
Airlie Beach is set for a huge weekend of classic rock as the Airlie Beach Hotel hosts two massive free tribute shows celebrating the music of Foreigner and Bon Jovi. The action begins on Saturday, 28 February, when Bon Jovi Forever – The Australian Bon Jovi Show takes to the stage from 2pm to 5.30pm. Touring internationally and renowned as one of the world’s hottest Bon Jovi tribute acts, the show delivers the ultimate experience for fans of the New Jersey rock legends. Audiences can expect a high-energy afternoon packed with powerhouse hits and fan favourites from Bon Jovi, including “Livin’ on a Prayer”, “Always”, “Bed of Roses”, “You Give Love a Bad Name” and “It’s My Life”. The production has previously featured on national television programs such as The AFL Footy Show and Foxtel’s The Tribute Show, showcasing its authenticity and stage presence. Known for selling out venues across the country, the band promises an afternoon that will have diehard fans and casual listeners alike singing along. The rock celebrations continue on Sunday, March 1, with a double-header event from 2pm to 5.30pm. Kicking off the afternoon from 2pm to 3.30pm is The Australian Foreigner Show, a tribute to the chart-topping sounds of Foreigner. The show captures the feel and presence of one of rock’s most successful bands, performing classics such as “I Want to Know What Love Is”, “Cold as Ice”, “Urgent”, “Feels Like the First Time”, “Waiting for a Girl Like You”, “Hot Blooded” and “Juke Box Hero”. From 4pm to 5.30pm, the very best of Bon Jovi returns to close out the weekend in style, ensuring back-to-back anthems and a lively atmosphere. With two afternoons of free live entertainment in the heart of town, the Airlie Beach Hotel is the place to be for locals and visitors looking to enjoy great music, waterfront views and an electric party atmosphere. Saturday 28 February WHAT: Bon Jovi Forever – Australian Bon Jovi Show WHERE: Airlie Beach Hotel WHEN: 2pm til 5:30pm Sunday 1 March WHAT: Double Header, Best of Bon Joni and Foreigner – Australian Bon Jovi Show and The Australian Foreigner Show WHERE: Airlie Beach Hotel WHEN: 2pm til 5:30pm Captions Photo source: Facebook
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GIG GUIDE – 20th FEB Friday 20 February Airlie Beach Hotel: Jam Hot Live – Sports Bar (8am – 11pm) Grandview Hotel: Paul Fergus (from 8pm) KCs: Phoenix Revival (from 8pm) Sorrento: Kaedan McCarthy (4pm – 7pm) Saturday 21 February Airlie Beach Hotel: Jam Hot Live (2pm – 5.30pm) Airlie Beach Hotel: Mad Mariachi (6.30pm – 9.30pm) Grandview Hotel: DJ Night (from 8pm) KCs: Phoenix Revival (from 8pm) Sorrento: Kieran McCarthy (4pm – 7pm) Coral Sea Marina Resort: DJ Bad Girl (1pm – 5pm) Sunday 22 February Airlie Beach Hotel: Mad Mariachi (2pm – 5.30pm) Airlie Beach Hotel: Paul Fergus Morris (6.30-9.30pm) Coral Sea Marina Resort: Noah Davis (1pm – 5pm) KCs: Mick Woodbridge (from 8pm) Sorrento: Ash Smith (4pm – 7pm) Grandview Hotel: Sam McCann (from 8pm) Monday 23 February KCs: Bear Brewer (from 8pm) Sorrento: Will Heta (4pm – 7pm) Tuesday 24 February KCs: Bear Brewer (from 8pm) Sorrento: Will Heta (4pm – 7pm) Wednesday 25 February KCs: Dylan Hammond (from 8pm) Sorrento: Will Heta (4pm – 7pm) Thursday 26 February Airlie Beach Hotel: Pluto Tango (7pm – 10pm) KCs: Sam McCann (from 8pm) Sorrento: Lucy Rose (4pm – 7pm)
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The Whitsundays Writers Festival returns on Sunday 13 September 2026 with a one-day celebration of local authors, regional stories, and the readers who bring them to life. Set against the stunning backdrop of the Whitsunday Marine Club, Airlie Beach, the festival promises an engaging, thought-provoking, and community-focused experience for all ages. Festival-goers can look forward to two intimate panel discussions, exploring the journey from inspiration to publication, and the creative sparks that drive storytelling. Hear from talented local authors as they share insights, experiences, and advice for aspiring writers. The day will also feature author readings, the presentation of the Whitsundays Literary Heart Awards, and Stories by the Sea — a lively book buy-and-swap event celebrating local voices and community participation. Stay tuned for full program details and ticket releases, and don’t miss your chance to be part of the region’s premier literary celebration. Save the Date When: 10:30am-4:30pm Sunday 13 September 2026 Where: Whitsunday Marine Club, 7 Altmann Ave, Airlie Beach Calling Local Authors – Expression of Interest Now Open! Are you a published author living in the Whitsundays, Central or North Queensland region? We’d love to hear from you! For the 2026 Whitsundays Writers Festival, we’re inviting local authors to express interest in joining two engaging panel conversations. Local authors can also confirm a dedicated space to sell books directly to festival attendees. EOI deadline: 11:59pm, Saturday 28 February 2026 Complete the online form: 2026 Expression of Interest – Whitsundays Writers Start writing! 2026 Whitsundays Literary Heart Awards We’re excited to announce the 2026 Whitsundays Literary Heart Awards, celebrating the next generation of Australian storytelling. This year’s awards include: Best Short Story – Adult & Under 18 divisions First prize: $1,000 | Runner-up: $500 Up to 3,000 words of unpublished creative fiction Poetry Prize First prize: $1,000 | Runner-up: $500 Up to 50 lines of unpublished poetry Judged on originality, creativity, and expressiveness Entries open 16 March to 30 June 2026 with a $20 entry fee. These awards are a vital investment in Australian literary culture, giving local and national writers the chance to have their work recognised and celebrated. Don’t miss the opportunity to join a community that champions creativity, imagination, and the power of storytelling. Contributed with thanks to Whitsundays Writers Festival.
