Saturday, March 14, 2026

WHITEFELLA YELLA TREE ADELAIDE FESTIVAL 2026

 

Whitefella Yella Tree by Dylan Van Den Berg.

Directed by Declan Green and Andy Sole. Composer/sound designer Steve Toulmin. Designer Mason Browne. Associate composer and sound designer Daniel Herten.  Lighting co-designers Kelsey Lee and Kaite Sfetkidis. Andrea James Dramaturg. Bayley Turner Intimacy coordinator. Tyler Fitzpatrick Stage Manager.  The Space. Adelaide Festival Theatre Centre. Griffin Theatre Company. Adelaide Festival 2026

Actors Joseph Althouse and Danny Howard. Images by Brett Boardmann

Reviewed by Peter Wilkins

Danny Howard as Neddy. Joseph Althouse as Ty

 in Whitefella Yella Tree

 

During the past several years I have been fortunate enough to review a few of Palawa man Dylan Van Den Berg’s. plays. Van Den Berg is one of the most significant and dynamic voices on the Australian stage today. He writes with authority that commands attention, a mind that compels us to consider the issues faced by indigenous people in our country today and with a heart that evokes empathy and perhaps an undiscovered understanding of First Nations People, their history, their culture and the very special place they hold in this country’s history for over as many as sixty thousand years. It is a legacy and a contribution that lies at the very heart of Van Den Berg’s plays.

Two young aboriginal boys meet under a lemon tree. Neddy (Danny Howard) is a young rumbustious larrikin, a rough and tumble kid from the mountain mob. Ty is sensitive, uncertain and more knowledgable about the ways of his river mob. The boys form a friendship, at first playful and innocent but as the moons pass and the boys venture into adolescence, their attraction grows and blossoms into love with the messiness, awkwardness and surprise of that first cautious kiss. Van Den Berg gently makes Whitefella Yellow Tree a tender story about queer love between two young men from different mobs who discover in their love something deeper than the inno0cent games of their childhood.  The time is at the beginning of the nineteenth century and their world is changing. Across the river the threat of colonial invasion is becoming a reality and Van Den Berg powerfully leads his characters into a world that is dangerously destroying the age old culture and society of Neddy and Ty’s people.

It is not an unfamiliar story of stolen land, stolen people, massacres and subjection to the gun. It is the horrific reality of lost language, lost customs, lost pride and lost identity. However, Whitefella Yellow Tree is not a chronicle of a past era. When we meet Ty and Neddy, they are dressed in contemporary clothes. Their language is the idiom of our time. Van Den Berg sets the play in early colonial times, but the costuming and the dialogue are of our time. The past is no foreign country. It is the signpost to  present trauma, to homophobia and racism. It is a stark reminder that humanity is universal, whether black or white, straight or queer, rich or poor. It is a lesson learned by Ty at the knee of his Auntie or by Neddy from the Elders of the tribe.

Suddenly the lemons fall with a loud thud to the ground. It is a sour and bitter omen of the change that is descending on their people.  A loud explosion in composer/ sound designer Steve Toulmin and associate Damien Kermen’s sound design forecasts the peril that will force Ty and Neddy’s love apart. The whitefella invades Danny’s mob, killing his people and stealing his sister and he must leave Ty to rescue his sister. Moons pass and deep longing lingers, locked in the lovers’ separation. The last time we see Danny, still seeking for a sister he will never find is when he appears to warn Ty of the white man’s approach. He is dressed in the period costume of a soldier, or white man’s policeman. It is the final irony, the ultimate degradation of assimilation. In Van Den Berg’s heartbreaking depiction of cultural and social erosion, the wonderfully free and playfully mischievous young Neddy is diminished to a servant of the oppressive Master, stripped of identity, though still hopeful that his subjugation to the white man and their ways may lead to his sister’s rescue. Ty too is the diseased victim of the white man’s inhumanity, awating an undignified death.

Co-directors Declan Greene and Amy Sole fully understand Van Den Berg’s symbolism and metaphor in a work richly laid with allusory imagery. Co-lighting designers Kelsey Lee and Kaite Sfetkidis shift the mood swiftly on Mason Browne’s set. The lemon tree hangs as a symbol of the white man’s threat at times blasting light, dropping fruit and glowing ominously or simply suspended as the ever-present symbol of the fateful destiny of two young aboriginal men who innocently fell in love. Theirs is a tragic tale of a cruel past that echoes still through the attitudes and actions of our  time.

