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Celebrating his 80th birthday, pioneering artist, William Yang, reflects on his extraordinary life in Milestone.
In this ambitious new performance, Yang weaves together an epic slideshow of documentary photographs from his vast collection. Through personal stories, he explores themes of family, sexuality, and culture with his signature humour and candour. Set against an exquisite score composed and performed by Elena Kats-Chernin with Ensemble Lumen, Milestone is a joyous tribute to an Australian icon.
Milestone is an intimate, often heartbreaking and regularly hilarious portrait of a life...truly life-affirming work.
A stunning meditation on time, loss, and the enduring beauty of human connection, Milestone is a triumph.
- Accessibility
-
This venue is wheelchair accessible.
Accessible tickets and Companion Card bookings are now available online for many Adelaide Festival Centre shows on Ticketek.
If the show you are looking at doesn't have online booking available, please complete Ticketek's Accessible Seating Form and you will be contacted to process your booking.
- Ages 16 and up
- This production contains adult themes, images of a sexual nature/full-frontal nudity.
- Runtime
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1 hour and 40 minutes
Lockout period applies.
Part of

OzAsia Festival is Australia’s leading contemporary arts festival engaging with Asia. It showcases the best theatre, dance, music, visual arts, literature, food and cultural events from across Asia.
Discover OzAsia FestivalIn partnership with
Milestone was co-commissioned by Asia TOPA, Arts Centre Melbourne, Melbourne Symphony Orchestra; Sydney Festival; Contemporary Asian Australian Performance (CAAP); funded by Creative Australia and City of Sydney. Photos are by William Yang with additional photography by Alexis Orosa, Charlie Young, Mai Nguyen-Long, George Gittoes and Peter Elfes. Thank you to Neil Simpson, Lyle Chan & Jackie Thomas Picardie, Jeff Khan, Tam Nguyen & the Asia TOPA team; Olivia Ansell & the Sydney Festival team; Sandi Woo & the CAAP team.
Credits
William Yang
Creator/Performer/Co-director
One of Australia’s most celebrated artists, William is a trailblazing photographer and performance artist. His acclaimed performance works, presented at major Festivals and Arts Centres across Australia and the world, draw from his vast photographic archive to tell powerful stories about immigration, culture, sexuality and creativity.
His photographs are held in major Australian gallery and museum collections, including the National Gallery of Australia and the Museum of Contemporary Art. He is hailed as a leading influence on subsequent generations of Australian artists.
Through his work, William specifically explores issues of cultural and sexual identity, integrating this practice with writing, performance and film to create unique performance pieces.
Beginning as a playwright, he turned to photographing parties and social events to earn a living. His 1977 exhibition, Sydneyphiles, and 1984 book Sydney Diary, recorded the emergent gay community and Sydney party scene of the 1970s and 1980s. In the 80s, he began to explore his Chinese heritage, and his themes expanded to include landscapes and the Chinese in Australia. He began performing monologues with slide projections in theatres in 1989. These slide shows were recognised as a unique form of performance theatre and have become his preferred way to show his work. He has toured Australia and the world to acclaim with shows such as Sadness, Friends of Dorothy, The North, Blood Links and Shadows.
Most recently, in 2018 he created PARTY (verb) about the 80s queer party scene in Sydney (Liveworks Festival), transferring the work in 2019 to Sydney Opera House (UnWrapped Festival). In 2021 he was honoured with a retrospective exhibition at QAGOMA, Brisbane. For this the gallery commissioned a new performance piece, In Search of Home. In 2023 he created Gay Sydney a Memoir for Sydney WorldPride.
A featured artist in last year's Biennale of Sydney: A Thousand Suns (March-June 2024), William has held significant solo and group exhibitions at the National Gallery of Australia; National Library of Australia; Queensland Art Gallery, Gallery of Modern Art; National Gallery of Victoria; Museum of Contemporary Art Australia; Higashikawa Arts Centre (Japan); San Diego Museum of Art (USA); and Art Gallery of NSW. His work is held in numerous major public and private collections nationally and internationally.