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Laughter is on its way to the Whitsundays as the Melbourne International Comedy Festival Roadshow rolls into town, bringing a taste of Australia’s biggest comedy celebration to our own backyard. For nearly 30 years, this travelling showcase has carried the spirit of the festival far beyond the bright lights of the city, connecting regional communities with world-class performers and emerging talent alike. For Proserpine and the greater Whitsundays region, events like this matter. Hosting the Roadshow at the Proserpine Entertainment Centre reinforces the importance of investing in local arts infrastructure and ensuring our communities remain culturally vibrant. Live comedy does more than entertain. It brings people together, sparks conversation and offers a much-needed release from the pressures of daily life. When residents can gather with friends, share a laugh and support a live performance close to home, it strengthens social bonds and boosts the local economy through dining, hospitality and tourism. The Roadshow’s carefully curated line-up promises a mix of established comedy heavyweights and exciting new voices, delivering sharp wit, clever storytelling and plenty of surprises. It’s a reminder that regional Australia deserves access to the very best in live performance. For the Whitsundays, this isn’t just a night out: it’s a celebration of connection, culture and community, right here where we live. Captions Photo sourced
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Anthony Fabian’s Mrs Harris Goes To Paris – based on Paul Gallico’s beloved 1958 novel – is a saccharine story in the best of senses. As maudlin (and occasionally pernicious) as it may be at times – especially in its assertions of capitalism’s ability to provide the poorer classes with happiness - audiences can’t help being drawn in on the whimsical journey.
In 1950’s London, Mrs Harris (played with exceptional facility and lovability by Lesley Manville), a widowed cleaning lady falls madly in love with a couture Dior dress. After working to raise the funds to pursue her consumerist dream, she embarks on an adventure to Paris that will “change not only her own outlook -- but the very future of the House of Dior.”
Fairy-tale escapism is the order of the day in the adapted film – which has potential sequel opportunity, considering its origins as part one of a four book series of the titular Ada Harris’s adventures. And there’s a chance for it: Lesley Mansville gives a luminous performance, one which audiences can’t help but smile at. In the hands of a lesser actor, the script could easily become sentimental drivel. But instead, Manville has us cheering along for her blue-collar performance, letting us in on how small dreams can sometimes mean an entire world.
A few unfortunate events are led by the frosty Claudine Colbert (Isabelle Huppert), who acts as a gatekeeper of taste who does her best to keep Mrs Harris at arm’s length from the posh upper crust.
Manville’s Cockney, chirpy cliché mounts challenge after challenge, undeterred by anything in her wake in this sugary film that is just what the doctor prescribes in a world of hardships.
Mrs Harris Goes To Paris is showing now at the Bowen Summergarden Cinema.
Lesley Manville is a delight in Mrs Harris Goes To Paris

Returning to the MECC for 2022, LOOSE ENDS will be an eclectic evening of art, music and performances by local artists and performers.
The performance is set to be a quirky night of entertainment, giveaways, fundraising, socialising and more as Crossroad Arts aim to heighten awareness for the International Day of People with Disability.
Crossroad Arts has initiated LOOSE ENDS to address the gap for young people with disability to go out in the CBD and know that the venue and facilities are accessible, and the attitudes of staff and clientele is open and inclusive.
Acts include Billy Dyer, Maddison Hunt, Groove Movers, With One Voice, Choir of Unheard Voices, Strictly Wheelchair dance group, Sacha Davis and Crossroad Arts Crew and more!
Crossroad Arts’ Artistic Director Alison Richardson says, “We are really excited to have such an array of acts on the evening in a fully accessible venue.
“We’re keen to address the need for an inclusive social performance evening for everyone, so I encourage people to come along, have a drink, meet a new friend and enjoy some entertainment!
“This is also one of our fundraisers for the year so we are keen to see people come out in support of what we’re trying to achieve here at Crossroad Arts - visibility and recognition for the talent we have in the region."
LOOSE ENDS is an Auslan interpreted event and the venue is accessible (toilet and level access) and is an official event of International Day for People with Disability.
WHEN: Friday November 25, 2022 7pm- 9:30pm
WHERE: North Foyer, The MECC Alfred St Mackay
TICKETS: $15 - $25 Bookings essential: (07) 4961 9777 or online via themecc.com.au
Companion cards accepted

Estate Planning for Older People
Friday, 9:30am to 11:00am
Free seminar for your financial future delivered by Services Australia.
Gordon White Library
Ananse Stories Performance
Friday, 3:45pm to 4:45pm, Gordon White Library
Saturday, 10am to 11am, Dudley Denny City Library
Sam Derchie uses an engaging blend of storytelling, song and drumming to introduce children to Ananse, a spider from the folklore of the Ashantie people of Ghana in West Africa. His stories, with their messages of co-operation, empathy and the joy of learning, are interspersed with music, drumming and song and provide numerous opportunities for children to get hands on and participate.
With his colourful Ghanaian clothing, his many African percussion instruments and his years of performance experience, Sam holds his audience from beginning to end, leaving children with a lasting impression of his African culture. For children aged five to 12 years.
Friday SUN.sets
Every Friday Evening From 6pm
Knock off drinks, lakeside dinner, good friends, and LIVE MUSIC.
Wake House Australia
Infamous
Opening Friday, November 11 running until Sunday, November 27, 7:30pm
A combination of sexy circus acts, raunchy dancing and cheeky comedy will have you crying with laughter. Infamous is an 18+ event encompassing delicious treats and snacks, VIP table service with a choice of alcoholic beverages for a never-seen-before circus cabaret vibe. At every Infamous show you can be assured of an intimate and unique setting when you arrive under the Spiegel Big Top. For all those who are over 18, this is a fresh and new offering to sit back to and enjoy the Infamous story, the costumes, the outrageous performances by a bevy of stunning superstars.