As Neddy and Ty, Althouse and Howard give flawless performances. We are enraptured by their childhood innocence, moved profoundly by their emerging love and horrified by their cruel fate. The final image of Neddy bent over the dying Ty to protect him from the inevitable violence of the approaching white men is a heartbreaking reminder of deeds still not requited and justice not fulfilled. Their performances make it impossible for an audience not to be moved if not to tears then to a deeper understanding of playwright Van Den Berg’s plea for understanding and compassion.

Van Den Berg is the playwright we need more than ever following the fate of the Voice and I urge everyone to see any one if not all of this amazing playwright’s works.

 

 

THE CHRONICLES ADELAIDE FESTIVAL 2026

 

 

THE CHRONICLES


Choreographer Stephanie Lake. Composer Robin Fox, Lighting Designer Bosco Shaw, Set Designer Charles Davis, Costume Designer Harriet Oxley,Dancers Max Burgess, Rachel Coulson, Tra Mi Dinh, Tyrel Dulvarie, Marni Green, Siobhan Lynch, Darci O’Rourke, Harrison Ritchie-Jones, Robert Tinning, Georgia Van Gils, Kimball Wong, Jack Ziesing. Solo Vocalist Oliver Mann. Children’s Choir (Adelaide Festival) Young Adelaide Voices. Conductor Christie Anderson. Child Soloist Ethan Lourie. Producer Beth Raywood Cross. Production Manager Lisa Osborn. Rehearsal Director and Bodywork Therapist Paea Leach. Associate Lighting Designer and Console Programmer Rhys Pottinger. Sound Engineer James Wilkinson. Stage Manager Rosie Osmond. Choir Consultant Renee Heron. Costume Makers Jo Foley, Fiona Holley, Emma Ikin, Kym Yeow. Financial Manager Bree Nurse. Additional Music: Ah Poor Bird (trad) – Arranged by Robin Fox. Forever Young (Alphaville). The Dunstan Playhouse. Adelaide Festival Centre. Adelaide Festival. March 12-15 2026.

Images Neil Bennett and Daniel Boud

Reviewed by Peter Wilkins

 

Stephanie Lake’s latest work for the Adelaide Festival attests to the extraordinary artistry of her choreography and the athleticism, grace and energy of her dancers.  The curtain rises slowly revealing a shaft of light and a black box that rises to reveal a foetal form upon the floor. Slowly the figure begins to unfurl, limb by limb, rising to reach towards the sky. The moment of birth is greeted with a forceful percussive beat and the company burst onto the stage. Life has begun.

 When composer of the electro acoustic score Robin Fox described The Chronicles as “from womb to tomb” Stephanie Lake completely agreed. The opening image of a human being emerging bit by bit from the womb to the final image of a figure being laid to eternal rest embraces with powerful resonance the cycle of life and the inevitability of our mortality, the inescapable end to a precious life. This is made even more moving by the introduction of the young Adelaide singers who in a soulful lament to the passing of time look forward with hope to a new tomorrow in the traditional song Ah Poor Bird. The lament comes full cycle at the end of the work as baritone Oliver Mann stands among the greenery at the rear of the stage to sing a song that longs to remain Forever Young. The irony is inescapable as a lone dancer gently lowers a companion to the ground and the box descends to the onset of eternal darkness.

 Bosco Shaw’s evocative lighting design complements Lake’s choreography. Dancers appear entrapped within squares of light across the stage. They struggle against Life’s challenges, their bodies tremoring against the confinement. At another time two shafts of light create a cross upon the floor as dancers surge towards the future intersecting and lurching towards the unknown. From the ensemble a solitary dancer moves into a spot or two dancers emerge mirroring each other in synchronized unison against the dimly lit background of ferns and bushes. Nature is always there as a constant in Life’s journey upon the stage.

