For Paralympian Rhiannon Clarke, the Variety Heart Scholarship came at a pivotal moment in her journey.
There is a quiet but persistent truth that underpins almost every success story, while talent may be evenly distributed, opportunity rarely is. For many young Australians, particularly those navigating disability, long-term illness or financial hardship, the gap between potential and achievement is not defined by ambition or effort, but by access to the resources, support and belief required to take the next step.
It is within this space that the Variety Heart Scholarship has emerged as one of Western Australia’s most quietly transformative initiatives, not simply by recognising talent, but by ensuring it is not lost to circumstance.
Designed to support children and young people already demonstrating commitment and ability in sport, the arts or education, the scholarship is intentionally focused on those progressing beyond early participation, where the demands both financial and practical begin to intensify. It is often at this critical juncture that promising journeys falter, not because talent diminishes, but because the pathway forward becomes increasingly difficult to access.
The transition from participation to performance requires more than passion; it demands specialised coaching, high-quality equipment, travel, competition fees and the kind of consistent support that allows young people to fully immerse themselves in their craft. For families already managing additional challenges, these costs can quickly become prohibitive, creating an invisible barrier that limits progress before potential is fully realised.
By offering scholarships of up to $4,000 funding that can be directed toward coaching, training, equipment, uniforms, performance gear or competition costs Variety WA intervenes at precisely the moment it matters most. This is not a symbolic gesture, but a practical and targeted investment that enables recipients to continue their journey with the resources required to perform at a higher level.
For Western Australian Paralympian Rhiannon Clarke, that intervention proved pivotal.
Diagnosed with cerebral palsy at a young age, Clarke had already shown extraordinary promise, rising rapidly through the ranks of para-athletics and becoming the youngest athlete from any country to win a Commonwealth Games medal at just 15. Yet, like many para-athletes, her progression was shaped not only by her ability, but by the realities of access.
Receiving the Variety Heart Scholarship in 2019 came at a defining moment in her career. “Access to training was hard,” Clarke has said, reflecting on that period. The scholarship enabled her to purchase essential equipment, including running spikes, and to work with coaches who could refine her performance at an elite level.
“It had a big impact in helping me achieve my goals,” she explains.
Beyond the practical benefits, the scholarship also provided something less measurable but equally significant: belief. “It gave me a lot more confidence,” Clarke has said. “It showed me that others believed in me.”
That belief is central to the program’s impact. In environments where representation is limited and pathways can feel uncertain, particularly for young people living with disability, being recognised as someone worth investing in can fundamentally shift how a young person sees their future.
Clarke herself has spoken candidly about this shift in perspective. “Growing up, I never thought my job would be running,” she said. “I want to give others the opportunity to be able to chase their dreams.”
Today, she is not only a Paralympian who has represented Australia on the world stage in both Tokyo and Paris, but also a Variety ambassador, using her platform to encourage young people with disability to pursue sport and believe in their potential. Her journey has come full circle, having also sat on scholarship selection panels, helping to identify the next generation of recipients.
Her story is compelling, but it is not unique. Across Western Australia, there are young people whose trajectories are being reshaped through this program , athletes achieving personal bests, artists accessing opportunities previously out of reach, and students progressing in ways that might not have been possible without support.
At its core, the Variety Heart Scholarship is grounded in a simple but powerful principle: that all children deserve access to the same opportunities, and that no young person’s potential should be limited by factors beyond their control. It recognises that while talent may emerge in any environment, the ability to nurture and develop that talent often depends on resources that are not equally available to all.
By addressing this imbalance, the program does more than support individual recipients, it contributes to a more inclusive and representative pipeline of emerging talent, one that reflects the diversity of the community it serves. Over time, this creates a ripple effect, with scholarship recipients not only achieving personal success but also returning as role models, mentors and advocates who inspire others to follow similar paths.
As Clarke notes, the impact extends far beyond the individual. “It can really push athletes and artists forward to achieve their goals,” she says. “A lot of the limitations are access, and this scholarship provides that.”
The true measure of a program like this is not found solely in medals, performances or accolades, but in the number of young people who are able to continue their journey when it might otherwise have ended and in the futures that are unlocked when they are simply given the chance to begin.


