• Source: Jindalee Lady
  • Jindalee Lady is a 1992 Australian film about an Aboriginal Australian woman who is a successful fashion designer. Directed by Brian Syron, it is the first feature film directed by an Aboriginal person in Australia. It is also notable for featuring dancers from the Bangarra Dance Theatre.


    Plot


    Lauren, a successful and ambitious Aboriginal fashion designer, discovers that her husband David, a white record producer, has been having affairs, and decides to leave him. She meets Greg, a black filmmaker who inspires her to rediscover her Aboriginality.


    Cast and crew


    Lydia Miller as Lauren
    Patrick Ward as David
    Michael Leslie as Greg
    Joanna Lambert as Julia
    Bangarra Dance Theatre as dancers, including
    Raymond D. Blanco as lead dancer
    Silvia Blanco as lead dancer
    Larissa Behrendt as a model
    David Banula Marika as didgeridu player
    Larry Yapuma Gurruwiwi as didgeridu player
    Su Cruickshank as singer
    Lillian Crombie as a dresser
    Justine Saunders


    Production


    Filming took place in Sydney from 1988 to 1990. Scenes were shot in the Leichhardt Japanese-themed home of renowned chef Tetsuya Wakuda, while the fashion parades were filmed in the AFTRS studios. Owing to funding delays, the first print was only released on 10 September 1992.


    Release


    The film did not have a theatrical release in Australia, but it was given a charity screening in Canberra at The Playhouse on 13 May 1992 and screened at the Brisbane International Film Festival later in the year. It also travelled to the Hawaii International Film Festival and was also shown in Edmonton, Alberta, in Canada.


    Reception


    Described as a soap opera by several reviewers, the film received a lukewarm reception, but Miller, Ward and Leslie were praised for their performances.
    Marcia Langton, in her work commissioned by the Australian Film Commission (AFC), Well I Heard It On The Radio and I Saw It On The Television (1993), gives the film a detailed and somewhat scathing treatment in the context of an academic analysis of black cinema in general, but it is questioned whether she actually saw the film. Because of this, Langton was drawn into the feud that existed at the time between Syron and the AFC.


    References




    External links


    Jindalee Lady at IMDb
    Official website

Kata Kunci Pencarian: