and you can find information on him as well as the amazing performing arts centres he runs with his beautiful wife and former professional dancer and model Judy Ward Redfern right here.]]></description><language>en-us</language><pubDate>Thu, 23 Feb 2012 23:10:20 -1100</pubDate><lastBuildDate>Thu, 23 Feb 2012 23:10:20 -1100</lastBuildDate><webMaster>jredfern@bigpond.net.au</webMaster><item><title><![CDATA[Young Talent Time returns to television]]></title><link>http://www.showbusiness.net.au/blog/young-talent-time-returns-to-television/</link><description><![CDATA[Just the most fantastic news was announced at a network ten media launch last night - Young Talent Time is set to return to Australian television screens in 2012. To say I'm excited and thrilled...]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Just the most fantastic news was announced at a network ten media launch last night - Young Talent Time is set to return to Australian television screens in 2012. To say I'm excited and thrilled would be the understatement of the decade, seeing that I have worked so hard throughout the last 10 years or so to make that happen - as have a number of former YTT'ers and of course my friend and the shows creator, Johnny Young.</p><p>More to come.....</p>]]></content:encoded><pubDate>Thu, 18 Aug 2011 00:00:00 -1100</pubDate><guid>http://www.showbusiness.net.au/blog/young-talent-time-returns-to-television/</guid></item><item><title><![CDATA[Young Talent Time - My Thoughts]]></title><link>http://www.showbusiness.net.au/blog/young-talent-time-my-thoughts/</link><description><![CDATA[Young Talent Time was one of the biggest success stories in the history of Australian television, and to be the founding Young Talent Time team member will always be one of my proudest achievements....]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Young Talent Time was one of the biggest success stories in the history of Australian television, and to be the founding Young Talent Time&nbsp;team member will always be one of my proudest achievements.</p><p>I had worked with YTT producers&nbsp;Johnny Young and Kevin Lewis on a number of television productions&nbsp;for 2 years prior to the YTT concept being born, and my father&nbsp;Sam was instrumental in supplying the contact details of&nbsp;the talented young&nbsp;friends I had previously&nbsp;worked with on the Seven Network production of&nbsp;Brian and the Juniors, so that the audition process&nbsp;could begin&nbsp;to&nbsp;choose the&nbsp;other 5 members of the original Young Talent Team.</p><p>Did I enjoy my time with Young Talent Time ? You bet I did !</p><p>I can honestly say that my time with the show&nbsp;was a major&nbsp;highlight of my career and gave me without a doubt&nbsp;many of the happiest moments&nbsp;of my&nbsp;life.</p><p>A small number of my fellow YTT cast members&nbsp;don't feel the way I do&nbsp;about their own&nbsp;time with the show and&nbsp;have made it very clear in the media&nbsp;that they&nbsp;would rather forget the whole YTT&nbsp;experience, which saddens me greatly.&nbsp;</p><p>In my opinion, both sides&nbsp;( JY and the team members in question) are decent and honest people,&nbsp;so you can imagine how hard and confusing it&nbsp;is for me&nbsp;to hear such opposing views on their&nbsp;respective&nbsp;YTT experiences.&nbsp;</p><p>The truth, as they say, probably lies somewhere in the middle - and, although I was present on the YTT set at the same&nbsp;time much of the negative stuff is alleged to have taken place - I remember nothing but happy times and lots of fun and laughter, and would do it all over again in a heart beat.</p><p>In fairness to my team member friends, I was only&nbsp;a little kid at the time,&nbsp;so maybe I was simply too&nbsp;naive to&nbsp;be aware of&nbsp;anything negative that may have&nbsp;been happening -&nbsp;it all appeared to be&nbsp;no different to our time with Brian and the Juniors to me.</p><p>I loved Brian and the Juniors, I loved Young Talent Time, and I'm now loving my Jamie Redfern Presents television show&nbsp;which I produce for Foxtels Aurora channel - tune in and&nbsp;join in the fun !!