YULDEA.
Choreographed by Frances Ring and the dancers of
Bangarra Dance Theatre. Set designer. Elizabeth Gadsby. Costume designer.
Jennifer Irwin. Lighting designer. Karen Norris. Composer. Leon Rodgers. Guest
composers. Electric Fields. Bangarra Dance Theatre. Canberra Theatre. July
20-22 2023. Bookings: 62752700
Reviewed by Peter Wilkins.
Connection and collaboration lie at the very heart of
Aboriginal culture. Nowhere is this more evident than in Frances Ring’s first
work for Bangarra Dance Theatre since taking over from Stephen Page as artistic
director. Truthtelling, healing and hope embody Bangarra Dance Theatre’s work.
Deeply personal, Yuldea
is a powerful and moving account of her
mob’s confrontation with colonial incursion and the impact of industrialization
upon a culture, lore ceremony and kinship of the Nunga people of far west South
Australia and the Anangu people of the
Great Victorian desert. Yuldea’s
story is one of oppression and displacement. It is also one of resilience and
survival. In four acts, Ring’s dancers enact the connection between sky and
water, land and custom, incursion and destruction. The collaboration and ritual
so beautifully expressed by Ring’s remarkable dancers in Act 1 is devastatingly
represented in Act 3, Empire, when the
Trans Western Railway weaves like a steel serpent through their land. The true horror of the white man’s impact is
graphically evoked in Act 3’s dance sequences - Mission and Black Mist. The dancers capture
the devastating influence of alcohol, disease and dependency. In one chilling
sequence dancers are dragged across the stage while struggling to escape. The traditional
connection with earth is proud and communal in Act 1 becomes an image of oppression in Act 3.. Ring’s
choreography is a poignantly visceral reminder of historical abuse and
humiliation. The black mist of Maralinga that enveloped the Anangu people, bringing
the spectre of death assumes a dark foreboding in Leon Rodgers’ score and Karen
Norris’s lighting on Elizabeth Gadsbys cyclorama setting.
Ring has stamped this wonderful work with her own distinct
artistry. Her dancers respond to her distinctive choreography and the moments
of traditional connection to the earth, combined at times with balletic
movement, graceful lifts, trust falls and acrobatics. There is a complexity to
the story of Yuldea and its many
conflicting stories and Ring with her dancers has continued to explore new ways to carry the
stories of their people forward into the future.
Photos by Karen Longley