Historical Overview of Theatre in Australia - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Historical Overview of Theatre in Australia

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Title: Historical Overview of Theatre in Australia


1
Historical Overview of Theatre in Australia
2
The Australian Continent
  • modern, industrialized nation on largely
    unpopulated continent
  • seven states, territories
  • only island continent
  • only continent to be occupied by single nation
  • population hugs seaboard interior is mostly
    desert (80 of country in arid or semiarid zones)

3
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4
Australia and New Zealand
5
Aboriginal Australia
  • ancestors of the Aborigines arrived on the
    continent at least 65,000-70,000 years ago
  • from South Indonesia during the last ice age
  • over time, separated into distinct tribal groups
    with their own languages and traditions
  • subsistence husbandry

6
Kinship, Religion, and the Land
  • over this long period, tribal lands were
    integrated into a complex set of religious
    beliefs and practices that governed all aspects
    of Aboriginal life
  • believed that physical structure of tribal
    territory embodied ancient spiritual entities
    that preserved and protected the land and its
    people
  • since the land was a physical expression of
    spirit ancestors, and the spirits were
    progenitors of the Aborigines, land and people
    were connected in mutually dependent relationship
  • land central to sense of personal identity myths
    of Dreamtime

7
Uluru (Ayers Rock)
8
European Exploration
  • Terra Australis Incognita
  • 17C Dutch exploration in 1642 Abel Tasman named
    Australia New Holland
  • initial reports unfavorable
  • 1770 James Cook annexed east coast territory on
    behalf of King George III of England, named it
    New South Wales

9
Convict Transportation 1788-1868
  • 1776 Britains North American colonies declared
    independence
  • Britain could no longer send convicts to America
  • overflowing prisons
  • in the 1780s it was suggested that Britain could
    use New South Wales as a prison
  • transportation for seven years, 10 years, or life

10
The Australian Penal Colony
  • in January 1788 the first shipload of convicts
    arrived in Botany Bay
  • founded settlement named Sydney
  • life was very difficult for early convict
    settlers soil infertile, food scarce, sickness
    rife
  • eventually learned how to survive convicts who
    finished their lags became free settlers

11
Colonial Expansion
  • Lachlan Macquarie became Governor of the colony
    in 1810
  • number of free settlers increased markedly
  • exploration inland
  • development of towns, roads, public buildings
  • pastoral wealth gold discovered in 1850s
  • convict transportation ceased in 1868

12
What about the Aborigines?
  • 18C approx. 600,000 - one million Aborigines
  • huge cultural gap between colonizers and
    colonized
  • Aborigines considered to be rural pests
  • opposing notions of land ownership and use terra
    nullius
  • two centuries of appalling economic and cultural
    disadvantage

13
The Stolen Generation
  • as a result of murder, dispossession, sickness,
    Aboriginal population plummeted
  • c.1900 Europeans assumed that Aborigines were
    dying out
  • non-full-blood children forcibly removed from
    families, placed in institutions to learn
    European values and trades
  • expected to breed with other half-castes or
    whites and ultimately eliminate the Aboriginal
    blood line
  • loss of identity, mistreatment

14
History of Australian Theatre Convict Theatre
1788-1840
  • convict theatre fueled by late-Georgian craze for
    amateur theatricals
  • instigated by convicts
  • first play George Farquhars The Recruiting
    Officer, June 4 1789
  • 1796 Sydneys first theatre, managed by Robert
    Sidaway
  • convict performances sustained until c.1840

15
19C Colonial Theatre
  • similar trends to other colonial settlements
    melodrama, musicals, comedy, domestic drama,
    farces, and other light theatre
  • bushranger plays
  • literary-historical drama in verse, based on
    historical drama of the 18C (Addison, Racine),
    also Shakespeare escapist

16
Towards an Australian Theatre1900-1950
  • call for indigenous Australian drama
  • influence of realism, and Independent Theatres
    overseas
  • rise of repertory groups, authors theatres,
    e.g. Australian Theatre Society, Adelaide
    Repertory Theatre
  • still characterized by amateurism, lacked
    widespread national support

17
Postcolonial Influences Post-1950
  • 1950s theatre subsidization
  • Australian Elizabethan Theatre Trust
  • Summer of the Seventeenth Doll (1955) and the
    Australian audience
  • new era of sustained professionalism in
    management, production, and acting associated
    with the Australian play
  • out of this new creative environment 1960s new
    dramatists, artists, experimenting with new forms

18
Aboriginal Theatre, 1970-2005
  • 1960s organized Aboriginal civil rights movement
  • 1971 Kevin Gilberts The Cherry Pickers performed
  • 1970s-80s collective initiatives Black Theatre
    Groups
  • 1989 Bran Nue Dae turning point in Aboriginal
    theatre
  • 1990s social, political change
  • more creative control, intense and high-profile
    activity women writers Indigenous Theatre
    Groups writing as resistance, also
    reconciliation
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