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| Julia Bullock in Perle Noir: Meditations for Josephine Photo by Andre Beveridge |
Perle Noir: Meditations for Josephine.
Directed by Peter Sellars. Composer and Piano/Percussion Tyshawn
Sorey. Texts Claudia Rankine. Performed
by singer Julia Bullock and Tyshawn Sorey and the International Contemporary
Society – Violin Jennifer Curtis. Guitar Dan Lippel. Flute Alice Teyssier. Bassoon Rebekah Heller. Saxophone Travis
Laplante. Lighting Designer James F Ingalls. Sound Designer Jody Elff. Movement
Director Michael Schuhmacher. Costume Designer Carlos Soto. Stage Manager Betsy
Ayer. Assistant Stage Manager Pamela Salling. Her Majesty’s Theatre. Adelaide
Festival. Sunday March 1 – Wednesday March 4 2026.
Reviewed by Peter Wilkins
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| Daniel Lippel on guitar. Tyshawn Sorey on percussion, Jennifer Curtis on violin. Photo by Andrew Beveridge |
Many recognize Josephine Baker as “the woman who danced in a banana skirt” Peter Sellars’ production of Perle Noir: Meditations for Josephine shows us that there is so much more to the exoticized dancer. Her story is told through the brilliant performance of soprano Julia Bullock, supported on stage by composer Tyshawn Sorey and the International Contemporary Ensemble. Writer Claudia Rankine presents a series of monologues tracing Baker’s life and spoken by Bullock from a platform at the top of a flight of stairs or on the floor amongst the musicians. Sellar’s production is part homage, part cabaret and part jazz club. For almost two hours without an interval, Bullock fully embraces the spirit of the “Black Pearl” of the Paris stage. There is no attempt to impersonate Baker. She is instead the personification of Baker’s life and experience. Rankine’s text is a poetic retelling of Baker’s story through Bullock. There is the soulful spirit of longing in Bullock’s haunting renditions of Baker’s desire to escape the prejudice and oppression of Jim Crow America. There is the fury at the lack of compassion and feeling of entrapment. And there is the defiance at the stereotyping of the savage upon the Paris stage as she seeks out dignity and reality in real life.
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| Alice Teyssier on flute. Rebekah Heller on Bassoon. Travis Laplante on saxophone. Photo by Andrew Beveridge |
On stage, Baker’s life
experience, spoken and sung so powerfully by Bullock, is accompanied by Rebekah
Heller on bassoon, Alice Teyssier on flute, Jennifer Curtis on violin and
Daniel Lippel on guitar and Tyshawn Sorey on piano and percussion. Experience
and emotion merge in a fusion of disparate periods of Baker’s extraordinary
life. Bullock’s aching rendition of Bye Bye Blackbird recounts her
desire to esape. Bluebird urges her to run. At times Sorey’s percussive score
reaches a crescendo that jolts the audience out of their complacency.
Rankine’s text suggests a complex being, both powerful and powerless. “I understand that I am a package that’s been ripped open and devoured like a box of chocolates.” Baker knows that “I am the instrument that I must care for” Rankine presents a woman, married at 14, growing up as a black woman in America and yet with the strength to escape and forge a career as a successful and highly paid performer. Rankine presents a less familiar side to the woman in the banana skirt – the founder of the Rainbow Tribe of multicultural adopted children because she could have no children of her own, an honorary wartime correspondent, a spy, a leading figure in the American Civil Rights movement alongside Martin Luther King Jr. and an awardee of the Legion of Honour. This is the story of adversity, confronted and turned to advantage. It is the story of drama. Perle Noire: Meditations for Josephine holds a mirror up to a woman of many parts, complex and insecure, determined and resilient, intelligent and vulnerable, successful in life and unsuccessful in love.
Peter Sellars’ direction is subtle, evoking the spirit of Josephine Baker like a medium summoning a soul to reveal the woman behind the stereotype. One senses in Bullock’s portrayal of Baker her battle to overcome the emptiness behind the mask, the self-deprecation and the pain. On the platform and bathed in James F Ingall’s muted lighting Bullock recreates the iconic danse sauvage, faithfully choreographed by Michael Schumacher. Even here there is the urge to escape. Sellars guides the action gently, breathing intensity and meaning into every moment. He is assisted by the musicians, phenomenally sensing the mood and Bullock’s emotional response to Rankine’s text. Towards the end of the performance, Bullock appears to lie lifeless upon the floor with the musicians offering a reverent eulogy. It is a requiem to a complex and complicated woman, the like of whom we will not see again.
As the lights slowly fade on Bullock against the projected words of Baker’s expressed desire to live a life of happiness, the audience sits in a stunned silence, as though transfixed by shattered expectation. In Perle Noir- Meditations for Jospehine we are left to meditate on our responses to a production that fractures the stereotype. We are exposed to the darkness behind the mask, brilliantly lured into disturbing reality. Rankine’s text presents a woman battling her demons as well as the adored cabaret performer, two faces of the mask. Sellars’ direction is masterly and deliberately manipulative, avoiding any sentimentality or illusion. We are directed to form our own judgement. Sorey’s composition, performed brilliantly by the International Contemporary Ensemble, is surprising in its spontaneous response to the many facets of Baker’s life. Bullock dominates the stage with a presence that appears destined to bring Baker’s life to the world and tell it as it is. Her vocal dexterity is phenomenal. Her presence magnetic. She is the perfect medium to bring the spirit of Josephine Baker to the stage.
Perle Noir – Meditations for Josephine
may not be to everybody’s taste, but the discerning connoisseur will be well
rewarded by the richness of this exceptional meditation on an amazing life.













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