Natasha Wanganeen | |
---|---|
Born | Point Pearce, South Australia, Australia | 20 June 1984
Occupation(s) | Actor, writer, producer |
Years active | 2001–present |
Relatives | Gavin Wanganeen, Trevor Jamieson |
Awards | AFI Young Actor's Award, 2004 |
Natasha Wanganeen (born 20 June 1984) is an Aboriginal Australian actress. She is known for her starring role in the 2002 feature film Rabbit-Proof Fence , aged 15, and numerous television roles. Her debut film as co-writer and co-producer is the 2022 short film, an Indigenous sci-fi drama entitled Bunker: The Last Fleet, about an alien invasion of Australia, in which she also takes the lead role.
Wanganeen was born in Point Pearce, South Australia, moving to Port Adelaide when she was five years old. [1] She is a Ngarrindjeri, Narungga, Kaurna and Noongar woman. [2]
Wanganeen appeared in Rabbit-Proof Fence (released 2002), playing a dormitory boss [2] at the age of fifteen, [3] and the made-for-TV film Jessica directed by Peter Andrikidis and released in 2004.
In 2017, she starred as a zombie-killer [2] in the dystopian thriller Cargo . [3] [2] Also in 2017, she played the role of Gilyagan in Kate Grenville's play The Secret River presented during the Adelaide Festival in March, having previously played a different role in the 2015 two-part TV series of the same name. [4]
She played Mary, mother of a talented gymnast, in feature film A Second Chance: Rivals! , released in 2019, [5] [6] and in the same year played a ghoul in the horror film Dark Place . [2]
In June 2020, Wanganeen was writing a script for her own independent film, Battle of the Ancestors, set 60,000 years ago against a backdrop of Aboriginal mythology, including Dreamtime stories and characters she knows from here childhood years. She is being supported by Screen Australia and the South Australian Film Corporation in this endeavour, and is in talks with local production companies who are interested in seeing it made. [2]
Wanganeen was on the jury for the Feature Fiction and Documentary awards at the 2020 Adelaide Film Festival. [7] [8]
Television roles include playing Mary Ann Bugg, a late 19th-century bushranger, in Drunk History Australia (Network 10, 2020) and a chef in Aftertaste (Closer Productions/ABC Comedy, 2021). She plays a government official in 2067 , a sci-fi thriller feature film directed by Seth Larney released in 2020. [8] [9]
Originally intended as a sci-fi series, [2] Bunker: The Last Fleet, co-written by Wanganeen, Stephen Potter, and Rowan Pullen, directed by the latter two, and co-produced by the three of them and others, [10] was inspired by Afrofuturism. [2] It was first released as a short film, with the intention of growing into a feature film. It had its Australian premiere at the St Kilda Film Festival in June 2022, with multiple screenings following around Australia (including Revelation Perth International Film Festival and Adelaide Film Festival) and internationally. Wanganeen plays Tjarra, an Aboriginal warrior in Australia 37 years in the future, and Kaurna elder Uncle Fred Agius plays the role of an elder. Trevor Jamieson (who is a cousin) gave cultural advice and also plays a role in the film. [11] The film was filmed entirely in the South Australian desert. [12] As the first Aboriginal sci-fi move, it is described as a "cheeky take on the First Fleet in Australia". [11]
In 2023, she appeared in Ivan Sen's mystery, crime drama Limbo , which was nominated in 'competition section' at the 73rd Berlin International Film Festival, to be held from February 16 to 26, 2023. [13]
Year | Title | Role | Type |
---|---|---|---|
2002 | Rabbit Proof Fence | Nina, Dormitory Boss | Feature film |
Australian Rules | Nunga family member (uncredited) | Feature film | |
Black and White | Extra (uncredited) | Feature film | |
2017 | Cargo | Josie Bell, a zombie | Feature film |
2018 | Konya | Angelica | Short film |
Wild | Rosie | Short film | |
White Lies | Nurse Lilian | Short film | |
