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Burning Daylight Marrugeku
Toured by Performing Lines for Mobile States: Touring Contemporary Performance, Australia
Trevor Jamieson & Yumi Umiumare in Marrugeku's Burning Daylight, Zurich, Switzerland, 2007. Photo: Christian Altorfer  
 
Director
Rachael Swain
Choreographer
Serge Aime Coulibay
Assistant Choreographer
Dalisa Pigram
Musical Director
Matthew Fargher
Cinematographer
Warwick Thornton
Designer

Dramaturgy

Costume Designer

With songs by

Joey Ruigrok van der Werven

Josephine Wilson & David Pledger

Stephen Curtis

Amanda Brown

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marrugeku launches the national tour of its explosive yet haunting dance theatre work, Burning Daylight from its origins, the West Australian town of Broome in October 2009.
 
It’s Karaoke night, Broome style, where country meets hip hop meets Japanese love song. A lone cowboy blows into town, stirring its ghosts for a long and wild night, as past and present dance it out on the street.

This spectacular high energy production incorporates old and new forms to conjure an image of today’s Broome – the traces of its past as wild frontier town still real, but also mythologised in glossy tourist brochures. Like the rest of the world, a place where young people live out complex identities spanning traditional cultures and global street culture.

Burning Daylight’s Director, Rachael Swain, was inspired by the depiction of Broome at the turn of the 19th to 20th century as an “Asian Wild West”. The production features “karaoke noodle western videos” by Warwick Thornton, the award winning Director of Samson and Delilah, music by MC Dazastah of Perth based hip hop crew Downsyde, and performances by actor Trevor Jamieson of Ngapartji Ngapartji and Sermsah Bin Saad or Suri, a recent finalist in So You Think You Can Dance.

Forging exciting new ground in contemporary indigenous and intercultural dance theatre in Australia, Burning Daylight was choreographed by Belgian based West African Serge Aime Coulibalay (former member of Les Ballets C de la B) working with Broome-based indigenous choreographer Dalisa Pigram.

Marraugeku’s previous works, Mimi (Perth Festival 1996, Dreaming Festival 1997) and Crying Baby (Perth, Sydney and Darwin Festivals 2000-02) were acclaimed by audiences around the country and internationally.

Performers/Devisers: Trevor Jamieson, Dalisa Pigram, Owen Maher, Sermsah Bin Saad, Antonia Djiagween, Yumi Umiumare, Kathy Cogill

Musicians/Composers: Dazastah, Lorrae Coffin & Justin Gray

  Visit Marrugeku for future touring information 
  2009: Toured through Mobile States to Goolarri Outdoor Venue, Broome; PICA, Perth; Performance Space, Sydney; Arts House, Melbourne; Salamanca Arts Centre, Hobart. 
        
  Burning Daylight and Marrugeku were assisted by the Western Australian Government through the Department of Culture and the Arts, the Australia Council’s New Australian Stories Initiative and its Dance, Theatre, Music, New Media and CCD Boards; The Sidney Myer Fund; the Australian Film Commission; The Kimberley Regional Development Scheme; and Country Arts WA. 
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"strikingly surreal sense of humour, powerful performers, a well-tuned ensemble sensibility and a dynamic design "

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