Ayesha Madon showed off her dance moves as she performed at The Lord Gladstone pub for SXSW Sydney Music Festival on Wednesday night.
The Heartbreak High star, 26, best known for her role as Amerie Wadia in the Netflix hit, showed off her talents as a singer as well as an actress at the busy gig.
She showed off her dancing skills as she appeared to be having the time of her life while busting a move on stage and belting out her songs for the crowds.
Ayesha showed off her incredible figure in a white cropped T-shirt with ‘Demure’ printed across it, which she styled with a tiny grey bubble hem skirt.
She completed her edgy ensemble with a pair of knee-high black chunky boots and showed off her stunning features with a natural make-up palette.
Ayesha was joined on stage by a band as she debuted her impressive singing skills while belting out some melodic tones for pubgoers at the Chippendale venue.
Her show came as part of SXSW Sydney, which shows off the talents of professionals across film, music and media at a whole host of events around the city.
The 2024 arts festival is taking place from October 14 until October 20, and will see Ayesha perform at another gig at The Underground Sydney on Friday night.
Ayesha Madon showed off her dance moves as she performed at The Lord Gladstone pub for SXSW Sydney Music Festival on Wednesday night
The Heartbreak High star, 26, best known for her role as Amerie Wadia in the Netflix hit, showed off her talents as a singer as well as an actress at the busy gig
It is not the first time Ayesha has showed off her vocal talents as she released a new single Eulogy earlier this year, just weeks before the second series of Heartbreak High dropped on Netflix.
She has since released another follow-up track called Blame Me and plans to drop a third single before the year is over.
The Sydney-born star first pursued her passion for singing back in 2020 when she released her debut single Outside Of The Party, before finding fame as an actress.
She originally questioned whether she should give up her passion for music when she first launched her acting career with Heartbreak High.
‘There was a point, maybe a few years ago, where I felt like I was kind of becoming a jack-of-all-trades and a master of none,’ she told Broadsheet.
‘I think songwriting and acting actually flex a lot of the same muscles in terms of that creative flow and locking into that kind of focus.
She showed off her dancing skills as she appeared to be having the time of her life while busting a move on stage and belting out her songs for the crowds
Ayesha showed off her incredible figure in a white cropped T-shirt with ‘Demure’ printed across it, which she styled with a tiny grey bubble hem skirt
She completed her edgy ensemble with a pair of knee-high black chunky boots and showed off her stunning features with a natural make-up palette
Ayesha was joined on stage by a band as she debuted her impressive singing skills while belting out some melodic tones for pubgoers at the Chippendale venue
‘When I’m doing good songwriting work, it feels exactly the same as when I’m doing good acting work.’
Elsewhere, Ayesha recently came out as bisexual in a tell-all interview about her sexuality.
Speaking to the Gay Times in July, Ayesha revealed she only accepted she was bisexual a few years ago and revealed her first kiss was with a girl.
‘I’ve actually never spoken about my sexuality before in anything, so this is pretty new. I only properly admitted, out loud, that I was bisexual two or three years ago,’ she told the publication.
‘It feels recent. It’s pretty interesting watching myself be attracted to [girls]. My first kiss was with a girl.’
It is not the first time Ayesha has showed off her vocal talents as she released her first single back in 2020 and also unveiled two new songs, called Eulogy and Blame Me, this year
The actress shot to fame in 2022 when she took on the brash leading lady role as Amerie Wadia (pictured) in the smash hit Heartbreak High reboot
She went on to explain that she was 11 and in acting class when she had her first kiss with a girl called Louise, who she ‘had the biggest crush on’.
Ayesha recalled her crush was chewing on gum when she pretended she wanted to ‘try the gum’ as an excuse to share an ‘amazing’ kiss with her.
Despite having several experiences ‘liking’ other girls, Ayesha said heteronormativity and comphet [compulsory heterosexuality] culture made it difficult for her to understand her own feelings.
‘When I was growing up, I felt myself being conditioned or gaslighted into thinking that I was straight,’ she admitted.