2019 | Storm Boy | Susan Franklin | Feature film |
Dark Place | Ghoul | Segment: Killer Native | |
A Second Chance: Rivals! | Mary | Feature film | |
2020 | Waiyiri | Lacardi | Short film |
2067 | Government Official | Feature film | |
A Sunburnt Christmas | Nurse | Feature film | |
2021 | Djaambi | Tjarrah | Short film |
2022 | Fate of the Night | Kate | Feature film |
Bunker: The Last Fleet | Tjarra | Short film | |
The Survival of Kindness | Waiting Woman | Feature film | |
2023 | Limbo | Emma | Feature film |
Year | Title | Role | Type |
---|---|---|---|
2004 | Jessica | Mary Simpson | Miniseries |
Through My Eyes | Interpreter | Miniseries, 2 episodes | |
2007 | Sacred Ground | Narrator | Documentary |
2013 | Redfern Now | Emily | TV series, 1 episode |
2015 | The Secret River | ||
2017 | Lost in Pronunciation | Woman in pub | TV series, 1 episode |
2018 | Sisters | Online miniseries | |
2019 | Lucy and DIC | Christina | TV series, 8 episodes |
2020 | Drunk History Australia | Mary Ann Bugg | TV series, 1 episode |
2021 | Aftertaste | Line Cook | TV series, 1 episode |
2021-22 | Firebite | Rona | TV series, 8 episodes |
2022 | The Tourist | CCTV Gift Shop Employee | TV series, 2 episodes |
MaveriX | Trish Peterson | TV series, 6 episodes | |
The Australian Wars | Enslaved Woman | Miniseries, 1 episode |
Year | Title | Role | Venue |
---|---|---|---|
2017 | The Secret River | Gillyagan | Adelaide Festival |
In 2018, Wanganeen advocated for greater cultural diversity in Australian screen culture, saying "There are not enough black faces on our screens and talking about it is a constructive conversation that we need to have". [15] She expressed her pleasure at the portrayal of Aboriginal people in Cargo (2017) as "living free and strong on the land". [16]
Wanganeen was one of the organisers of the Black Lives Matter protest in Adelaide on 6 June 2020, which focussed on racism and injustices against Indigenous Australians, in particular high rates of incarceration and Aboriginal deaths in custody. [17] [18]
As of 2017 [update] Wanganeen lives in Port Adelaide. She is related to Australian rules footballer Gavin Wanganeen, [4] and actor and playwright Trevor Jamieson is a cousin. [11]
Gavin Adrian Wanganeen is a former Australian rules footballer who played for the Essendon Football Club and Port Adelaide Football Club in the Australian Football League (AFL), and also for the Port Adelaide Magpies in the South Australian National Football League (SANFL).
The Kaurna people are a group of Aboriginal people whose traditional lands include the Adelaide Plains of South Australia. They were known as the Adelaide tribe by the early settlers. Kaurna culture and language were almost completely destroyed within a few decades of the British colonisation of South Australia in 1836. However, extensive documentation by early missionaries and other researchers has enabled a modern revival of both language and culture. The phrase Kaurna meyunna means "Kaurna people".
The Adelaide Film Festival is a film festival usually held for two weeks in mid-October in cinemas in Adelaide, South Australia. Originally presented biennially in March from 2003, since 2013 AFF has been held in October. Subject to funding, the festival has staged full or briefer events in alternating years; some form of event has taken place every year since 2015. From 2022 it takes place annually. It has a strong focus on local South Australian and Australian produced content, with the Adelaide Film Festival Investment Fund (AFFIF) established to fund investment in Australian films.
Nunga is a term of self-identification for Aboriginal Australians, originally used by Aboriginal people in the southern settled areas of South Australia, and now used throughout Adelaide and surrounding towns. It is used by contrast with Gunya, which refers to non-Aboriginal persons. The use of "Nunga" by non-Aboriginal people is not always regarded as appropriate.