Mackay Showgrounds
Jules Thompson book launch of ‘Broken Ballerina’
Saturday, 10:00am to 2:00pm
Come and see Jules at Mount Pleasant Centre on centre stage and purchase a signed copy of her autobiography ’Broken Ballerina’. A percentage of the sales will go to Broken Ballerina Inc.
Mount Pleasant Centre
De Goey Contractors Mackay BBQ and Beer Festival
Saturday, 11:00am
Enjoy a day out in the sun with friends listening to live music, eating some great BBQ Food and drinking your choice of over 50 Australian and International Beers!
Harrup Park
Theatre Arts Mackay Dance Excellence presents Showcase Gala 2022
Saturday, 4:00pm
Showcasing the very talented and diverse students from Twinkle Stars through to the elite Senior Students. This show is sure to entertain with performances in all genres of Dance/Acro/Drama and Musical Theatre.
MECC
Mackay Nth Qld Babies & Kids Market
Sunday, 8:30am
Over 50 Local businesses on display with all thing’s babies and kids, as well as mum to be and new mum products. The morning is set to be amazing, with lucky door prizes handed out throughout the market, jumping castles, face painting, free bounty bags. Don't forget you can get your coffee fresh and hot at the event to have while you’re shopping. Come join our amazing market morning to see all the amazing local small businesses under the one roof.
Mackay Showgrounds
Sour Sunday at Red Dog Brewery
Sunday, 1:00pm to 6:00pm
For the sour lovers - this one's for you. Ballistic Whitsundays will be joining Red Dog Brewery and celebrating all things Sours. The Ballistic beer trailer will have classics and some limiteds: Water Me Lawn, Twang Guava and Passionfruit, Twang Blackberry and Berliner Weisse.
Red Dog Brewery
Sunday Live Music – BarbsWired
Sunday, 2:00pm to 5:00pm
Music every Sunday from 2pm - 5pm. Head down to the Seabreeze Hotel this Sunday for some fresh tunes, delicious food, and ice-cold brews.
Seabreeze Hotel
Choir rehearsals: Christmas at St Paul’s
Sundays 4pm for four weeks
A four-week rehearsal schedule for the choir for Christmas at St Paul’s starts today at 4pm at the church. Have fun, make friends, and help lead worship at Christmas time in the beautiful acoustics of St Paul’s Uniting Church. It doesn’t matter if your voice is a bit squeaky, just turn up and sing!
St Paul’s Uniting Church, Macalister Street
Paul Hayman presents Cloudland the Musical
Sunday, 6:00pm
Cloudland the Musical tells the story of a culturally significant venue on top of Bowen Hills overlooking Brisbane that played an integral part of the most defining decades of popular music. Its overnight demolition in 1982 stunned not just the locals but people from all corners of the globe who had attended the venue during its lifetime. The story is filled with drama and controversy and comprises of a blend of original compositions and works from iconic artists that played at the venue including The Bee Gees, Buddy Holly, The Angels, Jerry Lee Lewis, Cold Chisel, Johnny O’Keefe, Midnight Oil, Australian Crawl, Normie Rowe, Mental as Anything, Bill Haley, Split Enz and more. Cloudland was no ordinary venue.
MECC
BMA Kidspace
Tuesday, 10:00am to 2:00pm
Join local artists and performers for creative art activities designed for toddlers and their adults. Drop-in anytime between 10am and 2pm (live children's music from 11.30am to 12.15pm). BMA Kidspace, Artspace Mackay’s free and ever popular toddler’s program, gives children under five a chance to explore and have fun with art in a climate of co-operative learning. The program includes free artist-run craft activities in two sessions, Sess1: Anytime from 10 to 11:30am; Sess2: Anytime from 12:15 to 2pm with live musical entertainment 11:30am to 12:15pm. Bring your children along for a fun day of art-making, singing and dancing. Proudly presented by BHP Mitsubishi Alliance.
Artspace Mackay
Musical Bingo at the Seabreeze Hotel
Tuesday, 7:00pm to 9:00pm
There’s only one thing better than bingo, and that’s Musical Bingo. Every Tuesday join us in the Bar from 7pm where you can show off your musical knowledge in Musical Bingo. Prizes will be on offer for our winners each and every week so make sure you’re on the ball as we drop the beats! Oh, and entry is FREE! Registration opens from 6pm, with all the action kicking off from 7pm. So music buff or not, make sure you clear your schedule each Tuesday evening for Musical Bingo at the Seabreeze Hotel.
Seabreeze Hotel
Mackay Farmers’ Market
Every Wednesday, 6:30am to 10:30am
The market is a showcase of our region’s amazing produce direct from the farmer.
Bluewater Quay
Sugar City Rock and Roll Mackay Club Wednesday Night Lessons
Every Wednesday, 7:00pm
Why not come along and learn to rock ‘n’ roll in a friendly and fun atmosphere with the Sugar City Rock ‘n’ Rollers Mackay Club? Previous experience is not required. Everyone learns at their own pace and, even better, the first lesson is free on your way to learning the four step style of rock ‘n’ roll. $5 for members and $8 for non-members after that. The club caters for social activities for club members with regular dances with live bands in attendance and away trips. For further enquiries call 0408 983 911.
58 Macalister St, Mackay

Immerse yourself in one of the most unique productions touring the world.
Celtic Illusion, the Irish dance and Grand Illusion sensation that has taken Australia, New Zealand, Hong Kong, Canada and the USA by storm and will tour nationwide in 2023.
