Rachel Perkins Explained

Rachel Perkins
Birth Place:Canberra, Australian Capital Territory, Australia
Occupation:Producer, director, writer
Years Active:1998–present
Spouse:Richard McGrath (divorced)
Children:1
Father:Charles Perkins
Relatives:Hetty Perkins (grandmother)
Hetti Perkins (sister)
Madeleine Madden (niece)

Rachel Perkins (born 1970) is an Indigenous Australian film and television director, producer, and screenwriter. She founded and was co-director of the independent film production company Blackfella Films from 1992 until 2022. Perkins and the company were responsible for producing First Australians (2008), an award-winning documentary series that remains the highest-selling educational title in Australia, and which Perkins regards as her most important work. She directed the films Radiance (1998), One Night the Moon (2001), Bran Nue Dae (2009), the courtroom drama telemovie Mabo (2012), and Jasper Jones (2017). The acclaimed television drama series Redfern Now was made by Blackfella Films, and Perkins directed two episodes as well as the feature-length conclusion to the series, Promise Me (2015).

Perkins is an Arrernte and Kalkadoon woman from Central Australia, who was raised in Canberra. She is the daughter of Aboriginal activist Charles Perkins and his wife Eileen.

Early life and education

Perkins was born in Canberra, Australian Capital Territory, in 1970.[1] She is the daughter of Charlie Perkins,[2] granddaughter of Hetty Perkins, and has Arrernte, Kalkadoon,[3] Irish, and German ancestry.[4] Her siblings are Adam and Hetti Perkins, an art curator, and her niece is actress Madeleine Madden.[5] [6]

She and her sister attended Melrose High School in Canberra.

Perkins' paternal grandmother's people were from Alice Springs, and she wanted to learn more about that side of the family's culture, so, after finishing school in 1988, she applied for a job as a television presenter with the Central Australian Aboriginal Media Association (CAAMA), mainly to get the airfare to fly there. As she expected, she was not given the job, but they offered her a traineeship at Imparja Television, where she learnt the basics of production, including editing and sound recording.[7]

After starting her career as a filmmaker, in the early 1990s she won a scholarship to study production at the Australian Film, Television and Radio School (AFTRS) in Sydney, where she met and collaborated with Warwick Thornton.[8] She completed the Specialist Extension Course Certificate – Producing in 1995, and also met and became friends with Ivan Sen there.[9]

Career

A few years after beginning her traineeship at CAAMA, aged 21, Perkins became executive producer of the Indigenous unit at SBS Television, the only person in the unit.[7]

In 1992, Perkins founded Blackfella Films, a documentary and narrative production company creating distinctive Australian content for television, live theatre, and online platforms, with a particular focus on Indigenous Australian stories. Much of her film work was done under the company name.

Perkins wrote, directed, and co-produced (with Ned Lander) a 55-minute documentary film about her father's 1965 protest bus journey into regional New South Wales, dubbed the "Freedom Ride". The film was called Freedom Ride,[10] and it was part of the 1993 series Blood Brothers, which profiled four prominent Aboriginal men.[11] Perkins said that she travelled with her father to many of the places that the Freedom Ride visited, and it was also a good opportunity to interviewer her father about his early life and get an insight into him and events that she would not otherwise have had access to. She also gained an "understanding of the importance of filmmaking, in terms of capturing Australian cultural history".[7]

In 1996, under the auspices of the Indigenous Branch of the Australian Film Commission, Perkins produced a film for Warwick Thornton (who was also a friend), From Sand to Celluloid – Payback.[7] [12]

Radiance (1998) was her first feature fiction film as a director. She said later that it took a long time to cast the main characters, who included Trisha Morton-Thomas, Rachael Maza, and Deb Mailman, then a newcomer from Brisbane, and that they rehearsed for six weeks.[7]

In 2001 she co-wrote (with playwright John Romeril[13]) and directed the telemovie One Night the Moon, featuring musicians Paul Kelly, Kev Carmody, and Maireed Hannah.[7]

First Australians was a seven-part documentary series broadcast on SBS Television in 2008. The general manager of SBS Nigel Milan had asked Gordon Briscoe what he could do for Indigenous people, and Briscoe suggested giving them back their history. It was a very ambitious project, and Perkins said that it was the most important thing she would ever work on, "because it really was an opportunity to try and tell the Indigenous story in a comprehensive manner from an Indigenous perspective, over a span of 200 years. It had never been done before".[7] The series took six years to make,[12] and remains the highest-selling educational title in Australia.

