Movie. Drama.
Featuring performances by Rachael Maza, Lydia Miller, and Rhoda Roberts AO, the play was groundbreaking in its focus on complex First Nations female characters within a major Australian theatrical production.
During an era when Indigenous narratives were frequently sidelined or presented through non-Indigenous lenses, this play marked a pivotal transformation.
That shift was built on the movement: the first Black national playwrights’ conference had been held in Canberra in 1987, and the Aboriginal National Theatre Trust was founded in 1988.
(Roberts helped co-found the Aboriginal National Theatre Trust, sitting on an inaugural steering committee that boasted Brian Syron, Kevin Gilbert, Lydia Miller, Suzanne Butt, Vivian Walker, Michael Johnson and Lesley Fogarty and Justine Saunders. Oodgeroo Noonuccal was the Trust’s Patron.)
In 1998, Radiance was adapted to the big screen, directed by Rachel Perkins and starring Deborah Mailman, Rachael Maza and Trisha Morton-Thomas. Nowra also wrote the screenplay, and Radiance featured cinematography by a young Warwick Thornton.
Radiance is a significant Australian film: the first full-length feature directed by Arrernte woman Rachel Perkins and only the third feature film to be directed by a First Nations person after Tracey Moffatt’s BeDevil (1993). (It was also only the second to have a commercial release directed by an Indigenous woman)
It also marked a breakthrough moment, with Mailman becoming the first Aboriginal woman to win an AFI Award (1998).
Radiance Friday 3 April at 9:00pm on NITV and SBS on Demand.