Bangarra's 'Yuldea' comes to Riverside in 2024 after a record-breaking debut season
Australia’s leading Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander performing arts company, Bangarra Dance Theatre is delighted to bring Frances Rings’ powerful production, Yuldea, to Riverside Theatres from 22 – 24 February 2024.
This comes after a record-breaking debut season earlier this year, which marked Yuldea as the highest grossing tour in company history.
Venue: Riverside Theatres
Address: Corner Market &, Church St, Parramatta NSW 2150
Date: 22 - 24 February 2024
Time: Various Times
Ticket: From $64.50
Web: https://riversideparramatta.com.au/whats-on/yuldea/
EMail: info@bangarra.com.au
Address: Corner Market &, Church St, Parramatta NSW 2150
Date: 22 - 24 February 2024
Time: Various Times
Ticket: From $64.50
Web: https://riversideparramatta.com.au/whats-on/yuldea/
EMail: info@bangarra.com.au
Image Copyright / CDN: Bangarra Dance Theatre
Brought to life with costumes from multi-award-winning Jennifer Irwin, lighting by Karen Norris, and set design by Elizabeth Gadsby, Yuldea features original music composed by David Page Music Fellow, Leon Rodgers, a descendant of the Worimi nation in NSW. In an exciting new creative collaboration, the work also features multi-award-winning duo Electric Fields as guest composers.
Frances Rings’ first work as Artistic Director of Bangarra Dance Theatre is a deeply personal ceremonial affirmation of history and heritage, inspired by her family’s connection to the area. Yuldea awakens the earth and sky worlds to tell the story of the Aṉangu people of the Great Victorian Desert.
Yuldea explores the abrupt moment that traditional life collided with the industrial ambition of a growing nation in South Australia’s Yuldea (Ooldea). In Yuldea, the ancient water soak, Yooldil Kapi, connected important trading routes and dreaming stories that crossed through the site for thousands of years.
Yooldil Kapi was instrumental in the construction of the Trans-Australian railway extending across the Nullarbor, joining the east coast to the west coast in 1917. As a result of the industrial pressures placed on the permanent waterhole, the water quickly ran dry.
Now memories lay scattered, like the Aṉangu people, displaced from their home. Remnants of colonial progress are swallowed by sand. But the Aṉangu endure, determined to keep strong their knowledge systems of land and sky, honouring their eternal bonds of kinship between people and place.
“Within my family lineage lies the stories of forefathers and mothers who lived a dynamic, sophisticated desert life, leaving their imprint scattered throughout Country like memories suspended in time. Their lives were forever changed by the impact of colonial progress,” said Frances Rings, Bangarra Artistic Director, co-CEO, and choreographer of Yuldea.
“The story of Yuldea asks us to look beyond the narrative of our nation’s modernisation to reconcile a fraught history, and to affirm a future that no longer hides behind its truths but grows because of them”.
For more information and to purchase tickets, visit
https://riversideparramatta.com.au/whats-on/yuldea/
https://boxoffice.riversideparramatta.com.au/WebPages/EntaWebGateway/gateway.aspx?E=N&QL=S8304%7CP45040%7CVRIV%7CG~/WEBPAGES/EntaWebShow/ShowCalendar.aspx
Frances Rings’ first work as Artistic Director of Bangarra Dance Theatre is a deeply personal ceremonial affirmation of history and heritage, inspired by her family’s connection to the area. Yuldea awakens the earth and sky worlds to tell the story of the Aṉangu people of the Great Victorian Desert.
Yuldea explores the abrupt moment that traditional life collided with the industrial ambition of a growing nation in South Australia’s Yuldea (Ooldea). In Yuldea, the ancient water soak, Yooldil Kapi, connected important trading routes and dreaming stories that crossed through the site for thousands of years.
Yooldil Kapi was instrumental in the construction of the Trans-Australian railway extending across the Nullarbor, joining the east coast to the west coast in 1917. As a result of the industrial pressures placed on the permanent waterhole, the water quickly ran dry.
Now memories lay scattered, like the Aṉangu people, displaced from their home. Remnants of colonial progress are swallowed by sand. But the Aṉangu endure, determined to keep strong their knowledge systems of land and sky, honouring their eternal bonds of kinship between people and place.
“Within my family lineage lies the stories of forefathers and mothers who lived a dynamic, sophisticated desert life, leaving their imprint scattered throughout Country like memories suspended in time. Their lives were forever changed by the impact of colonial progress,” said Frances Rings, Bangarra Artistic Director, co-CEO, and choreographer of Yuldea.
“The story of Yuldea asks us to look beyond the narrative of our nation’s modernisation to reconcile a fraught history, and to affirm a future that no longer hides behind its truths but grows because of them”.
For more information and to purchase tickets, visit
https://riversideparramatta.com.au/whats-on/yuldea/
https://boxoffice.riversideparramatta.com.au/WebPages/EntaWebGateway/gateway.aspx?E=N&QL=S8304%7CP45040%7CVRIV%7CG~/WEBPAGES/EntaWebShow/ShowCalendar.aspx