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A Review by Deborah Searle
Bangara Dance Theatre's True
Stories was a double bill inspired by two diverse indigenous
cultures and created by two unique indigenous choreographers.
Emeret Lu, indigenous for
'Very Old Things' was the choreographic work of Elma Kris.
Elma Kris was raised on Thursday Island in the Torres Strait
and used Emeret Lu to portray her people's love of
the land, the sea and each other. A work strong in imagery
and with simple themes, it was easy to understand and enjoyable
to watch. Guest Artist Smilar Sinak started the performance,
alone on a lit stage. Then dances presenting the hunt, harvest,
gathering, rain, wind, desire and pleasure filled the stage
throughout the program.
A dance titled 'Hunters' which
featured the full ensemble of dancers was interesting and
theatrically strong as the dancers used 'catcher' props. The
choreography and energetic dancing built a powerful atmosphere.
It made me feel as though I was actually in the Australian
Outback, at an Indigenous dwelling, watching from behind a
large rock or tree, being given a special and intimate peak
into the culture and life of our land's people. Following
this dance was my personal favourite, 'Harvesting', performed
by the female dancers of the company. It was a soft lyrical
piece and a great contrast to the bold, dynamic movements
of the previous dance. The music was engaging and the dancers
moved to meld themselves with the music and the theme, with
a flowing, and inspiring dance.
Emeret Lu featured a pas
de deux by talented dancers Jasmin Sheppard and Waangenga
Blanco, suitably titled 'Trance'. Jasmin danced as if she
was in a trance, bound by Waangenga, as he used a blue cloth
to wrap around her body and make interesting pictures. It
wasn't the usual loving pas de deux that we are so accustomed
to, it was more animal like and instinctual, but it was powerful,
clever and still intimate.
A sit down dance - 'Keriba Kolap
Segur' featuring the full ensemble, was fun and lighthearted,
as the dancers gathered to sing, slap their knees and play
with a spinning top. This portrayed the fun side to the Torres
Strait Islander people, as well as their strong sense of community
and love for each other.
Emeret Lu, although simple
in theme and idea, really was interesting and entertaining
for a varied audience. I must have been enjoying it, as I
was disappointed when it seemed to end quickly.
X300 on the other hand was
confronting, depressing and heavy. Choreographed by renowned
and very talented choreographer Frances Rings, X300
was based on the 1950's Atomic experiments conducted on Maralinga
Tjarutja traditional lands.
The work made clear to the audience
that the so called 'safe' explosions were actually devastating.
They caused contamination to desert assumed vacant and poisoned
the people. The work asked two very important questions. What
are we doing to our land? And most importantly, what are we
doing to our people?
The first piece 'Waterhole' was
a work of outstanding choreography. My eyes were fixed on
the dancers as they lay squashed together on top of each other,
with their feet to the audience, moving mostly only their
lower legs and feet for several minutes. A piece then began
titled '50's' which was fun and carefree, set in a dance scene
with 50's costumes and party dancing. This dance showed how
naive and carefree the people where, with little understanding
of what their decisions/government decisions were doing to
the Indigenous people.
'Guinea Pig' was a scary and harsh
choreographic work, stared by Sidney Slatner. It turned Sidney
into a freaky science experiment as he portrayed the atomic
tests on the land with his body. The movement was thought
provoking and powerful, and the green lights made one feel
sick just watching it. A voice over, playing radio broadcasts
from the time repeated: 'The atomic explosions will be conducted
out at Maralinga where the winds will blow the radiation out
into central Australia where NO ONE LIVES!' This was powerful
and hard hitting, as I began to realize just what these so
called 'harmless tests' actually did to the Indigenous people
of central Australia.
The radio broadcast was followed
by an engaging pas de deux by outstanding dancers Deborah
Brown and Waangenga Blanco who danced and weaved amongst the
radiation portrayed by beams of green light. This piece was
the stand out dance of True Stories as the choreography
was so beautiful, yet intense and heartbreaking at the same
time.
Many dances followed this, which
were performed well and technically strong, but I found my
heart left the stage when Deborah Brown and Waangenga Blanco
did, as their pas de deux was so astounding. I think the work
could have very successfully ended then and the message would
have 'hit home'. However, a large group piece finished the
work, after three other dances, which included interesting
partner work and did ultimately end X300 on a high
note.
Altogether True Stories
was a performance of contrasts and conviction that I really
enjoyed and respected.
To watch some video footage of
True Stories Click
here
Banagara will peform their next
work Clan regionally throughout October to December:
Clan Tour Dates:
Mt Gambier 5 Oct - 6 Oct
Launceston 10 Oct - 13 Oct
Shepparton 17 Oct - 19 Oct
Dandenong 22 Oct - 23 Oct
Sale 25 Oct - 26 Oct
Warragul 29 Oct - 30 Oct
Albury 1 Nov - 3 Nov
Wagga Wagga 6 Nov - 7 Nov
Orange 9 Nov - 10 Nov
To read about Clan Click
Here
Visit www.bangarra.com.au
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