&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>]]></content:encoded><pubDate>Fri, 07 Aug 2009 00:00:00 -1100</pubDate><guid>http://www.showbusiness.net.au/blog/young-talent-time-my-thoughts/</guid></item><item><title><![CDATA[Jamie Redfern - Why I Love Australian Idol]]></title><link>http://www.showbusiness.net.au/blog/jamie-redfern-why-i-love-australian-idol/</link><description><![CDATA[Love it or hate it you have to admit that Australian Idol has been a much needed shot in the arm for the Australian music industry. The number of success stories the popular concept has nurtured and...]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Love it or hate it you have to admit that Australian Idol has been a&nbsp;much needed&nbsp;shot in the arm for the Australian music industry. The number of&nbsp;success stories the popular&nbsp;concept has nurtured and created to date&nbsp;is nothing short of amazing, and all&nbsp;have been instrumental in instilling or reinforcing&nbsp;the required belief in other&nbsp;budding young performers that they too&nbsp;might actually have what it takes to&nbsp;make it in the exciting world of showbusiness, if presented with the&nbsp;same opportunity to showcase their talents.</p><p>As director and vocal coach of the Australian Showbusiness Academy in Melbourne's Hoppers Crossing, I personally witness each day&nbsp;the very positive effect the Idol concept continues to have on young performers with stars in their eyes and ambition in their hearts - and I love it !</p><p>Before Idol, New Faces and Young Talent Time gave young performers a chance to be discovered and gain rare television exposure.</p><p>Both New Faces and YTT enjoyed enormous ratings success, and the socially accepted&nbsp;adjudication method employed by each concept at the time&nbsp;was&nbsp;the use&nbsp;of gentle positive encouragement. My own manager the wonderful Miss Evie Hayes was&nbsp;the perfect example of this philosophy in action, and would only ever critisize a talent quest contestant using the most respectful and diplomatic words possible - and we all loved her for it.</p><p>Then came Pot Of Gold and the introduction of the always entertaining&nbsp;though often razor tongued critiques of Bernard King. Bernard knew only one way to adjudicate - his way&nbsp;-&nbsp;and once again, though in stark contrast to the&nbsp;method used by Evie,&nbsp;the television viewing audiences loved it.&nbsp;</p><p>The success of Pot of Gold was a sign that times had begun to change, and that&nbsp;something which&nbsp;was once television taboo,&nbsp;had become a sure fire ratings winner.</p><p>The negative&nbsp;comments occasionally&nbsp;directed at contestants on Australian Idol now&nbsp;make Bernard Kings tirades seem like the ramblings of a schoolboy on valium, but in defense of the idol judges, and the concept in general, I have to say that it is only a true reflection of how much times have changed yet again, and is nothing more than what the&nbsp;contestants&nbsp;can expect&nbsp;should they make it as successful performers&nbsp;on&nbsp;the world stage.</p><p>My&nbsp;humble advice to performers who find themselves in&nbsp;the Idol&nbsp;judges firing line, is to use the experience as a positive - a chance to harden themselves&nbsp;to the&nbsp;realities of the negative aspects of the&nbsp;industry I have known and loved for the better part of 45 years.</p><p>Comments&nbsp;often&nbsp;levelled at performers by some&nbsp;members of&nbsp;the public and the media via the internet and other social mediums&nbsp;can be potentially soul destroying - it comes with the territory.&nbsp;</p><p>Showbusiness is unfortunately&nbsp;not all glitz and glamour - it is a rewarding but&nbsp;tough industry and&nbsp;a performer has&nbsp;to&nbsp;be equally as&nbsp;tough to succeed and&nbsp;survive in it. Nowadays, I truly believe&nbsp;mental toughness is&nbsp;a prerequisite to a successful career as a performer, and that&nbsp;Idol is simply giving the contestants a taste of what to expect, nothing more.</p><p>Personally, I hope that Australian Idol exists for many years to come - not only&nbsp;for the sake of the Australian music industry, but also for the sake of the many exciting young&nbsp;world class&nbsp;stars of the future&nbsp;we are yet to meet,&nbsp;who might not have&nbsp;otherwise been given&nbsp;a chance to shine.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>Jamie Redfern&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>]]></content:encoded><pubDate>Sun, 28 Jun 2009 00:00:00 -1100</pubDate><guid>http://www.showbusiness.net.au/blog/jamie-redfern-why-i-love-australian-idol/</guid></item></channel></rss> 
