Women of the Sun

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Women of the Sun
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Genre Historical drama
Written by Sonia Borg and Hyllus Maris
Directed by James Ricketson
David Stevens
Stephen Wallace
Geoffrey Nottage
Country of origin Australia
Original language(s) English, Yolngu Matha
No. of episodes 4
Production
Producer(s) Bob Weis
Editor(s) Edward McQueen-Mason
Running time 60 mins
Release
Original network Australian Broadcasting Company
SBS Television
Original release July 1981
Chronology
Followed by Women Of The Sun: 25 Years Later

Women of the Sun is an award-winning Australian historical drama television miniseries that was broadcast on SBS Television and later the Australian Broadcasting Company in 1981. The series, co-written by Sonia Borg and Hyllus Maris, was composed of four 60-minute episodes to portray the lives of four Aboriginal women in Australian society from the 1820s up until the 1980s.[1][2] It was the first series that dealt with such subject matter,[3] and later received several prestigious awards including two Awgies and five Penguin Awards following its release. It also won the United Nations Media Peace Prize and the Banff Grand Prix in 1983.[4][5]

Plot

The first episode, titled Alinta: The Flame, dealt with the first contact between tribal Aborigines and Europeans. Set in 1820s, the story begins when two English convicts are found washed up on the beach by the Nyari. They are nursed back to health by the tribe, providing them with food and shelter, despite warnings by the tribal elders. The tribe is eventually encountered by early Australian settlers searching for grazing land. Their culture and rituals are threatened by these newcomers, who begin to settle on their lands, and leads to the annihilation of the tribe. Alinta (Yangathu Wanambi) and her child are the only survivors and the episode ends with Alinta determined that her daughter "carry the torch for her culture and the future".[1][4][5]

Maydina: The Shadow takes place in the 1860s and follows a young Aborigine woman, Maydina, who lives with a group of seal-hunters. It is revealed that she was abducted by the hunters as a child and, after years of abuse by her captors, she attempts to escape with her half-caste daughter Biri. They are taken in by Mrs. McPhee, founder and head of a church mission, where mother and daughter are separated when Maydina is employed into service with the church. While there, she and another Aborigine man fall in love and attempt to leave with Biri so that can return to their traditional life and culture in the Australian Outback which the Europeans think is devil art. Mrs. McPhee sends troopers after the three and soon catch up to them. The man is shot and killed by the soldiers while Maydina's child is presumably taken away from her permanently.[1][4][5]

"Nerida Anderson" is the third episode in the series and was based on the real-life "Cumeroongunga Walkout" in 1939. The segment focuses on Nerida (Justine Saunders), a young and rebellious Aborigine woman, who returns to the government-established Aboriginal reserve after working in the city as a bookkeeper. She finds the conditions on the reservation have seriously deteriorated since leaving and attempts to encourage the rest of the tribe to improve conditions themselves. Her activities are opposed by the reserve manager who, in anger, orders Nerida and her family tried for treason. The charge is dismissed but the manager keeps his position. As the young men of the tribe are drafted into the Australian Army during the Second World War, life on the reservation continues to worsen. Finally, Nerida leads her family and the rest of the tribe to leave the reserve, never to return.[1][4][5]

The fourth and final segment, "Lo-Arna", is set in the then-present 1980s and focuses on 18-year-old Ann Cutler, who lives with her adoptive parents, Doug (Max Phipps) and Joy Cutler (Fiona Spence), in a small country town. Ann's relationship with her parents suddenly changes when she discovers she is of Aboriginal descent and not French Polynesian as she believed. She also learns that she is the biological child of her adopted father Doug Culter and Alice Wilson, an Aborigine woman who lives in a nearby shanty town. In an attempt to "resolve her emotional turmoil", she considers contacting her birth mother.[1][4][5]

Characters

Segment 1

  • Young Alinta (Naykakan Munung)
  • Alinta (Yangathu Wanambi)
  • Murra (Gordon Lunyupi)
  • McNab (William Zappa)
  • Towradgi (Gati Munyarryua)
  • Turuga (Garrala Gurruwiwi)
  • Morrorra (Walumarri Wunungmurra)
  • Kiah (Wurrandilngawuy)
  • Finlay (Adam Joseph)
  • Waroo (Nippuranydja Munungurr)
  • Young Wonda (Beyawuy Murawili)
  • Goodman (Tony Hawkins)
  • Fisher (David Scott)
  • Bosun (Ken Grant)
  • Stuckey (Reg Evans)

