RØDE Microphone founder Peter Freedman makes $5 million donation to Sydney Festival

RØDE Founder and Chairman Peter Freedman has made an unprecedented $5 million donation to the Sydney Festival as part of a renewed commitment as principal philanthropic partner of the event.

Freedman has been the principal philanthropic partner of the Sydney Festival since 2013, contributing a significant amount of funds across the seven years. In 2016, he received the Order of Australia, awarded for his services to business, manufacturing and export, and his philanthropic support for cultural events, including the Sydney Festival.

“I am extremely proud to continue my support of Australian arts and culture with this donation to the Sydney Festival,” says Freedman. “Our artistic communities need assistance now more than ever. The creative arts are at the mercy of this pandemic, more so than any other industry, and the past 12 months have highlighted just how fragile the industry is.”

The $5 million donation is the largest singular philanthropic contribution to the Sydney Festival in its history and will play a pivotal role in its continued success in 2021 and beyond.

“Mr Freedman’s generous philanthropic gift will do much to rescue the state of our arts industry after the immense disruption COVID has caused,” according to Olivia Ansell, Incoming Sydney Festival Director.

Peter Freedman has long been an advocate for the Sydney Festival and “strongly believe it is one of the world’s most important cultural events and most certainly Australia’s. The Festival has supported thousands of creative artists and behind-the-scenes workers in the industry. These are the people who have supported my career with RØDE, and this is my way of giving back to them.”

Freedman’s donation follows several philanthropic ventures in recent years, including the funding of the RØDE House, a live performance venue within the Momentary, a new contemporary arts space in Bentonville, Arkansas, which was opened to showcase Australian arts in the US. In 2020, Mr Freedman purchased Kurt Cobain’s iconic ‘MTV Unplugged’ acoustic guitar for a world record-breaking A$9 million to help spotlight the plight of the world’s performing artists. Plans to tour the guitar around the world to raise funds and awareness for struggling artists through a new philanthropic foundation are currently underway. 

 Freedman Electronics began in 1967 when Henry and Astrid Freedman opened shop after migrating to Australia from Sweden. Their son Henry began as a sound mixer, sitting behind the desk mixing a young Tom Jones during his 1968 tour of Australia. In the 1990s, Henry’s son Peter Freedman and RØDE began creating the infrastructure to design, build and manufacture microphones in Australia.

 

 


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