Kaurna is a Pama-Nyungan language historically spoken by the Kaurna peoples of the Adelaide Plains of South Australia. The Kaurna peoples are made up of various tribal clan groups, each with their own parnkarra district of land and local dialect. These dialects were historically spoken in the area bounded by Crystal Brook and Clare in the north, Cape Jervis in the south, and just over the Mount Lofty Ranges. Kaurna ceased to be spoken on an everyday basis in the 19th century and the last known native speaker, Ivaritji, died in 1929. Language revival efforts began in the 1980s, with the language now frequently used for ceremonial purposes, such as dual naming and welcome to country ceremonies.
South Australian Film Corporation (SAFC) is a South Australian Government statutory corporation established in 1972 to engage in film production and promote the film industry, located in Adelaide, South Australia. The Adelaide Studios are managed by the South Australian Film Corporation for the use of the South Australian film industry.
The Tandanya National Aboriginal Cultural Institute, usually referred to as Tandanya, is an art museum located on Grenfell Street in Adelaide, South Australia. It specialises in promoting Indigenous Australian art, including visual art, music and storytelling. It is the oldest Aboriginal-owned and -run cultural centre in Australia.
Point Pearce, also spelt Point Pierce in the past, is a town in the Australian state of South Australia. The town is located in the Yorke Peninsula Council local government area, 194 kilometres (121 mi) north-west of the state capital, Adelaide.
Here I Am is a 2011 Australian drama film written and directed by Beck Cole.
Lily Sullivan is an Australian actress. She played Coral in the 2012 film Mental, and Miranda in the 2018 television series Picnic at Hanging Rock. She plays leading roles in two 2023 feature films, Australian sci-fi thriller Monolith, and American horror film Evil Dead Rise.
Tilda Cobham-Hervey is an Australian actress. She made her film debut in 52 Tuesdays, a critically-acclaimed independent film directed by Sophie Hyde, and has also appeared on stage. She appeared in the 2018 film Hotel Mumbai, and starred as feminist icon Helen Reddy in the 2019 biopic I Am Woman. In 2023 she starred in the Amazon Prime TV series The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart.
Trevor Jamieson is an Aboriginal Australian stage and film actor, playwright, dancer, singer and didgeridoo player.
Alitya Wallara Rigney, née Richards,, also knowns as Aunty Alice, was an Australian Aboriginal scholar. She was a Kaurna elder and part of the team that revived the Kaurna language.
I Am Mother is a 2019 Australian cyberpunk thriller film directed by Grant Sputore, from a screenplay by Michael Lloyd Green, based on a story by both. Starring Clara Rugaard, Luke Hawker, Rose Byrne, and Hilary Swank, the film follows Daughter, a girl in a post-apocalyptic bunker, being raised by Mother, a robot aiding the repopulation of Earth. The film had its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival on 25 January 2019. Netflix released it in several countries on 7 June 2019.
Tarnanthi is a Festival of Contemporary Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art held in Adelaide, South Australia, annually. Presented by the Art Gallery of South Australia (AGSA) in association with the South Australian Government and BHP. It is curated by Nici Cumpston.
Ivaritji also spelt Iparrityi and other variations, and also known as Amelia Taylor and Amelia Savage, was an elder of the Kaurna tribe of Aboriginal Australians from the Adelaide Plains in South Australia. She was "almost certainly the last person of full Kaurna ancestry", and the last known speaker of the Kaurna language before its revival in the 1990s.
2067 is a 2020 Australian science fiction film directed and written by Seth Larney from a treatment by Gavin Scott Davis, and starring Kodi Smit-McPhee and Ryan Kwanten.
Dark Place is a 2019 Australian horror anthology film. The shorts in the film were written and directed by Indigenous filmmakers Kodie Bedford, Perun Bonser, Rob Braslin, Liam Phillips, and Bjorn Stewart. All five shorts centre on Aboriginal peoples and the long-reaching impact of colonialism in Australia.
Elaine Crombie is an Aboriginal Australian actress, known for her work on stage and television. She is also a singer, songwriter, comedian, writer and producer.
David Jowsey is an Australian film producer, co-founder of Bunya Productions. He is known for producing many films made by Indigenous Australian filmmakers. Bunya Productions' co-owners are Indigenous filmmaker Ivan Sen, and Jowsey's wife Greer Simpkin.