Elena Kats-Chernin AO
Composer/Pianist
One of Australia’s foremost contemporary composers, Elena Kats-Chernin's vibrant and distinctive music across all genres has reached millions worldwide.
Among her extensive oeuvre are works in nearly all genres: instrumental solo and ensemble pieces, symphonic, chamber orchestral and concertos, for plays, ballet and musical theatre, choral and other vocal music for such organisations as Australian Chamber Orchestra, Australian World Orchestra, the Symphony Orchestras of Adelaide, Tasmania, Melbourne, Perth and Sydney, Australian Brandenburg Orchestra, City of London Sinfonia, Swedish Chamber Orchestra, as well as the opera houses of Berlin, Antwerp, Stuttgart, as well as Luxembourg Philharmonie and Opera Australia.
She has collaborated with well-known artists such as Meryl Tankard, Barrie Kosky, Richard Tognetti, Michael Collins, Katie Noonan, Tamara-Anna Cislowska, Benjamin Northey, Marin Alsop, and many more.
Elena has composed scores for 4 feature length silent films, the most recent of which, Variete, was recorded by the Cologne Radio Orchestra, and premiered live to the film by the Belgian National Orchestra in 2023.
Elena’s recent score for the Golden Globe/Oscar-nominated and award-winning claymation Memoir of a Snail from Oscar-winning Melbourne director Adam Elliot, was performed by Jane Sheldon and the Australian Chamber Orchestra. It’s also nominated for AACTA 2025 in the category Best Score for a Feature Film.
Elena collaborated for the first time with William Yang on his 2012 Sydney Festival project, I am a camera, and recently with the world premiere of Milestone for Sydney Festival and AsiaTOPA.

Tessa Leong
Dramaturg/Co-director
Tessa is the Artistic Director of Contemporary Asian Australian Performance. She is a theatre director, dramaturg and collaborator who has worked extensively across theatre, performance, dance theatre, live art and socially engaged projects. Her love of new work has led to collaborations with artists and companies across Australia and internationally. She was Griffin Theatre Company’s inaugural Associate Artistic Director from 2020 until 2022 and is a founding member of Adelaide-based theatre company isthisyours?.
Her most recent directorial credits are on Rainbow Chan's The Bridal Lament for the Liveworks, OzAsia and Sydney festivals; as Co-Director and Dramaturg on William Yang's Milestone for Asia TOPA and Sydney Festivals; and on Merlynn Tong’s Golden Blood for Griffin Theatre, Sydney Theatre Company and Melbourne Theatre Company in their 2024 seasons.

Key Creatives
- William Yang Creator/Performer/Co-Director
- Elena Kats-Chernin Composer
- Lyle Chan Co-orchestrator
- Tessa Leong Dramaturg/Co-Director
- Daniel Herten Technical Director (AV)
- Sammy Read Lighting Designer/Operator
- Neil Simpson (rehearsal) Production Manager
- Aiden Brennan (performance) Production Manager
- Fenn Gordon for Tandem Producer
- Performance Space Auspicor
Performance Location: Adelaide Town Hall

The Adelaide Town Hall is located on 128 King William Street, Adelaide 5000 and is easily accessible by public transport.
Find timetables for Adelaide’s bus, train and tram services on the Adelaide Metro website here.
You can also visit the Adelaide Metro InfoCentre at the Adelaide Railway Station or call their InfoLine on 1300 311 108.
For full information, visit the Adelaide Town Hall website.
The following access features are in place:
- Automatic glass sliding doors at entry
- LED display directory
- Lift with illuminated raised tactile/braille buttons and voice announcements
- Right hand transfer unisex accessible toilet
- Wheelchair accessible seating in the Auditorium Stalls (not in the Gallery or Dress Circle)
Please see the Adelaide Town Hall access services webpage for more information.
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