'Reconciliation… or revenge?
'Somewhere in the Australian bush, mild-mannered archaeologist Dr Jacqueline Black is conducting a survey on a site intended for the new factory of a shadowy corporation. She’s under pressure to provide the all-clear, but when her dig uncovers a mass grave, she picks up a skull and is immediately over-powered by the spirit of her Aboriginal great-great-grandmother. Blackie Blackie Brown, cold-blooded vigilante, is born.
'In a no-holds-barred gore-fest, she’s going to kill all the descendants of the men who massacred her ancestors. White people, watch out. You could be one of them.
'Paying homage to blaxploitation movies, Blackie Blackie Brown features the work of Barkindji, Birri-Gubba illustrator Emily Johnson and animations by visual effects whiz-kids Oh Yeah Wow. Nakkiah Lui’s script matches perfectly the lo-fi, hi-camp style of director Declan Greene (Sisters Grimm’s Calpurnia Descending).
'With break-out newcomer Megan Wilding in the title role, and the ever-hilarious Ash Flanders playing every white person she needs to kill, this two-hander is a wild ride that will have you laughing out loud while squirming in your seat.
'All in all, it’s precisely the violent and uncompromising take-down that our country’s genocidal history had coming.'
Source: STC.
Additional Awards:
Sydney Theatre Awards:
Best Lighting Design of a Mainstage Production (winner, 2018).
Green Room Awards:
Set and Costume Design (winner, 2019).
Composition (nominated, 2019).
Helpmann Awards:
Best Male Actor in a Supporting Role (nominated, 2019).
World premiere, Sydney Theatre Company (Wharf 2 Theatre, 12 May - 30 June 2018).
Director: Declan Greene.
Designer: Elizabeth Gadsby.
Animation: Oh Yeah Wow.
Lighting & AV Designer: Verity Hampson.
Concept Artist: Emily Johnson.
With Ash Flanders, Megan Wilding.
Illustration: Emily Johnson.
Subsequently performed as part of Malthouse Theatre's 2018 season, 5-29 July 2018, with the same cast and crew.
Revived for the 2019 Malthouse Theatre season, 29 August - 8 September 2019.
'I would like to acknowledge the Boomwurung and Wurundjeri people of the Kulin Nation, and pay respect to their elders, past and present, and extend that respect to other Aboriginal people here today.
'I would also like to acknowledge the ancestral stories of our people which we safeguard in the world’s oldest library – the land, seas, skies and atmosphere of this country.
'It is a great honor and privilege to give the 2018 Stephen Murray-Smith Memorial Lecture. One small thing that I have in common with Stephen Murray-Smith is that I also came from a home that was bookless, but even so, I would not have traded a childhood that was enriched every day by the oral storytelling culture of my family and our people. Now I live more than a thousand miles from my home in this beautiful city of literature. I read that Stephen Murray-Smith had unswerving principles about the things he believed in, and I am sometimes like this too.' (Introduction)
'"Your white meat is DONE, motherf***er!" The words, growled by an unseen protagonist, echo around Sydney Theatre Company's Wharf 2 theatre.'
'Lui has been criticised by Quadrant and News Corp. Would this have been the case if she wasn’t black?'
'Not your everyday superhero story, Nakkiah Lui’s satirical revenge comedy takes on colonisation with unexpected consequences.'
'"Your white meat is DONE, motherf***er!" The words, growled by an unseen protagonist, echo around Sydney Theatre Company's Wharf 2 theatre.'
'I would like to acknowledge the Boomwurung and Wurundjeri people of the Kulin Nation, and pay respect to their elders, past and present, and extend that respect to other Aboriginal people here today.
'I would also like to acknowledge the ancestral stories of our people which we safeguard in the world’s oldest library – the land, seas, skies and atmosphere of this country.
'It is a great honor and privilege to give the 2018 Stephen Murray-Smith Memorial Lecture. One small thing that I have in common with Stephen Murray-Smith is that I also came from a home that was bookless, but even so, I would not have traded a childhood that was enriched every day by the oral storytelling culture of my family and our people. Now I live more than a thousand miles from my home in this beautiful city of literature. I read that Stephen Murray-Smith had unswerving principles about the things he believed in, and I am sometimes like this too.' (Introduction)