Even fans who have seen our previous shows won’t dare miss The Magic Returns tour that is set to raise the bar once again. This exhilarating production has broken barriers by fusing unparalleled art forms and is more spectacular than ever before.
A breathtaking array of experiences, fusing Irish Dance, Magic and influential flavours of Fosse, Michael Jackson, with a Broadway style. Celtic Illusion is a show like no other.
The Reimagined tour features new spellbinding illusions and choreography, alongside a musical score that will either make you cry or send shivers down your spine.
Starring the multi-talented former lead dancer of Michael Flatley’s Lord of the Dance and Star Illusionist Anthony Street, with Georgia May, a marvel in both dance and Illusion. These impeccable performers lead a cast of champion dancers recruited from renowned productions across the world, such as Lord of the Dance and Riverdance, into a theatrical masterpiece that will have you mesmerised from the moment the curtain is raised.
Celtic Illusion will surpass your expectations and leave you wanting more.
Don’t hesitate, and book now to know the hype of one of the largest and most unique Dance and Illusion shows in the world.
Secure your seats today and experience an evening you will never forget!
What: Celtic Illusion – The Magic Returns
Where: The MECC
When: 20 April, 2023
Tickets: Available from the MECC, starting from $69.90

Harrup Park is heating up the barbecues.
After a huge turnout in 2021, the De Goey Contractors Mackay BBQ and Beer Festival is back again in 2022 this Saturday November 12 from 12pm.
It’s the perfect opportunity to enjoy a day out in the sun with friends listening to live music, eating some great food and drinking your choice from more than 50 Australian and international beers on offer.
In 2021, the Mackay BBQ and Beer Festival worked with the Australasian Barbecue Alliance to bring an official round of the Australian Barbecue Championships to Mackay.
The competition was named ‘The BBQ Battle’ and saw 20 teams travel to Mackay to compete in the lucrative Barbecue Championship Round with $9,500 in prize money.
This year, they’re doing it again, looking to bring back all the big names.
Watch local legends battle it out to win Mackay’s Best Beard and Mullet Competitions.
Entry is free to anyone on the day and there is still plenty of time left to grow a winning mullet or beard.
It wouldn’t be the Mackay BBQ and Beer Festival without the famous Chilli Eating Contest.
Can you handle the heat?
Applications can be found at Harrup Park’s website.
The event will feature live entertainment from Kyle LIONHART, French Press, The Wild Sky and more throughout the day.
Harrup Park General Manager Adrian Young said he’s extremely excited to have the event back in 2022.
“It was a great experience to have a sanctioned ABA event in Mackay with teams traveling across Queensland to compete on our grounds,” he said.
“This year we’re also making an effort to get more independent breweries on board to help showcase their beers.”
WHAT: The De Goey Contractors Mackay BBQ and Beer Festival
WHERE: Harrup Park Country Club
WHEN: Saturday, November 12 from 12:00pm to 8:00pm
TICKETS: www.mackaybbqandbeerfestival.com.au

Please, take a seat.
A beautiful young couple, I must say. Quite exquisite. Our pleasure to feed you. Shall we start with a drink? I always recommend the Chianti, the house. Excellent vintage and pairs favourably with the hors d’ouevres; simply makes your mouth water, thinking of it.
Though, you’ll be pleasantly surprised by the mains – they always are. The steak is to die for; it melts in your mouth; the marrow accoutrement, too. A prime grade. But, we do things somewhat differently here at Hawthorne Island, so I implore: listen closely to ‘The Menu’.
What has happened to high-end dining? Often, there’s nothing even close to an actual meal served. And that’s the question posited throughout director Mark Mylod’s ‘The Menu’, a black comedy thriller following a couple as they travel to a coastal island to eat at an exclusive restaurant where the chef has prepared a lavish course of meals, with some “shocking surprises.”
And you might be thinking: Ah, it’s about food, I get it. A bit of a ‘Most Dangerous Game’ situation, huh? We are actually the meals and all that. I see you, surprises. I know what you are – but no, you really don’t. The Menu sounds like a standard fair where self-inflated rich people get their comeuppance in a horrible, twisted way, and you’re partially right, but it’s not just that. There are several courses to writers Seth Reiss and Will Tracy’s film.
Unlike the meals served up by Ralph Fiennes – who is at his absolute Fienn-est (couldn’t help it) – as Chef Slowik, The Menu has actual substance. Driven by a constant satirising of the unbridled emptiness of fine dining, which has become more about status for decadent aristocrats than it has about actually feeling full, The Menu is a biting film that never disappoints.
You might even come back for seconds.
‘The Menu’ (R) is opening at the Bowen Summergarden Cinema on Friday, November 25.
Ralph Fiennes is brilliant in ‘The Menu’, a dark thriller that takes aim at the vapidity of upper echelon foodie culture

The Airlie Beach Festival of Music brought thousands of people together for one wild weekend of live tunes and awesome beats, from its central main-stage tent at the Whitsunday Sailing Club right through to the 16 venues spread right across the town.
A highlight of this years’ event was the nationally acclaimed Passport to Airlie Competition which saw eight talented representatives from all around Australia compete for the chance to win a spot in next year’s main-stage line-up.
The competition received hundreds of entrants and heats were carried out in Darwin, Mackay, Melbourne, Newcastle, Sunshine Coast, Byron Bay and Cairns – whittling the finalists down to one representative from each region.
The grand final took place last Thursday night and Perry Street Park from Brisbane were announced the overall winners.
The Neo, Abi Muir, Weathered, Karly Jewell, Dande & The Lion, Sunday Lemonade & Owls of Neptune also made the finals.
Perry Street Park said they were stoked to win.
“The talent pool was so deep this year, so we feel absolutely honoured," they said.
"For an up-and-coming band to be a part of a festival this size is a huge opportunity to get exposure and build the chops for a career in the industry, and now to be crowned the winners and come back again next year is incredible," added front-man Benny.
