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Two people are standing on a stage in front of a projector, they appear to be singing into two microphones. One person is wearing a blue patterned shirt and holding a globe of the earth. The person next to them is holding a drum in a yellow patterned shirt.

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Two people are standing on a stage in front of a projector, they appear to be singing into two microphones. One person is wearing a blue patterned shirt and holding a globe of the earth. The person next to them is holding a drum in a yellow patterned shirt.

ALEX PROCOPIS

MEET AUSTRALIA’S FIRST ELEPHANT WHISPERER

In 2016, eighteen-year-old Alexander Procopis swept the floor, winning the $10,000 Access Arts Achievement Award against stiff competition from across Queensland.

Alexander is non-verbal and cannot speak. But when multitalented Zimbabwean musician Tichawona Noble Mashawa heard Alexander sing for the first time he was amazed and said: “If he would have been brought up in Zimbabwe, he’d have been chosen as a potential elephant whisperer.”

This Award will enable Alexander from Clontarf to work with Tichawona and develop a 12-minute ‘elephant whispering’ symphony and video that will include singing to the elephants at Taronga Park Zoo in Sydney.

Pat Swell, CEO of Access Arts, said, “This is a unique artistic project without equal world-wide. We hope this will bring Alexander’s amazing vocal ability to a wide audience.”