'Compelling contemporary dance, soul-stirring soundscapes and uniquely Australian stories – Bangarra is a company at the peak of its powers. In superb form after the sold-out season of Bennelong, we return in 2018 with a major new dance work, Dark Emu.
'Inspired by Bruce Pascoe’s award-winning book of the same name, Dark Emu explores the vital life force of flora and fauna in a series of dance stories directed by Stephen Page. With long-time Bangarra collaborators Steve Francis (music), Jacob Nash (sets) and Jennifer Irwin (costumes) bringing their impeccable aesthetic to the production, Dark Emu will satisfy your spirit and connect you to Country.' (Production summary)
Additional Awards:
2019 Helpmann Awards:
Waangenga Blanco (winner, best male dancer).
Jennifer Irwin (nominated, best costume design).
Steve Francis (nominated, best sound design).
Presented by Bangarra Dance Theatre. Performed at:
The Sydney Opera House 14 June -14 July 2018
Canberra Theatre Centre 26 - 28 July
State Theatre Centre of WA 2 - 5 August
QPAC 24 August - 1 September
Arts Centre Melbourne 6 - 15 September
Artistic Director: Stephen Page.
Choreographers: Stephen Page, Yolande Brown, Daniel Riley, and the dancers of Bangarra Dance Theatre.
Composer: Steve Francis.
Set Designer: Jacob Nash.
Costume Designer: Jennifer Irwin.
Dramaturg: Alana Valentine.
'First Bruce Pascoe spent years researching. The came Dark Emu, the book, published by Magabala, meticulously detailing from multiple sources the myriad ways Aboriginal people lived before Invasion and busting the simplistic hunter-gatherer and peaceful colonisation myths.'
'Bangarra Dance Theatre has been Australia’s premier Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander dance company for nearly thirty years. Although the company includes dancers from every language grouping, it collaborates with specific traditional owners, depending on the particular works they are creating. This attention to specificity is an important part of Bangarra’s recognition of the different groupings across the Australian mainland and islands, and the islands of the Torres Strait. Led by Artistic Director Stephen Page, Bangarra draws on techniques that include traditional Indigenous dance as well as contemporary world techniques. The company’s works include Praying Mantis Dreaming, Ochres, Skin, Corroboree, Unaipon, CLAN, Mathinna, and Bennelong.' (Introduction)
'His mother called it “whispering language”. She would whisper the words of their freshwater people to her children at night, because it was part of a forbidden culture. When the welfare people came, she hid these children beneath a stockman’s house. Storytelling would be the family gift passed on to these kids, and Roy Page, the youngest of eight, told tales that inspired three of his own sons to become famous performers and storytellers.' (Introduction)
'Lights come up on an orb receding back in space, an echo perhaps taking us back in time, or into the cosmos, into the dreaming to the Emu in the Sky. Dancers, in groupings of three or five, move stage right to left, undulating up from the ground and wavering like kangaroo grass.' (Introduction)
'Bangarra Theatre's Stephen Page was so inspired by Bruce Pascoe's non-fiction book Dark Emu hat he has created a dance show.'
'Inspired by Bruce Pascoe's award-winning book of the same name, Bangarra Dance Theatre's Dark Emu explores the vital life force of flora and fauna and challenges the 'hunter-gatherer' myth of pre-colonial Aboriginal Australians.'
'Bruce Pascoe and Stephen Page tell how a joking remark led to Bangarra’s latest production.'
'Lights come up on an orb receding back in space, an echo perhaps taking us back in time, or into the cosmos, into the dreaming to the Emu in the Sky. Dancers, in groupings of three or five, move stage right to left, undulating up from the ground and wavering like kangaroo grass.' (Introduction)
'His mother called it “whispering language”. She would whisper the words of their freshwater people to her children at night, because it was part of a forbidden culture. When the welfare people came, she hid these children beneath a stockman’s house. Storytelling would be the family gift passed on to these kids, and Roy Page, the youngest of eight, told tales that inspired three of his own sons to become famous performers and storytellers.' (Introduction)