Elaine Crombie
Elaine Crombie | |
---|---|
Born | |
Nationality | Australian |
Occupation(s) | Actress, singer, writer |
Years active | 1999–present |
Children | 2 |
Parent(s) | Lillian Crombie and Sam Backo |
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.
Early life and education
[edit]Crombie is a Pitjantjatjara and Yankunytjatjara woman from South Australia.[1] She and her brother were brought up by her mother's foster parents in Port Pirie, the Turners, after being given up at the age of six weeks by her mother, actor Lillian Crombie, who went to Sydney "to follow her dreams" in the performing arts. Lillian, along with her brother, had been one of the Stolen Generations.[2]
During her teens Elaine (in her own words) "fell off the rails", and she left high school at the age of 16 to go to the University of Adelaide to attend the Centre for Aboriginal Studies in Music. She lived in Adelaide for two years before going to Brisbane, where she was met by her father, rugby league great Sam Backo, for the first time.[2][3]
In Brisbane Crombie studied at the Aboriginal Centre for the Performing Arts for 18 months.[2]
Crombie delivered the second annual lecture at National Institute of Dramatic Art for NAIDOC week 2021.[4]
Career
[edit]Crombie's first break was when she auditioned successfully for Wesley Enoch's The Sunshine Club with the Queensland Theatre Company. The play toured regional Queensland, including Cairns, and did a season at the Playhouse in Brisbane in November 1999 followed by a run at the Sydney Opera House[2] in January 2000. In 2003 she joined the tour to England to perform in the first Aboriginal-written play, The Cherry Pickers by Kevin Gilbert, with the Sydney Theatre Company.[5]
After spending a few years performing in Sydney and Brisbane, Crombie met and fell in love with the man who would be father to her two sons. After the birth of her second child she found herself feeling very depressed, and soon afterwards the couple split up during a family holiday, and Crombie returned to South Australia with her boys. They lived there for some years but spent periods in Sydney for performances. As of 2016[update] they had been living in the Wollongong area for two years.[2]
One of Crombie's earliest roles on television was in 8MMM Aboriginal Radio, a comedy series about an Aboriginal radio station located in Alice Springs which screened on ABC Television in 2015.[6][7] She played Kitty in Nakkiah Lui's 2017 comedy television series, Kiki and Kitty, made for ABC iview[8] and also screened on ABC Comedy.[9] She also appeared in many episodes of Black Comedy and played Bev in the drama series Top of the Lake.[10][11]
She appeared in the feature film Top End Wedding (2019).[11]
In 2019, Crombie premiered her own show, Janet's Vagrant Love in the Spiegeltent at Adelaide Cabaret Festival, and two years later brought a pared-back version of the show to the Adelaide Fringe. A combination of personal songs and stories, she described the show as "Love, loss, childhood trauma & raising blak men".[citation needed]
She co-hosted the National Indigenous Music Awards 2020 in Darwin.[12]
Crombie starred in a touring production of Wesley Enoch's The 7 Stages of Grieving, directed by Shari Sebbens for the Sydney Theatre Company. The staging was originally scheduled for 2020,[13] but, interrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic in Australia, was postponed until mid-2021.[14] It was staged in Sydney, Adelaide, and Canberra,[15] with a new epilogue that introduces a note of activism, with Crombie, Sebbens and assistant director Ian Michael calling for the audience to engage in "seven actions of healing".[16]
Her first performance in 2022 was in the Bangarra Dance Theatre's production, Wudjang: Not the Past, which premiered at the Sydney Festival in January before touring to Hobart and Adelaide as part of the Adelaide Festival.[3] Also in 2022, Crombie directed Bungambrawartha, a stage production in Albury-Wodonga presented by Hot House Theatre Company.[17]
In February/March 2024, Crombie performed as Gindara in Baleen Moondjan, a work commissioned by the Adelaide Festival and created by former Bangarra Dance Theatre artistic director Stephen Page. It was performed on a huge stage in front of huge specially-constructed "whalebones" on the beach at Glenelg. The performance combined contemporary dance, storytelling, and songs in English, Jandai, and Gumbaynggirr/Yaegl languages.[18][19][20]
Awards
[edit]Crombie won the Helpmann Award for Best Female Actor in a Supporting Role in a Musical in 2019 for her role in Barbara and the Camp Dogs,[21] in a reprise of the role at the Belvoir St Theatre that she had also undertaken in 2017.[11]
She won the Dreamtime Award in 2020 for Actor of the Year.[22]
Other roles
[edit]Crombie is a First Nations Organiser for the Media, Entertainment and Arts Alliance (MEAA).[11]
She is a member of the South Australian Film Corporation's First Nations Advisory Committee, launched in November 2020 as part of their First Nations Screen Strategy 2020-2025,[23] in partnership with Channel 44.[24]
Documentary