Bran Nue Dae, a film version of Jimmy Chi's 1990s hit stage musical, was directed by Perkins and released in 2009.[12]

In 2009 Perkins was curator of the Message Sticks Indigenous Film Festival. This tenth anniversary of the festival held at the Sydney Opera House featured the premiere of Fire Talker, a documentary film about her father Charlie Perkins by Australian filmmaker Ivan Sen.[14] [15]

Her courtroom drama / biopic telemovie about land rights campaigner Eddie Koiki Mabo, Mabo, featuring Jimi Bani and Deborah Mailman, was broadcast in 2012.[12]

Also in 2012 Perkins directed two episodes of the first series of Redfern Now in 2012: "Stand Up" and "Pretty Boy Blue", the latter dealing with a death-in-custody.[12] She also directed the feature-length conclusion (2015).[16] Luke Buckmaster of The Guardian gave the film 4 out of 5 stars, praising its "superb cast" and saying "the series concludes at the peak of its power".[17]

Perkins executive produced the first series of First Contact (2014), a reality television show which challenged the non-Indigenous participants of Indigenous Australians.[18]

Also in 2014, she finished making the documentary film Black Panther Woman for SBS. The film was nominated for the Documentary Australia Foundation Award for Australian Documentary at the Sydney Film Festival.[19]

She directed the feature fiction film Jasper Jones, released in 2017.[20]

Perkins wrote, directed, presented, and produced the three-part documentary series The Australian Wars which aired on SBS and NITV in September 2022. This series examines the Australian frontier wars fought across the country when British settlers moved in.[21] [22] [23]

Perkins has said that of all the filmmaking jobs, she likes editing the best, as it is the most creative part. She also said that she feels a great sense of responsibility "to make films or to use media as a vehicle to tell my people's story and to create change".[7]

Blackfella Films

Perkins founded Blackfella Films in 1992.

Darren Dale joined the company in 2000, becoming co-director of the company. The award-winning First Australians, a seven-part documentary series broadcast on SBS Television in 2008, won many awards and was also sold overseas. Miranda Dear, formerly head of drama at ABC Television, was a producer and head of drama at Blackfella from 2010 to 2020.[24] Other productions have included the television film Mabo, the TV series Redfern Now, and many more since.[25] In 2009, Blackfella Films was renting space from Bangarra Dance Theatre in offices overlooking Sydney Harbour.[7]

In 2022, Perkins left Blackfella Films.[24]

Other activities

Perkins served as Commissioner with the Australian Film Commission from 2004 to 2008, and since 2009 has been on the board of Screen Australia. She has been a member of the boards of the New South Wales Film and Television Office (now Screen NSW), the Australian Film, Television and Radio School (AFTRS), National Indigenous Media Association, the Indigenous Screen Australia, and the Australian International Documentary Conference. She has said that she gets onto these boards in order to help drive government policy.[7]

In 2015, she raised funding for the Arrernte Women's Project, which had been established in 2014, one of the goals of which was to record the traditional songs and associated cultural knowledge of the Arrernte women of Central Australia, to create an archive for future generations.[19] [26]

Perkins became president of the AIATSIS Foundation in 2015.[27] [28] She was a council member from 17 May 2017 to 16 May 2021,[29] and is deputy chair of AIATSIS board from 1 July 2024 30 September 2024.[30]

In 2019, she was invited to give the ABC's annual Boyer Lecture, which she titled The End of Silence, and broadcast on ABC RN in November and available as a podcast.[4]

