Tahlila

AVAILABLE TO TOUR

In collaboration with First Nation artist Caleena Sansbury and Camile Feghali and inspired by First Nation elderly leaders Uncle Larry Walsh and Jason Tamiru

Developed with co-director and performer Caleena Sansbury, musical director Camille Feghali and inspired by First Nations elders Uncle Larry Walsh (Taungurung) and Jason Tamiru (Yorta Yorta). Originally motivated by frustration at finding activities in laguanges other than English for her own three year old in Melbourne, a city of more than 200 languages, Aseel developed Tahlilah (“Lullaby”). The stars are no longer twinkling in the sky and we need your help to sing them back to shine more brightly than ever! In this participatory performance, families connect across cultures through the simple beauty of lullabies. Children dance, sing, and play in a magical, twilight-inspired installation space.

Lullabies Under the Stars is an interactive musical show or performance playtime for children under 2 and their families. The show is built around a narrative of the stars in the sky disappearing because of a lack of joyful song from earth.

The performers introduce the audience to the space by leading the children in song and dance from Arabic and Australian Indigenous cultures; then the children are invited to explore the space, playing with colourful, nightlit activities. The show resolves when the stars return, and the audience come back together as a group and are each invited to share their own lullabies, language and ritual with everyone.

“… a beautiful participatory performance…” Tot Hot Or Not https://tothotornot.com/lullabies-under-the-skies/

“We absolutely loved this workshop – thankyou. It was ran so beautifully and the changes in activities through song, story, dance, drawing really worked well.” – audience feedback

Artplay (City of Melbourne) (as Lullabies Under the Stars)

June 2019 – Artplay (City of Melbourne) (as Lullabies Under the Stars)

April 2021 - Be Bold Festival, The Bowery Performing Arts Centre, St Albans

Tahliah is performed in a wide variety of spaces including unconventional and non-theatrical venues. We require a dedicated, clear space of at least 12m x 6m.

Audience: infants under 2 years old and their families. Audience size is restricted to a maximum capacity of 40 (adults and children). The audience I seated on the floor and the children’s activities take place at floor level.

Duration: 50 minutes

Cast: Aseel Tayah, Caleena Sansbury, Camille Feghali

Crew: x 2

Performed in Arabic, First Nations Australian languages, and English.

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Musician / Artist / Actor / Broadcaster / Story Teller A Proud Guguyelandji and Woppaburra Woman

MARLENE CUMMINS

Lighting Designer

Bronwyn Pringle

Artist

Neda Taha

Artist

Nandika

Creator, director and performer, Producer

Aseel Tayah

Musician / Artist / Actor / Broadcaster / Story Teller A Proud Guguyelandji and Woppaburra Woman

MARLENE CUMMINS

MARLENE CUMMINS

Born in the southwest Queensland town of Cunnamulla, Marlene’s traditional people on her Father’s side are Guguyelandji, and Woppaburra on her Mother’s side. The family then moved to Winton where Marlene spent her formative years. Growing up under the cloud of the Aboriginal Protection Act of the 1950s and 60s, Marlene had a ‘grassroots’ upbringing in a very politically aware family.

Marlene’s life is the story of her people and she tells it through her art, her lyrics, her on-stage performance as both an actress and singer and more recently through documentary film making. Marlene refined her skills as a blues saxophonist and songwriter at the Berklee College of Music Boston in the mid-90s and has been performing live for as long as she can remember.

A regular broadcaster on Koori Radio with her renowned blues show, ‘Marloo’s Blues’, Marlene won Broadcaster of the Year at the 2009 Deadly Awards and Gadigal Information Broadcaster of the Year 2015. In recent years Marlene has represented Koori Radio at the Byron Bay BluesFest as a roving reporter interviewing major blues artists from around the globe.  Also an actor and storyteller, Marlene played the role of Beenie in Nardi Simpson’s play ‘Black Drop Effect’ premiering at the Sydney Festival in January 2020. In 2014 Marlene released her first full-length album, Koori Woman Blues to coincide with the premiere of her biographical documentary film Black Panther Woman that she co-wrote with Rachel Perkins.

Over the past 20 years Marlene has performed with her band at festivals, events and clubs throughout Australia. Considered one of Australia’s foremost Indigenous female blues writer and performer, Marlene knows the blues from an Aboriginal woman’s perspective.  Her story is one of vulnerability, strength and survival. A career highlight was performing on saxophone with Charles Neville (Neville Bros) at Snug Harbour New Orleans in 2017.

Marlene presents a biographical journey through her music; a myriad of political, social and personal experiences that content her lyrics and songs. With a mixture of original and traditional blues numbers, the centrepiece and original song is the stirring epic blues anthem, ‘Koori Woman’. Marlene dedicates this song to Aboriginal women everywhere as they were, in her words, ‘the backbone of the struggle’.

“The life Marlene has lived is closer to the life that produced those original blues singers like Muddy Waters, than any contemporary American blues artist.” (Richard Field, Producer)

Marlene is currently a Board Member of Koori Radio

and is a past Board Member of the Australia Council for the Arts

Lighting Designer

Bronwyn Pringle

Bronwyn is a Melbourne based lighting designer who’s work with companies including Polyglot, SoulArt, Finucane & Smith, Chamber Made Opera, Ballarat Arts Academy, Outback Theatre for Young People and La Mama has been seen in venues ranging from a derelict Kensington flat, a woodshed in Glencoe, Belvoir Street Theatre,

Artist

Neda Taha

Neda Taha is a Tongan-Iraqi interdisciplinary artist hailing from Western Sydney with core practices in dance, theatre and community engagement. From her street hip-hop roots with award winning Pioneers Dance Crew to her captivating performances in Sydney’s prestigious venues like the Sydney Opera House, Neda’s talent knows no bounds. Beyond her Helpmann-nominated work in theatre, Neda is a creative producer and advocate for the arts. She is dedicated to empowering young people from Western Sydney and encouraging their involvement in the vibrant arts community.

Artist

Nandika

Nellicka is an emerging Indian-Australian artist from Western Sydney, with a background in dance, music and acting. She recently completed high school and is now studying a Bachelor of Arts/ Bachelor of Social Science at Western Sydney University while pursuing experience in acting. She has participated in community and school performances, primarily singing and dancing, from a young age and is currently a part of PYT Fairfield’s 2023 Ensemble. She is eager to continue learning and growing as an artist through involvement in various projects.

Creator, director and performer, Producer

Aseel Tayah

Creator, director and performer, Producer

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