Segment 2

  • Maydina (Mawiyul Yanthaluway)
  • Mrs. McPhee (Julia Blake)
  • Charlie/Joala (Freddie Reynolds)
  • Rev. Bligh (Bill Johnson)
  • Biri (Sonia Pozzana)
  • Little Johnny (Doug Briggs)
  • Edward (James Laurie)
  • Maggie (Essie Coffey)
  • Matilda (Anne Saward)
  • Mr. Johnson (Roger Oakley)
  • Old Tommy (Wangjuk Marka)
  • Old Timothy (Alfred Austin)
  • Muller (Michael Duffield)
  • Alf (Chris Heywood)
  • Joe (Tommy Dysart)

Segment 3

  • Nerida Anderson (Justine Saunders)
  • Mr. Felton (Graham Rouse)
  • Mrs. Felton (Felicity Gordon)
  • Grannie Anderson (Minnie Patton)
  • Ivy Anderson (Lorraine Mafi-Williams)
  • Bill Anderson (Stan Roach)
  • Ron Anderson (Paul Pryor)
  • Auntie Rachel (Joyce Johnson)
  • Andy (Monty Prior)
  • Maisie (Yvette Isaacs, a.k.a. Maroochy Barambah)
  • Frank Reilly (Ed Thurley)
  • Mr. Short (Robin Cuming)
  • Mr. Watson (Geoff Parry)
  • Peter (Jack Charles)
  • Eddy (Wesley Williams)
  • Alma (Phemie Day)

Segment 4

  • Ann Cutler (Michelle Lanyon)
  • Doug Cutler (Max Phipps)
  • Joy Cutler (Fiona Spence)
  • Alice Wilson (Eva Birrit)
  • Val Pearce (Mollie Dyer)
  • Nick (David Cameron)
  • Jimmy Randle (Bob Maza)
  • Peter Randle (Michael Cockatoo)
  • Jamie Randle (Gordon Edwards)
  • Grannie Johnson (Margaret Tucker)
  • Secretary (Amanda Muggleton)
  • Receptionist (Adele Lewin)
  • Public Servant (James Wright)
  • President (Osvaldo Maione)

Production

The original concept for the series, in which the colonization of Australia would be told through the eyes of Aboriginal women, came from aboriginal poet, sociologist and educator Hyllus Maris. She formed a successful collaboration with Sonia Borg, an award-winning screenwriter, and spent five years working on the script.

A television series was eventually commissioned by SBS Television, partly because of the efforts of producer Bob Weis, who later recalled his first meeting with the network.

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When the series was first commissioned by SBS I'd read the script, loved it, made a commitment to the writers to make it, sent the scripts to SBS and I got a phone call one week later from Bruce Gyngell (SBS' founding manager) who, fortunately, had been in Canberra the week before.
Someone asked him in a senate committee hearing "what are you doing about Aboriginal Australia?" And he replied, "I just got these scripts that I'm going to do". He rang me and said, "Bob, I love the scripts, we're going ahead".[3]

The series was directed by James Ricketson, David Stevens, Stephen Wallace and Geoffrey Nottage, then some of the top directors in the industry, and shot on location in Victoria. While many of the Aboriginal cast members were non-professional actors, the series also featured a number of high-profile television actors and actresses, including William Zappa, Reg Evans, Julia Blake, Roger Oakley, Chris Heywood, Tommy Dysart, Justine Saunders, Graham Rouse, Robin Cuming, Max Phipps, Fiona Spence, Bob Maza and Amanda Muggleton. Singer, Yvette Isaacs (Maroochy Barambah) appeared in episode 3. Australian indigenous rights activists Essie Coffey and Wangjuk Marka also made a cameo appearances.

Reception

The series was aired on SBS Television, and later the Australian Broadcasting Company, during July 1981. Its unique and groundbreaking storytelling challenged conventional Australian history and received almost immediate international and national acclaim following its release. Women of the Sun won several awards during the next two years including two Awgies, five Penguin Awards, the United Nations Media Peace Prize and the Banff Grand Prix.[2][4][5]

The series, more importantly, for the first time provided the opportunity to tell the Aboriginal story through the eyes of its women, in their own language, and made available to national audience. It also had a significant impact on Aboriginal communities as the series brought up key issues affecting its culture.[3]

In 2006, series producer Bob Weis interviewed the leading actresses who appeared in each of the four episodes. He then discussed with them the impact it had had on their lives, as well as on his own, and the issues facing them and the Aborigine culture today. A feature-length documentary was released based on these interviews titled Women of the Sun: 25 Years Later and which premiered at the Melbourne International Film Festival.[3]

The series was presented by Macleay Museum at the University of Sydney's Old Geology Lecture Theatre on 25 January 2007, the day before the anniversary of Australian colonization. It was accompanied by the final viewing of the Macleay Museum's "Living Water" art exhibition which featured "artistic expressions of Aboriginal identity".[2]

References

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External links