Perkins served two terms on the Australian Heritage Council, from February 2015 to February 2018 and from March 2018 to March 2021.[31]

In 2023, she campaigned for a "yes" vote in the 2023 Australian referendum to establish an Indigenous Voice to Parliament.[32]

In March 2024, Perkins was a guest speaker in a "spotlight session" at the Australian International Documentary Conference.[22] In the same month, she was appointed chair of AFTRS, the first Indigenous filmmaker to be appointed to the position in its 50-year history.[8]

In 2024 she conducts masterclasses for Indigenous screen students at the Centre of Appropriate Technology in Alice Springs.[8]

Recognition and awards

Personal honours

Film and TV awards

Some of the many awards for which her films and TV productions have been nominated or won include:

Personal life

Perkins has a son with her ex-husband, filmmaker Richard McGrath.[20] [44]

She has said that next to filmmaking, music is her other passion.[7]

she lives in Alice Springs.[8]

Selected filmography

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Perkins, Rachel, 1970- [authority record]]. AIATSIS. 26 August 2024.
  2. News: The Sydney Morning Herald. Two of us: Rachel and Hetti Perkins. 13 November 2013. Eryk. Bagshaw. 20 November 2019. Sisters Rachel Perkins, 44, and Hetti Perkins, 49, are the daughters of renowned Aboriginal activist Charlie Perkins..
  3. Web site: Perkins, Rachel. 2012. Tenille. Hands. Written by Tenille Hands, National Film and Sound Archive; [in] The Encyclopedia of Women and Leadership in the Twentieth Century [Creative Commons International 4.0]. 20 November 2019.
  4. News: ABC News. Australia. Director Rachel Perkins calls for 'end of silence' on Indigenous recognition in ABC Boyer Lecture. 16 November 2019. Rachel. Perkins. 20 November 2019. ...an edited extract from the first of Rachel Perkins's Boyer Lectures. Her complete series of lectures, titled The End of Silence, will be broadcast on ABC RN..
  5. News: Aboriginal teen 'stoked' after speech. 25 October 2010. The Age. Melbourne. 27 September 2015. Australian Associated Press.
  6. News: An Employment Pool of Eager Aussies. Dobbie. Phil. 6 November 2010. CBS MoneyWatch. 27 September 2015.
  7. Filmmaker interviews: Rachel Perkins. Rachel. Perkins. National Film and Sound Archive. 26 August 2024.
  8. Web site: Morris. Linda. Rachel Perkins to chair AFTRS at crucial point for the arts school. The Sydney Morning Herald. 3 April 2024. 27 August 2024.
  9. Web site: Rachel Perkins. Australian Film Television and Radio School. 24 March 2023. 27 August 2024.
  10. Web site: Blood Brothers – Freedom Ride. National Film and Sound Archive. 26 August 2024.
  11. Web site: Blood Brothers (1993). Screen Australia. 26 August 2024.
  12. Rachel Perkins: Creating Change Through Blackfella Films. Senses of Cinema. Felicity. Collins. December 2013. Contemporary Australian Filmmakers. 69. 27 August 2024.
  13. Web site: One Night the Moon Media kit. Cath Lavelle. MusicArtsDance. November 2001. https://web.archive.org/web/20110714133800/http://www.musicartsdance.com/projects/docs/ONTMmediakit.pdf. 14 July 2011. dead.
  14. Web site: SBS Film – Spreading the message by Mary Colbert. 4 May 2009.
  15. Web site: ABC Sydney – What's on This Weekend – SATURDAY 9 May – FILM FESTIVAL. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20090911101729/http://www.abc.net.au/local/stories/2009/05/08/299325.htm. 11 September 2009.
  16. Web site: Watch Redfern Now: Promise Me. Netflix. 26 November 2018. 27 August 2024.
  17. Web site: Buckmaster. Luke. Redfern Now: Promise Me review – final, unsettling showing from a superb cast. The Guardian. 9 April 2015. 27 August 2024.