The evening saw a huge crowd come to support the artists and the night was topped-off with a stunning acoustic performance by Passport to Airlie competition judge Sarah McLeod from The Superjesus.
“A chance to be heard in a professional environment and to receive advice from established artists - I would’ve jumped at this opportunity when I was young. Feedback from industry professionals goes a long way,” said Sarah.
Brisbane band, Perry Street Park win Passport to Airlie competition

Every Wednesday, every Thursday, every Friday, Saturday, Sunday, settle in at locals’ favourite local for an evening of music in its purest form: The Airlie Beach Hotel’s Acoustic Sessions.
Local musicians will be plucking and strumming at their guitars at ‘The Pub’ throughout November and December – artists like Andy Mammers, Simon Briley, Matt Angell, Pluto Tango, and Lloyd Saunders, just to name a few.
Known for its big, bombastic, larger-than-life shows, The Airlie Beach Hotel is also a home for resident musos in the region, singers who bring out the best of the beachy vibe the coastal town offers.
They’re some of the best acts in town, from Mammers – an experienced stage maestro – to local legend Matt Angel, and relative newcomer Pluto Tango, a one-man looping sensation.
The acoustic boys have been hand-picked by the Airlie Beach Hotel for both their abilities on their instruments, as well as their crowd-pleasing attitudes. Singalongs are commonplace between artists and audience on evenings when the sunglow turns Airlie Bay shades of purple and orange.
On Friday and Saturday nights, Andy Mammers embodies that attitude.
He has become a crowd favourite at The Pub, with an “innate sense of guitar” where every strum sounds “just right.”
It is the casual simplicity that invites audiences in as Mammers changes any venue into a lounge room, making audiences instant friends, and seeing them delight in his ability to emerge from sensitive lyrics to an outrageous Kazoo solo – and making it work to boot.
Mammers has been playing Fridays and Saturdays at The Pub for roughly two years, and said the evenings were where the Acoustic Session’s artists “play for the crowd.”
“If it’s a young crowd, we play to them, if it’s an old crowd, we play to them. I spend my night taking requests and when the crowds are into it, it’s what gives us energy, 100 per cent,” he said.
“When they give you energy, you give it back, its reciprocal. The best parts of the night for me are that the bar staff are super interactive as well. A lot of those guys - Cooper, Thiago, Logan - they’ll dance along, singalong and we have a call and response with them, which goes to the crowd too.”
The Acoustic nights at the Airlie Beach Hotel have one goal: for the audience to have fun. “We as acoustic artists, as a venue, try to make it enjoyable; we want you to come back to Airlie Beach if you’re on holiday, we want you to take the enjoyment and want to feel it again,” Mammers said.
Head for The Pub to check out the Acoustic Sessions running every Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, and Sunday evening throughout November and December in Airlie Beach – you won’t be disappointed.
WHAT: The Pub Acoustic Sessions
WHEN: Every Wednesday from 6.30pm, and every Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday, from 7pm to 10pm
WHERE: The Airlie Beach Hotel
The Pub’s Acoustic Sessions are running across all of November and December, featuring resident artists like Andy Mammers who “plays to the crowd”
Other artists include Simon Briley, a popular performer who brings his own original style to a multitude of pub favourites
And there’s also famed Western Australian singer and guitarist Matt Angell amongst others at The Airlie Beach Hotel

Ben Lee’s catalogue of iconic Australian hits can be heard in Hollywood movies, hit sitcoms and indie surf flicks all over the world. Saturday night at the Airlie Beach Festival of Music brought thousands together to watch Ben’s return to Australian stages and Sam had a chat to him before he took to the big tent.
I want to go right back to your childhood band Noise Addict, how did that come about?
That was just, honestly, I wanted to form a band and I just looked around and saw that guy, ok, his older brother has a drum kit so he can be the drummer. That guy has a Zoom pedal that can make his guitar sound like a bass so he can be the bass player, and I’ll tell them what to play and that’s it, we’ll have a band.
How did that transition into your solo career?
It was really just because I was writing all these songs and I would record them on a boombox just acoustic but I always envisioned they would be songs we would then play with the band, but I gave them to the label. This guy, Steve Pav (Stephen Pavlovic), I would give him these tapes and they were just acoustic, and he was like, ‘I think you should record some of these like that,’ so that was that.
You hear Ben Lee songs on TV shows, on movies, what was that like to get that coverage?
It was good because I love the way songs interact with film. Sometimes it’s used almost as a band aid where a scene isn’t working so they’ll put a cool song in, but that’s the worst case. The best-case scenario is you’ve got a great film and the right song in it and suddenly everything gets heightened; the song gets better, the movie gets better. I had the song ‘How To Survive A Broken Heart’ that the Farrelly brothers used when Cameron Diaz first comes in on roller skates in ‘There’s Something About Mary’, and to me it was like, I love being part of that scene, that’s an iconic Hollywood comedic moment, and I feel like my song is a part of that history, so it’s great.
Is that your favourite scene that a song has been used in?
Yeah, that would be one of them. There was one in ‘How I Met Your Mother’ that was really good. They’re all good. The funny one was I was watching the Tegan and Sara; they have a show called ‘High School’ on Amazon and there’s a scene in it where one of them is going to make a mixtape and she’s like, ‘Get ready, it’s going to be all California punk bands and the dulcet tones of Ben Lee,’ and I was like, ‘Yeah, man, I’m in there.’ It’s just being part of things, it’s cool.
My mind was blown when I saw Radnor and Lee pop up on the internet. How did your relationship with actor Josh Radnor come about?
It just happened through the show. The creators, I chatted to them, and they invited me down to the set after they’d used one of the songs and me and Josh met and just became friends.
What’s the creative back and forth like?
We had a few years where we were doing a lot. Josh was new to song writing and guitar playing and I have a side of me that really likes being in the support role, I just like helping people bring their vision to fruition, so it was a bit like that.
