(Story dated August 26th 2016) - Ashburton’s talented youth learn their skills on home turf; inevitably they hone those skills on the international stage. Often, however, those same stars return home to perform and to inspire those wanting to follow in their footsteps. One of those is Zara Ballara, an opera singer who spoke to reporter Sue Newman about her journey from a child who dreamed to an adult who realised that dream.
A tiny girl in a pink tutu, hair neatly in a bun, steps out on stage.
Her classmates follow. The little girl runs, trips and falls. The audience gasps in sympathy.
Fast forward 30 years, that same little girl, now dressed in an evening gown, hair a tumbling mass of curls, steps out on stage – the audience gasps, but this time at the purity of her voice.
That little girl was Zara Hollis; her adult counterpart is Zara Ballara opera singer, teacher, international star.
Back in Ashburton for the Phoenix Chorus fundraising concert Zara admits that each time she steps out on stage the memories of that tutu-clad child falling, still slips out of her memory banks.
The former Ashburton College student was home as a guest artist in the fundraising concert and shared the story of a life that many would say was extraordinary.
Zara can’t remember a time when she didn’t want to sing.
“I think I was at kindergarten and someone told mum that I could sing. I started singing lessons when I was eight. Back then not everyone wanted to take me on because we didn’t have a piano at home and in those days you couldn’t just be a singer, you had to have an instrument as well.”
That didn’t deter Pam McCormick, she saw Zara’s potential.
In her early years she did the round of competitions, performing in concerts and at family events. Initially her experience was of music that was light years away from opera where she would carve out a career.
“The standard songs in the back seat of our car were things like Ferry Across the Mersey and Tie a Yellow Ribbon,” she said.
At her grandfather’s persuading she even tried country and western, but admits that was a far from successful venture; once tried, easily forgotten.
Opportunities came when she started at Ashburton College, but college was almost responsible for derailing her music career as well.
A careers visit by police and Zara was inspired. Her lack of height would not be a problem; as a Maori student she was told she could work in the education field. Zara was intrigued; her mother wasn’t.
“I announced to mum that I was going into the police. I got an unequivocal no. Mum said that’s non-negotiable.”
As a member of the Phoenix Chorus she quickly learned the pleasure of shared music and the fun factor of school musicals. Those school musicals, however, did come with some frustrations.
“We were so desperate to do West End and Broadway shows and here we were doing school musicals, they were awful but a lot of fun.”
Zara’s talent was obvious to the school’s music tutors and hers was a regular name on the programme for musical performances, prizegivings and public events.
Through her college years Zara had huge support from teachers Robert Aburn, Ann Robinson and Christchurch tutor Mary Adams-Taylor.
After her brief flirtation with a career in the police, there was never any doubt in Zara’s mind that her career lay with music.
“My worry, however, was how my mother could ever afford for this to happen,” she said.
With college wrapped up she auditioned for music programmes at both Victoria and Otago universities, was accepted for both, but the lure of a brand new music department saw her head north for what would prove to be a several-year stint as a student.
“I was terrified when I started. The minimum requirement to be accepted was grade eight in an instrument and theory. My instrument was my voice and
I was studying with students who were very strong in this discipline, but this just made me want to try harder.”
The world of academia proved difficult to leave. Zara completed a three-year under-graduate degree, stayed on to do honours and still couldn’t leave, remaining in the cloistered student world to complete her masters.
“I felt I was still not savvy enough to leave life in an institution.”
Remaining part of the student corp meant Zara was able to secure some major roles in university productions and gain valuable exposure.
“We had so much fun. We were in our 20s and still had no real idea, but it eventually got to the point – a bit like coming to the end of school where you know that time is up and it’s time to go.”
Leaving university was a giant step towards becoming a “responsible” adult, she said, the second was marrying violinist Carlo Ballara.
“He found me really. He was in the pit and I was on the stage and he decided he was going to marry me, it seems I had no choice.”
The couple married and moved to London, a move that would set Zara’s career on fire.
“But we left on a one-way ticket. We knew ourselves so well, we knew if we’d had a return ticket we’d have come back,” she said.
Zara was accepted by the Guildhall School of Music and Drama and represented the school at several international events. She also appeared in many master classes and won sought-after roles in a number of operas.
During her two years at Guildhall, Zara studied several languages, and in 2000 she won the prestigious Maggie Teyte prize and performed a solo recital at the Royal Opera House.
She made her debut at Wigmore Hall, London in 2002 and performed in companies and as a soloist throughout the United Kingdom.
“I was singing so much and I was surrounded by singers. It was wonderful, a time when you said ‘yes’, to every opportunity,” she said.