[edit]A 2019 short documentary film in a series called Deadly Family Portraits, called Crombie Crew, focused on Elaine and her mother Lillian.[1][25] The series of three films included one about Zaachariaha Fielding and his father, artist Robert Fielding, and another about dancers Taree and Caleena Sansbury.[26]
Filmography
[edit]Television
[edit]Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
2017 | Kiki and Kitty | Kitty | Series 1, Episode 1: "Kiki Comes To Town"
Episode 2: "A Blessing in Disguise" Episode 3: "Live Fast, Die Young" Episode 4: "Big Trouble in Little 'Gina" Episode 5: "Revenge is a Dish Best Served Moist" Episode 6: "Ice, Ice Baby" |
2016–2018 | Black Comedy | Guest | Episodes 1-6 |
2018 | How To Stay Married | Carol | Series 1, Episode 2 |
2018 | Nowhere Boys | Brianna | Series 4 "Battle for Negative Space", Episode 1: "We Are Not Alone Anymore"
Episode 2: "Secrets, Lies and Parasites" Episode 3: "Lost in Negative Space" Episode 4: "The Cool Guy" Episode 5: "Stranger Danger" |
2018 | The Housemate | Gloria | Series 1, Episode 6: "Hometown Housemate" |
2018 | Grace Beside Me | Miss Long | Series 1, Episode 2: "Black Hat's Treasure"
Episode 3: "Yarn for Yar" Episode 4: "Sorry" Episode 7: "Grace" Episode 8: "The Sweetest Gift" Episode 9: "Blackbird" Episode 11: "Love Me, Love Me Not" |
2018 | Rosehaven | Series 2, Episode 1 | |
2019 | Top End Wedding | Dana | |
2017-2019 | Get Krack!n | Eloise Kroombe Businesswoman | Series 1, Episode 2
Series 2, Episode 8 |
2019 | Ties That Bind | Marlene Short | |
2019 | Sammy J | Cop | Series 2, Episode 38: "Constitutional Cops" |
2020 | Thalu | Bits and Bobs | Series 1, Episode 1: "Escape" |
2020 | Drunk History: Australia | Mary's Mother, Officer | Series 1, Episode 5: "Abe Saffron aka Mr Sin/The Female Bushranger Mary Ann Bugg" |
2021 | Wentworth | Aunty Fran | Series 9, Episode 1: "Rogue"
Episode 2: "Requiem" |
2021 | RFDS | Ursula | Series 1, Episode 6, Episode 8 |
2021 | Firebite | Coralee | Series 1, Episode 1: "Pest Control"
Episode 2: "The Last Bloodhunter" |
2021 | History Bites Back | Host | |
2020-2022 | Stuff Everyone Should Know About Australia | Host | Series 1, Episode 1: "Original Greenies"
Episode 2: "Sweet Dreamings" Episode 3: "Fishes & Loaves" Series 2, Episode 1: "The Heroes of Gundagai" Episode 2: "Language Warriors" Episode 3: "Ancient Ovens" Episode 4: "More Than Myth" |
References
[edit]- ^ a b "First Nations Advisory Committee - Elaine Crombie". SAFC. 23 October 2020. Retrieved 26 June 2021.
- ^ a b c d e Crombie, Elaine (9 December 2016). "I am living proof of the stolen generation. Trust me, the trauma is real". The Guardian. Retrieved 27 June 2021.
- ^ a b Cathcart, Michael (7 December 2021). "Elaine Crombie will calm you down before she punches you in the guts" (Audio + text). ABC Radio National. The Stage Show. Retrieved 8 December 2021.
- ^ Kappos, Matthew (9 July 2021). "Elaine Crombie speaks to the First Nations experience in the arts". Retrieved 12 May 2023.
- ^ "The Sunshine Club". AusStage. Retrieved 28 June 2021.
- ^ "8MMM Aboriginal Radio (ABC TV Mini Series)". Amy Bastow. 17 August 2017. Retrieved 25 June 2021.
- ^ "8MMM Aboriginal Radio (2014)". The Screen Guide. Screen Australia. Retrieved 25 June 2021.
- ^ Knox, David (16 March 2017). "ABC filming absurdist iview comedy, Kiki & Kitty". TV Tonight. Retrieved 25 June 2021.
- ^ "Kiki And Kitty". ABC iview. Retrieved 25 June 2021.
- ^ Elaine Crombie at IMDb
- ^ a b c d "Elaine Crombie". Belvoir St Theatre. Retrieved 26 June 2021.
- ^ "National Indigenous Music Awards 2020: Baker Boy wins second artist of the year title". The Guardian. 8 August 2020. Retrieved 9 August 2020.
- ^ "The 7 Stages of Grieving". AusStage. 25 June 2020. Retrieved 24 June 2021.
- ^ "The 7 Stages of Grieving by Wesley Enoch & Deborah Mailman". State Theatre Company South Australia. Retrieved 26 June 2021.
- ^ Bremer, Rudi (5 June 2021). "As The 7 Stages of Grieving is re-staged, Shari Sebbens and Elaine Crombie ask how much has changed in 26 years". ABC News (Australia). ABC Arts. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 24 June 2021.
- ^ Dow, Steve (26 May 2021). "The 7 Stages of Grieving review – Elaine Crombie gives a singular performance in show that swings to outright activism". the Guardian. Retrieved 27 June 2021.
- ^ "Show is the story of how the mixed-mob of Albury-Wodonga came to be". The Border Mail. 11 October 2022. Retrieved 12 May 2023.
- ^ "Baleen Moondjan". Adelaide Festival. Retrieved 3 October 2024.
- ^ Routley, Nicholas (4 March 2024). "Baleen Moondjan and Guuranda". Australian Stage Online. Retrieved 3 October 2024.
- ^ Keen, Suzie (29 February 2024). "Adelaide Festival review: Baleen Moondjan". InReview. Retrieved 3 October 2024.
- ^ "2019 Nominees and Winners". Helpmann Awards. Retrieved 25 June 2021.
- ^ "Garrmalang Festival Janet's Vagrant Love - Elaine Crombie". ArtsHub Australia. Retrieved 12 May 2023.
- ^ "First Nations Screen Strategy 2020-2025". SAFC. Retrieved 26 June 2021.
- ^ "SAFC launches new First Nations Screen Strategy and Channel 44 partnership". SAFC. 13 November 2020. Retrieved 26 June 2021.
- ^ "Deadly Family Portraits: Crombie Crew". ABC iview. 6 March 2018. Archived from the original on 8 December 2021. Retrieved 26 June 2021.
- ^ Knox, David (14 August 2019). "SAFC, Screen Territory link filmmakers in the heart of Australia". TV Tonight. Retrieved 2 January 2024.