What’s it like being an Australian singer-songwriter living in America?
It’s good. It’s fun because I’m obviously most successful in Australia and Australia is a really good country to be successful in. If you had to pick one country that you have to go to a lot, it’s fun, you get to play festivals like this, on a beautiful beach. If you get successful in, like, Germany, you’re just touring playing beer festivals all summer. That’s really nice. I do love the creativity. I feel like, in Hollywood, people come with very big dreams, and I really get off on that. They all want to play in the big leagues and see how good they are, and I respect that ambition.
How do you think it’s affected your career trajectory?
I don’t know. For instance, me and my wife do a podcast, and we got offered, from Australian companies, to do it, who would only have Australian advertising, and I was just like, ‘I don’t ever want to make anything just for one place.’ I’ve never been like that. Now the world’s a bit different in that more artists are thinking internationally out of the box, but when I started, that was not that common. If you were an indie band in Sydney, you never thought you were going to get to go to America. For me, my world is big, and I like to keep it that way. Even if Australia’s my biggest fanbase, I like thinking globally.
When you think that way, where are you going?
I’ve always envisioned a career that peaks in my 70s. I really feel like I’m halfway through. I can really see more and more people getting it. It’s funny, I know that’s, in a way, statistically unlikely, but I’ve never been that interested in the normal to do things. I think, we’re actually living in a time where there’s less ageism than ever before and diversity in outlooks in more valued than ever before and I see, when I play, there’s teenagers and kids and older people and people in their 40s who have a babysitter for the night – I can play for everybody. I still view it like that.
What’s it like to be back in Australia and playing at the Airlie Beach Festival of Music?
Honestly, after the pandemic, I reprioritised, like, ‘What do I want out of gigs?’ so the show’s become much more of a spectacle. We’ve got a giant joint and props and the full band. I just realised, firstly, I think everyone got a sense of life is short, societal collapse is possibly on the way, lets try and create a good energy because, as an artist, I am not going to solve any of the problems that we are facing collectively, but I can contribute to creating a good atmosphere where maybe my audience can go and solve those problems.
Photo credit: Cherrie Hughes Photography

For the second year in a row the Whitsunday Regional Council is hosting their Christmas Lights Competition, inviting households from across the region to dress their gardens in festive lights and Christmas cheer.
Packing the kids in the car and cruising the streets to admire neighbourhood Christmas lights is a favourite tradition among many local families and this competition encourages everyone to embrace that festive spirit.
Last year 16 houses participated and Proserpine resident, Ron McCall who lives at 1 Atkinson Street, won the competition with his impressive display.
Ron has been decorating his home for 28 years and spends three weeks preparing his house for the intricate lighting display.
Having worked at the Proserpine Mill for 38 years, Ron has enjoyed bringing the community together at Christmas, hosting a street party each year with over 200 people in attendance.
To enter the Christmas Lights Competition simply head to Your Say Whitsundays and search Christmas Lights.
Here you will find a link to ‘nominate’ your house for the competition and also pin your Christmas Lights display on the interactive map so people can follow the Christmas lights trail.
This year, the lucky winner will receive a night’s accommodation for two adults and two children at Daydream Island Resort and Living Reef, with $500 spending money.
They will also win a family trip to Reefworld, for a Great Barrier Reef Adventure with Cruise Whitsundays.
Last years’ winners Ron McCall and his wife Wendy outside their house on Atkinson Street in Proserpine

The Mackay & District Orchid Society Inc. held its Annual General Meeting at the Sporting Wheelies Hall last month where a new committee was selected.
The incoming committee for 2023 is:
President: Dennis Farlow
Vice President: Roger Clark
Secretary: Ros Farlow
Treasurer: Eve Penningh
Committee Members: Ron Laird; Veanna Joiner; Debbie Clark
A presentation was made to the Club Patron, Mayor of Mackay, Cr. Greg Williamson and his wife Annette.

Four years ago, Shed Happens Mackay started to celebrate International Men’s Day with a fundraising breakfast, aiming to lift up the men of Mackay.
The 2022 edition of the breakfast is nearing where the Mackay Man Of The Year will be named from nine proud nominees.
Shed Happens Mackay Convenor Frank Cowell said being nominated is an honour.
“We don’t lift up and celebrate the positive things a bloke does very often,” he said.
“The average bloke in the street who does his very best at being a dad, a husband, a provider, that’s not very often celebrated, and the idea of Man of the Year is for that to be celebrated and for people to nominate blokes who might not make the cut, but it identifies their qualities.”
International Men’s Day is structured around six pillars and Mr Cowell said these pillars are qualities a man can aspire to.
Man of the Year nominees provide a written submission which is compared alongside these pillars before an interview takes place.
“When we do the verbal interview, we cover every aspect of a bloke’s life: family life, what he does in the community, what’s his definition of a man,” Mr Cowell said.
“We ask about his history, any awards he might’ve got, those sorts of things.”
Sponsored by DGH Engineering, all proceeds from the International Men’s Day fundraising breakfast will be donated to local groups on the day, to assist them to carry on the valuable work they do in our community.
As with other years, table discussions will be held within the groups seated together, and the results of the table discussions will be disseminated and discussed with the attendees.
As well as the Mackay Man Of The Year Award announcement, there will be raffles drawn throughout the morning.
Tickets are $60.00 per person including breakfast, or $550 for a table of 10, and are available via the Shed Happens Mackay Facebook page.
