Director’s Note: Wesley Enoch, BLACK COCKATOO

18 Dec 2019

Australian Cricket is full of characters and stories, some we know about but many we don’t. From unsavoury stories of ball tampering and sledging through to the amazing untold story of our women cricketers and their extraordinary international successes. But, few would know about the first ever Australian team to tour to England; the fact that is was in 1868 and that the team was made up of 13 Aboriginal cricketers from Western Victoria, that one player died and was buried in London or that Johnny Mullagh was our first Australian sporting hero.

The pages of history have not be kind to our First Peoples, often neglecting or ignoring the achievements whilst dwelling on falsehoods, generalisations or the demeaning. Dark Emu written by Uncle Bruce Pascoe and the Bill Gammage book The Biggest Estate on Earth talk about a different view of history and the recorded stories of sophisticated farming techniques, established villages, complex social structures that have been lost in our public storytelling about the First Australians. The story of the First XI is one of these stories that somehow doesn’t fit in to our view of the country’s history and that even now the artefacts and records of the tour sit in personal collections or in multiple locations so that the public find it difficult to access these fragments of history.

Telling neglected stories is what theatre can do so well. Through the insightful and emotional renderings of characters we can get closer to the human endeavour. As writer Geoffrey Atherden writes in the script “…although there are some facts about the tour, they’re only fragments, isolated separate fragments. So in order to tell the whole story, the bits between those fragments have been made up.” This is a play that gets inside the story and fills out the facts with fictions about the players, what they may have been feeling and thinking during their time overseas and ultimately, on their return, how their lives had changed or not.

The decision to have an all Indigenous cast, where the actors are playing all the roles including white English characters, is a way of owning the whole story and providing a commentary on the race politics. Actors switch seamlessly from being actors today, Aboriginal characters in 2018 and a range of characters in 1868. Time and place are fluid as we connect the past, present and future to tell this story.

We are excited about telling this story and thank Uncle Richard Kennedy (a descendent of the First XI players) for his cultural guidance, Cricket Australia for their amazing support of this project and a huge thank you for Josie Sangster who is an absolute legend in supporting and running the Harrow Discovery Centre which celebrates Johnny Mullagh and the First XI.

Enjoy the show and the making of history.

Love Wesley.


Playing from 4 Jan – 4 Feb, book here.