Monique DiMattina | Australian Musical Creator: The Real Cost of Choosing an Artistic Life
Andrew G sits down with Monique DiMattina to unpack the journey of building a creative life across music, theatre, and storytelling—shaped not by a traditional pathway, but by persistence, curiosity, and a deep need to create. A highly versatile Australian musician and writer, Monique reflects on how her career evolved from performing and releasing albums to ultimately stepping into musical theatre as a space where all her artistic influences could finally coexist.
They explore the making of her new Australian musical Stella, based on the life of literary icon Miles Franklin. Monique shares how the project began almost accidentally, sparked by a conversation with her niece and a desire to spotlight overlooked Australian cultural figures. What started as a few songs gradually grew into a full production through workshops, performances, and collaborative momentum, eventually becoming a large-scale stage work exploring ambition, sacrifice, and legacy.
Monique opens up about the realities of becoming a professional artist, including years of feeling behind, struggling with technical confidence, and experiencing the deflating pressure of being surrounded by more advanced peers. She reflects on how her creative voice only began to fully emerge in her mid-thirties, after years of practice, experimentation, and slow development rather than overnight success.
The conversation also dives into her wide-ranging musical influences, from classical composers like Bach and Beethoven to film score legends like Ennio Morricone and John Williams, as well as singer-songwriters across multiple genres. She explains how musical theatre became the perfect format to combine these influences, allowing her to move freely across genres in service of storytelling rather than commercial constraints.
Andrew and Monique also discuss the challenges facing modern artists, particularly the pressure of social media, streaming culture, and constant online visibility. Monique reflects on how stepping back from digital noise has helped protect her creativity, and how live performance remains the most meaningful form of connection with audiences.
At its core, this episode is about creative resilience, artistic identity, and the long, often uncertain process of finding your voice. Through Monique’s journey with Stella, the conversation reveals how meaningful work is often built slowly over time—through rejection, experimentation, collaboration, and the willingness to keep showing up even when the path forward is unclear.