WHAT: International Men’s Day Breakfast
WHERE: Ocean International Resort
WHEN: November 18, 2022 from 6:45am to 9:45am
CONTACT: Frank Cowell - 0434 908 968

Public Art Walk
Friday, 4:30pm
A free afternoon guided walk exploring Mackay’s public art. Hosted by Artspace Mackay Director Tracey Heathwood, the free city art walk for all ages begins at Artspace Mackay and takes you through the city centre. Along the way, participants will learn about Mackay’s iconic public art installations, and the local, and internationally-acclaimed artists who created them. Whether you’re an artist, art lover, local or visitor to our lovely riverside city, you’ll find this late afternoon public art walk a thoroughly enjoyable experience. Bring friends, family members, or come by yourself - wear a hat, comfortable shoes, bring a bottle of water, and arrive promptly to Artspace Mackay as the group will depart on time.
Artspace Mackay
Ninja Hub Teen Shed Event
Friday, 6:00pm
After their first fun filled Teen Shed event, the teens have asked for more. The Teen Shed event will be back on the first Friday of each month. Event runs from 6pm - 8pm ages 12 to 18. Everyone is welcome. Bookings are required. Cost includes 2 hours non-stop Ninja fun, pizza and drink for $25.
The Ninja Hub
Friday SUN.sets
Every Friday Evening From 6pm
Knock off drinks, lakeside dinner, good friends, and LIVE MUSIC.
Wake House Australia
Creedence Clearwater Collective
Friday, 8:00pm
Creedence Clearwater Collective invites you to join in for a celebration of Creedence Clearwater Revival, as they walk through the life and music of one of the world’s most iconic bands – from the songs they wrote, to the songs covered, to the songs they wrote for others. The Creedence Clearwater Collective brings to the stage a six piece band – with a guest Saxophonist and a vocalist that emulates John Fogerty’s distinct vocals – to capture the unique CCR sound. You do not want to hear through the grapevine that you missed out on this hit-packed production.
MECC
Mackay Woodturners Christmas Expo
Saturday and Sunday, 9:00am to 3:00pm
Featuring demonstrations and sales of woodturning, scroll sawing, intarsia, wood carving and pyrography. This is a great opportunity to purchase unique, locally handcrafted gifts for Christmas such as bowls, clocks, pens and toys. All welcome. Contact Frank on 0417 625 818 for more information.
Snow Wright Court, Beaconsfield
RADfest '22 Junior Roller Derby Bootcamp
Saturday, 12:00pm to 8:00pm and Sunday, 8:00am to 1:00pm
Mackay City Rollers is hosting the first ever RADfest. Why RAD? Well, it’s all about Regional Alliance Derby, providing an opportunity for regional junior skaters to meet, develop and just have a RAD time skating together. Open to Junior Skaters 8 - 17 years of all skill levels. Featuring special guest coaches to be announced on the event page, on and off skates training sessions, short track and WFTDA rules scrimmages, ramp skating demos and a whole lot of fun in the gorgeous tropical Queensland setting of Mackay. $40 weekend pass, go to the Facebook event to register.
Mackay PCYC
Last Latin Night for the Year
Saturday, 7:30am
Latin dance fusion with Indigenous dance. Maria Eugenia Alvarez with special guest Patrick Thaiday will perform together for the first time in Mackay for this special night. An incredible night for all to be part of this experience.
Palace Hotel
Chess the Musical
Saturday, 8:00am to 10:00pm and Sunday, 2:00pm to 4:00pm
As another chess drama plays out in the real world, join Mackay Choral Society as they present the exciting Chess the Musical at the wonderful Conservatorium Theatre.
Central Queensland Conservatorium Of Music
Sunday Live Music – Leyon Milner & Zoey Mills
Every Sunday, 2:00pm to 5:00pm
Music every Sunday from 2pm - 5pm. Head down to the Seabreeze Hotel this Sunday for some fresh tunes, delicious food, and ice-cold brews.
Seabreeze Hotel
National Recycling Week recycling facility tours
Monday to Friday, 12:30pm to 1:30pm
Would you like to learn what happens to your recyclables when they reach council’s Materials Recovery Facility? Book a tour any day during National Recycling Week (November 7 to 11) from 12.30pm to 1.30pm.
Materials Recovery Facility, Paget
Founders Allegiance
Monday, 5:30pm to 7:00pm
Free business start-up support and assistance. If you are a budding entrepreneur, monthly check-ins are a fantastic way to keep up to date with business trends and create business opportunities and relationships. You will have honest conversations about your business dreams, strategies and goals. Split Spaces wants your business to succeed and has the networks to help get you there. This is a monthly check-in designed to help you maintain your goals and stay on track. This group will help you troubleshoot your hurdles and connect you with industry members and opportunities to connect with fellow entrepreneurs.
Split Spaces
Be Storm Ready - a workshop for the Mackay Multicultural community
Tuesday, 10:30am
Are you from the Mackay Multicultural community and have you lived through a storm season, cyclone or natural disaster in Mackay? Would you like to know more about what the recently announced La Nina weather event will mean for the Mackay region this spring/summer season? Do you want to be able to work through a plan for your own family with resources to take home and use to prepare for storm, flood, cyclone and other natural disasters? You’re invited to attend this session which will be run by the Mackay Regional Council Disaster Preparedness team along with the State Emergency Service (SES). You will have a chance to talk to you about your own experiences, ask questions and what it means to prepare fully for a storm season in North Queensland. Lunch will be provided. Children welcome. RSVP: clairec@tnhub.org.au by Friday November 4 for catering purposes.
The Neighbourhood Hub
Mackay Farmers’ Market
Every Wednesday, 6:30am to 10:30am
The market is a showcase of our region’s amazing produce direct from the farmer.
Bluewater Quay
Healthier Parents Program – Activate Mackay Region
Every Wednesday, from 9:30am
Following the success of the recent pilot program and overwhelming interest, the Healthier Parents program has become part of Activate Mackay Region and will continue to be conducted at the Andergrove Hall by Lauren Neill of Women’s Health Physio Mackay. The subsidised class is part of Activate Mackay Region at a cost of $5 paid directly to the service provider. To find out more about these classes, visit council’s website.