 It is left to the audience to interpret the dance in terms of one’s individual life. Lake’s choreography is mesmerizing. There is the life force in the ensemble’s herd-like traverse of the stage. There is the intimacy of coupling in the negative spacing movement of coming together transforming and departing. Images merge and dissolve as Lake’s imagination takes wing. The Chronicles is an eclectic collection of styles- jazz and classical ballet, break dance or gymnastics as bodies are lifted thrown and caressed. This is the essence of Life’s vicariousness, constantly changing and coming to rest only in the final image of mortality’s inevitable destiny. In a meticulous sequence of dance movements and patterns Lake carries us along through metaphor and image. A dancer enters dragging a load across the stage. Dancers slide along the floor each pushing their baggage like Sysiphus before them until they are torn open and yellow hay engulfs the stage. One dancer is smothered before breaking free to reveal a solitary dancer rising from the burdens that have entwined her. A loud scream echoes through the auditorium as the dancers hold the note until only one remains in a victorious salute to survival.

 The Chronicles is an account of all our lives. The pulsating energy and constancy of the dance is beautifully accompanied by the pure voices of the young singers of the Adelaide Youth Choir under the direction of Christie Anderson. Dancers and children, carrying lanterns, come together in a celebration of community. It contrasts with Mann’s soulful baritone rendition of Forever Young. There is a tone of regret, of lost opportunity and longing for the past. It is a note of sombre reflection, realized in the final image of the two dancers beneath the descending tomb.

The Chronicles is an astounding work of choreographic imagination. It is visceral, performed by a talented ensemble of dancers. The Chronicles reminds us how fleeting is our life and yet Lake’s work does not thrust us into despondency but celebrates our time with all its trials and tribulations, joys and triumphs between our beginning and our end. The collaborative nature of the work is instantly apparent in the choreography by Lake, performed by her wonderful ensemble of youthful and athletic dancers, the set design by Charles Davis, brilliantly lit by Bosco Shaw and the music composed by Robin Fox. The Chronicles is an exciting and totally engaging experience with the power to encourage us “to make hay while the sun shines”.

Adelaide Festival production photos by Andrew Beveridge.

 

Friday, March 13, 2026

THE CONVICT AND THE COMPASS - The Untold Story of James Meehan - by PETER BRADLEY.


 

THE CONVICT AND THE COMPASS – The Untold Story of James Meehan – By Peter Bradley.

Reviewed by Bill Stephens.

Peter Bradley is a Canberra writer whose first book Convicted inspired by the discovery of his great-grandfather’s first-hand account of surviving a shipwreck, was an engrossing retelling of a father, son and grandson entwined with the history of Australia, from the landing of the First Fleet in 1788.

Bradley’s latest book, The Convict and the Compass is a richly detailed and deeply human portrait of James Meehan, an Irish political prisoner whose quiet precision and dedication as a surveyor, helped lay the foundations of modern Australia.


Author Peter Bradley.

Far from the celebrated names of early colonial exploration, Meehan’s story has been long overshadowed. Bradley’s work turns a long-overdue spotlight on to a man whose maps and town plans shaped the nation’s early settlement.

The book blends meticulous historical research with an engaging narrative style, making it accessible to both history enthusiasts and casual readers. Bradley, himself a descendant of Meehan, writes with a personal warmth that adds emotional depth without sacrificing scholarly rigour.

The descriptions of Meehan’s surveying expeditions, from trudging through dense bushland to charting the layout of emerging towns, are vivid and immersive, giving readers a sense of the physical and intellectual challenges of the work.

In the manner of a well-paced stage production, Bradley sets his scenes with care, drawing the reader into the raw, often unforgiving landscapes of earth 19th -century New South Wales.

His prose has a measured rhythm, allowing the drama of Meehan’s transformation, from convict shackled by circumstance to a man whose maps would shape the very bones of the colony, to unfold with understated power.

Bradley knows when to step back and let his subject take centre stage. Meehan emerges not as a romanticised hero, but as a man of grit, precision, and quiet ambition.

The book’s strength lies in its balance. The historical detail is rich without ever feeling academic, and the human story is told with warmth and respect.

What stands out most is the way Bradley frames Meehan, not just as a skilled professional, but as a man navigating the complexities of colonial politics, personal redemption, and the lingering stigma of his convict past.

The book also subtly challenges the “great man” narrative of Australian exploration, showing how unsung figures like Meehan were indispensable to the colony’s development.

A large (600 pages) impressively produced publication, The Convict and the Compass comes with informative prologue and epilogue, pages of photos, maps, research information and a comprehensive index. Making it not only a compelling and respectful tribute to a forgotten figure of Australian history, but also a must-read for those interested in early colonial history, the hidden contributions of convicts, and the human stories behind the maps that shaped a nation.

Published in 2025 by Ventura Press.