The world of music was at Zara’s feet but she admits that as a couple they realised it might be time to grow up, put roots down. It was time to start a family.
“The boys came along and it was an excuse not to sing anymore. I was rash, I said, ‘I’ll never sing again, it’s a young person’s game’.”
As their boys grew, Zara and Carlos started to think about the kind of upbringing they wanted for their children. That wasn’t in London. They wanted their boys to experience their growing years surrounded by extended family and in a simpler environment.
Returning to New Zealand four years ago meant Zara was turning her back on the opportunities she had worked so hard to create in London, but she wanted to be able to enjoy music without pressure.
Today she is an itinerant music teacher at Medbury School in Christchurch and as head of voice at Canterbury University tutors in performance music.
She’s part of a wave of new, younger tutors who have returned from overseas with fresh, new ideas and that creates an exciting and stimulating environment in which to work – or be a student, Zara said.
“I’m now doing what I want and with no pressure. It’s a mentorship role now and for students it’s great, they get to work with professionals and they get to have fun. I love teaching. I guess it’s part of getting back into performing, I keep making demands on my students; I’m putting their shoes on again.”
For some singers, time is an enemy, for others a friend and Zara says time has been kind to her voice, she’s lucky she is still able to sing, but she no longer takes lessons.
“I should have a teacher. I can hear in my students things I want to fix and I can tell them how to fix it, but I should have that too,” she said.
Her work is not just with talented singers, Zara admits she gains huge satisfaction from working with students who just want to improve their singing, not build a career.
“I’m very lucky to be able to do both, having high pressure university all the time would be too intense.”
While opera is her genre, Zara describes herself as a closet pop singer. “I’d listen to pop concerts by choice.”
That dream might be lived by son Luca. He has a good voice but claims he doesn’t want to do mum’s kind of singing, he wants to be a rock star.
Zara says she looks at her boys, at the way they’ve grown as people since their return to New Zealand and knows the decision to come home was the right one.
“I always wanted my children to enjoy their grandparents because my nana was an important part of my life; she was significant in defining who I am. I look at my boys though and realise I’m getting older, I’m 43 and in denial.”
And in spite of vowing when Luca and Matteo were born that her singing days were over, she does sing, likes to prove to herself that her talent is still alive.
She was on stage in Ashburton recently as guest artist in a fundraising concert for the Ashburton College Phoenix Chorus for its trip to the Gold Coast to participate in the finals of the Glee! Competition.
The lure of being part of her old chorus was too strong to resist, Zara said, but she admits that before stepping out on stage she was nervous.
She has her own way of dealing with nerves. “I always think about the treat I’m going to get when the singing is over and it’s always a burger, it doesn’t matter which kind.”
Zara might have reached the point of comfort in her career, but says she still has goals to achieve.
The next one is likely to be working towards a doctorate.
“It’ll be a long-winded thing, I’m not stopping working to do it. I’m in a really good place in my life. I’ve worked really hard and I didn’t know I wanted to be here until I came back for the boys; it was divine intervention.”
© The Ashburton Guardian
After returning from the 2018 World Multisport Championships with two silver medals around his neck, Matthew Clough is aiming to go one better in 2019, twice.
Clough headed to Spain earlier this week to get ready to race in the event’s aquathlon on April 30 and cross triathlon on May 2, and with it being the final year the 18-year-old is eligible to race as an under-20, he’s got high hopes.
Finishing second in both last year means he’s motivated and driven to go for gold this year, although he knows that anything can happen come race day.
“It all comes down to that one day and that one race,” Clough said.
“Everyone over there wants to win, it’s just a matter of who wants it more on the day.”
And Clough knows what he’s talking about. It’s the fourth time he’s boarded a plane bound for the World Multisport Championships, but his build-up to the 2019 event has been a lot different to any of the others.
He’s no longer living at home with mum and dad in Ashburton. Having finished his schooling at Ashburton College at the end of last year, Clough now resides in Dunedin where he’s studying towards a B.Com. It’s a three year degree, but he’s hoping to add further study on to the end of it.
Balancing study and classes with training and student life isn’t easy, but Clough quickly found his groove and has been enjoying getting out and about on both bike and foot in a much different training environment than what he’d grown up with.
“I’m missing out on student life a bit, but I don’t mind with the bigger picture in mind,” Clough said.
He knows how important his study is and with that in mind, said the races in Spain will be his last for the year. For the rest of 2019 he wants to focus on his studies, but will keep up his training because he’s planning on starting 2020 with his second shot at the Coast to Coast.