  18. Web site: Munro. Kate. First Contact producer Rachel Perkins: 'Prejudice often comes from ignorance … people can change'. The Guardian. 28 November 2014. 27 October 2016.
  19. Web site: Rachel Perkins. Radio National. 30 September 2019. 27 August 2024.
  20. Web site: Dow. Steve. Rachel Perkins on Jasper Jones and Indigenous activism. The Saturday Paper. 28 January 2017. 28 January 2017.
  21. Web site: Filmmaker Rachel Perkins reveals the truth of The Australian Wars. National Indigenous Television. 24 August 2022. 27 August 2024.
  22. Web site: Rachel Perkins: Truth to Power. AIDC. 22 January 2024. 27 August 2024.
  23. Web site: Payne. Anne Maree. Norman. Heidi. In The Australian Wars, Rachel Perkins dispenses with the myth Aboriginal people didn't fight back. The Conversation. 21 September 2022. 21 September 2022.
  24. Web site: About. Blackfella Films. 26 August 2024. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20240523083607/http://blackfellafilms.com.au/about/. 23 May 2024.
  25. Web site: Blackfella Films. Official site. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 27 May 2013.
  26. Web site: 4. Finding Arrernte songs. Myfany. Turpin. 2016.
  27. Web site: Slattery. Claire. Foundation launches million-dollar plan to record Australia's songlines. ABC News. Australia. 18 October 2016. 27 October 2016.
  28. Web site: A Foundation for all Australians. The Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies (AIATSIS). 14 May 2015. 27 October 2016.
  29. Web site: Transparency Portal. Transparency Portal. 26 August 2024.
  30. Web site: Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies (Board). Directory. Australian Government. 26 August 2024.
  31. Web site: Australian Heritage Council. DCCEEW. 13 March 2012. 26 August 2024.
  32. Web site: Perkins. Rachel. Grasp the nettle. The Monthly. 1 October 2023. 27 August 2024.
  33. Web site: The Byron Kennedy Award, 1984-2016. ...is awarded for outstanding creative enterprise within the film and television industries. The Award is given to an individual or organization whose work embodies the qualities of [producer] Byron Kennedy: innovation, vision and the relentless pursuit of excellence. AACTA.
  34. Web site: Rachel Perkins. AustLit. 27 August 2024.
  35. Web site: 200 Women: Book Review. Geoff. Blackwell. Geoff Blackwell. Ruth. Hobday. Top Titles. Australian Booksellers Association. 26 August 2024.
  36. Web site: Rachel Perkins. 200 Women who will change the way you see the world. 26 August 2024.
  37. Web site: BMW Group Presents: 200 Women Who Will Change the Way You See the World.. BMW Group PressClub. 5 August 2018. 26 August 2024.
  38. Web site: Aboriginal Australia : 1994 highlights [Catalogue entry]]. AITSIS. Mura Collections Catalogue. 20 November 2019. ...covers the Tudawali Film and Video Award. Rachel Perkins' entry 'Freedom Ride' won the award and Rachel discusses the film and using the visual media as a tool to help tell Indigenous stories.
  39. Web site: Aboriginal magistrate Pat O'Shane, Archie Roach honoured at Deadly Awards. ABC News. Australia. 10 September 2013. 27 August 2024.
  40. Web site: All the Awards from Festival des Antipodes. Rencontres Internationales du Cinéma des Antipodes. 27 August 2024.
  41. News: The Sydney Morning Herald. Sweet Country wins top prize at the Directors Guild Awards. Garry. Maddox. 6 May 2019. 20 November 2019.
  42. Web site: Australian Director's Guild Awards 2019: winners. TV Tonight. 7 May 2019. David. Knox. 20 November 2019.
  43. Web site: 2020-03-25. NSW Premier's History Awards. 2023-09-07. State Library of NSW.
  44. Web site: Mengel. Noel. Hurt and healing voiced. The Courier-Mail.
  45. Web site: Flat. Blackfella Films. 27 August 2024.
  46. Web site: Mimi. Blackfella Films. 11 January 2024. 27 August 2024.