Andergrove Hall
Soul Jam Wednesdays at The Kooyong Hotel
Every Wednesday, 6:00pm to 9:00pm
Soul Jam has an intimate room where they will be hosting another friendly space to share your originals, jam with others and experiment with music. Supplied is a drum kit and bass guitar. All artists welcome including slam poets and comedians.
The Kooyong Hotel
Sugar City Rock and Roll Mackay Club Wednesday Night Lessons
Every Wednesday, 7:00pm
Why not come along and learn to rock ‘n’ roll in a friendly and fun atmosphere with the Sugar City Rock ‘n’ Rollers Mackay Club? Previous experience is not required. Everyone learns at their own pace and, even better, the first lesson is free on your way to learning the four step style of rock ‘n’ roll. $5 for members and $8 for non-members after that. The club caters for social activities for club members with regular dances with live bands in attendance and away trips. For further enquiries call 0408 983 911.
58 Macalister St, Mackay
Call for singers: Christmas at St Paul’s
Register today for the choir for Christmas at St Paul’s. Have fun, make friends, and help lead worship at Christmas time in the beautiful acoustics of St Paul’s Uniting Church. It doesn’t matter if your voice is a bit squeaky! Join the St Paul’s Singers by contacting the church today on 4957 3557 or ucamackay@optusnet.com.au.
St Paul’s Uniting Church, Macalister Street

A Mackay-based filmmaker has entered her short film into an international competition, asking for local support to put Mackay on the filmmaking map.
Writer, director and producer (among many other duties and talents) Alle Segretti has been making films for over 20 years, her films winning awards and screening at festivals all over the world.
‘Golden Hour’ is currently running in the Zhiyun Annual Short Video Contest and stars Damien Thomas and Laura Galley as a couple throwing items at the sun, attempting to induce a sunset.
Filmed on a property south of Mackay in August, ‘Golden Hour’ was made for the Sydney Underground Film Festival’s 48-hour film competition TAKE48, tasking filmmakers with incorporating a particular object, honey, and a line of dialogue, “This is your last chance,” into their films.
“We’d been having these really amazing sunsets, which were caused by the Tongan volcano,” said Alle.
“I thought, ‘Sunsets, golden hour, honey, it all makes sense. Why don’t we just have someone throwing something at the sun trying to turn it into a sunset?’”
Shooting wasn’t without drama, with solar mass ejections causing equipment faults.
“At the particular time of day that we were shooting to get the sun at the right angle, we actually had equipment fails,” said Alle.
“The drone went off in its own direction, the camera stopped working, radio mics stopped recording.
“All of this was happening at exactly the same time on both days.”
‘Golden Hour’ has been entered in the Narrative category of the Zhiyun Annual Short Video Contest, with five judges of varying professional backgrounds to announce the winners on November 20.
“If we could get a good range of people watching that film and hitting that like button, then that’s going to influence those judges to say, ‘Hey, we need to look at this and give it a bit more attention,’” said Alle.
Alle said she often experiences cast and crew shortages when making films in Mackay, with ‘Golden Hour’ stars Damien being a local friend and Laura coming from Rockhampton.
“He (Damien) actually says that acting is harder than working in the mines on a 12-hour shift and I had to bring Laura up from Rockhampton because I couldn’t find anyone locally,” she said.
Alle said she is addressing these shortages by taking interested filmmakers on board for projects.
“I am very willing for people to come out and work on what I call ‘gateway projects,’” she said.
“Over two or three projects, not only do you get a bit of training, but we get to find out where your talent lies and give you access to the equipment and resources necessary to actually make a film.”
Those interested are asked to email mackay@venimentus.com and to view ‘Golden Hour’, visit youtu.be/vQ3dHqmGQM8.

Each Year on World Scout Day, (August 1), Scouting Leadership Awards are announced. The Awards are presented at Government House. If recipients aren’t able to go to Brisbane to receive their award, they have the option of it being presented at a suitable function in their own District.
The Hibiscus Coast District (HCD) awards were presented at a special parade which was held on Saturday 15th October at the JOTA JOTI weekend at Rowallan Park when there were many youth members and leaders present to join in celebrations.
It was announced that former Banksia Venturer Scout Leader Mrs Joann Brzozowski would be presented with the Silver Emu Award for contributing significantly to the Wellbeing of Scouting. Joann has been instrumental in having a large number of Venturer Scouts achieve their peak award which is the Queen’s Scout Award. Joann will be presented with her award at a suitable time. Joann is now a Qld Branch Advisor to the Duke of Edinburgh Award Scheme with Scouting.
The Silver Koala Award for a high level of distinguished service were presented to Greg Milne and Dougal McWhinney. Central Coast Region Commissioner Dougal McWhinney received his award prior to the presentation at Rowallan Park, however Greg Milne, Group Leader of Mackay City Central Scout Group received his award at the special parade at Rowallan Park.
Silver Wattle Awards for 10 to 12 years performing at a consistently high standard, were presented to Rowan Cahill, District Scout Leader HCD and District Commissioner HCD Katrina Hoare. Assistant Region Commissioner Jason Hazell was absent from the District when the awards were presented so a suitable time for his presentation will happen in the near future.
Special Service Awards for Noteworthy contribution to supporting, developing and management to the Scouting Movement were presented to three Rover Scouts who regularly support leaders at group and at District Events as well as planning and carrying out the activities. They were Kaitlin Allen, Jim McIntyre and Tristan Archibald.
Two Venturer Scouts, Ethan Cahill and Emily McVeigh, who received their Queen’s Scout Awards late last year were presented with their certificates which are usually presented at Government House.
Congratulations to all leaders and Rover Scouts in particular the ones who have performed above and beyond what is expected of them. Scouting is in Good Hands with the standard and qualifications that is required of the Scouting Leaders of today.
Contributed by Mary Wallace