Clough first tackled the Coast to Coast two-day event in 2018 and was the first schoolboy home, and second overall, and it’s the two-day event he’s eyeing up again in 2020.
That’s a few months off yet though, and for now his sights are firmly set where they should be – on the job at hand in Spain.
An aquathlon consists of a 1km swim followed by a 5km run, while the cross triathlon is effectively an off-road triathlon made up of a 1km swim, a 30km bike ride and an 8km off-road run.
The main difference racing in Spain offered was that the swim leg will take place in a river, where the water temperature is currently around 15 degrees Celsius, Clough said.
Racing will take place in the north-west of Spain, near Portugal, in Pontevedra, and although it’s a long way from home there will be plenty of people cheering Clough on from the sidelines.
He has his parents, his sisters, and his grandparents in Spain to support him in what could be his final shot at the world multisport championship title.
Clough said he has no idea what the future holds for him. He’s a multisporter who’s tried a few different racing formats over the years – earlier this month he raced in the New Zealand Xterra Championships in Rotorua where he came third.
Whether it’s triathlons, aquathlons, cross tris, ironmans or longer endurance events like the Coast to Coast, Clough doesn’t know which path his future will take. He said he likes trying new things, so where his name will pop up in years to come is anyone’s guess.
Erin Tasker © The Ashburton Guardian - 25 April 2019
It may have been early season, but the scoring didn’t reflect it when entrants lined up for a shot at the Target Shooting Mid Canterbury Open Championship title at the weekend.
It was the opening weekend on the South Island calendar for open championships, and Target Shooting Mid Canterbury’s was the first to go on the line on Friday night and Saturday, with competitors from as far away as Nelson and Invercargill converging on the Coronation Target Shooting Club range for the event.
The master grade competition was lit up with five 200s scored, and 13 100s across the entire field, with a young Ashburton shooter coming out on top. Shania Harrison-Lee from the Phoenix Target Shooting Club, in her first master grade outing, produced two 200s and won with a score of 399.33.
In second was Rachel McLaren from the Wood Club in Nelson who also got a 200 on her way to 398.25 while Coronation’s Steve McArthur was third on 396.26, with two 200s.
A grade was won by Graham Hunter (Collegiate Club, Invercargill) on 392.20 at his second home of Coronation, while B grade was won by Paul Holland (Richmond Club, Nelson) with 393.19 from Coronation’s own Colin Taylor with 388.14. Coronation’s Bill Rankin was third with 385.12.
C grade was won by Holly Gibbons (Wakefield, Nelson) with 282.9, with Phoenix’s Andrew McKenzie second with 278.6 and Brendan Cleave (Gore) third on 277.6. D grade was won by Coronation’s Charlotte McKenzie with an excellent score of 288.11.
After all grades were shot the top 10 qualifiers came together for a competition, with Harrison-Lee also taking out the M, A and B grade top 10 with 200.14, while the C and D top 10 was won by Gibbons with 193.04.
On Sunday attention turned to the inaugural Phoenix Target Shooting Club Open Championships, and once again it was a mighty battle in the master grade, with McArthur coming out on top in that one with a score of 299.90, beating out Harrison-Lee who finished with a score of 297.20.
In A grade Katherine Butt (Richmond Club, Nelson) took a well-deserved win with with a total of 296.20, narrowly beating Phoenix president TJ Stewart who finished with 100.7 for 296.14, with Tony Black from the Balclutha Club in third with 296.14.
Holland took out the B grade again with a sound 294.13, again beating out Taylor (293.18), with Peter Boerlage (West Eyreton) third with 291.14.
C grade was won by Samantha Whitcombe (Paparua, Christchurch) with 286.10 and D grade was won again by Coronation’s Charlotte McKenzie, with the first-time entrant scoring 293.07.
Another promising local youngster, Maddison Tourle from Phoenix, also had great day and finished with a great result of 258.05.
The open top 10 was taken out by Coronation’s Sandy Bennett with 199.11 and the B, C, D top 10 was taken by Faron Holland (Richmond) with 195.10.
The overall top shot for the entire weekend was Harrison-Lee (Phoenix) who, at only 16 was an exciting prospect in the sport, while the top B, C, D shooter for the weekend was Paul Holland from Nelson, while 13-year-old Coronation shooter Charlotte McKenzie was the runner-up, a big honour which cemented her as one to watch.
Target Shooting Mid Canterbury president Nina McKenzie said the weekend was a huge success and it was great to see the team work among members of the Mid Canterbury target shooting family to make sure both events ran smoothly.
She said it was great that so many people came from so far away to take part.
Erin Tasker © The Ashburton Guardian - 24 April 2019