“Director Wesley Enoch once again produces work marked by significant simplicity and sympathetic realism that includes a great deal of humour.” – Helen Thomson, The Age
Set in the 1950s, in the northern Victorian area of Shepparton and Mooroopna, RAINBOW’S END creates a resonant “snapshot” of one particular Koori family to dramatise the struggle for decent houses, meaningful education, jobs and community acceptance.
The mood is pure 1950s. The Queen’s visit. The Olympic Games. Bob Dyer’s Pick-a-Box on the radio. The coming of television. Meanwhile three generations of Aboriginal women living on ‘the Flats’ – the banks of the Goulburn River – confront floods, prejudice and how to pay off encyclopedias. A generation after the Cummeragunga Walk-off the struggle continues. Nan Dear remembers – and continues to fight for the freedom that life on The Flats brings. Her daughter Gladys wants what all mothers’ want, a better life for her children, while daughter Dolly can’t understand why they have to live life like this. Maybe encyclopedias have the answer?
Performed by Beryl Booth, Pauline Whyman, Tammy Clarkson and Gareth Ellis
Written by Jane Harrison
Director – Wesley Enoch
Set and Costume Designer – Christina Smith
Lighting Designer – Marko Resoindeck
Sound Designer – David Franzke



