Dreaming, Losing in the Great Outback

Sometimes, both combatants lose: the woman struggling to save the Australian Aborigines’ way of life, and the woman drawing these soulful people into the 20th century.

   In “Daisy in the Dreamtimeâ€� the Aborigines lose, too.

   But they were done for the day British explorer Captain Cook spied the “cliffyâ€� shore of eastern Australia in 1788. By the time Daisy Bates, an Irish woman seeking freedom, adventure and magic, sets up her tent in Australia’s outback more than a century later it was all over. She just did not know it.

   Daisy (Joanna Seaton), corseted and fierce, aims to protect these nomadic, spirit-filled people (and herself) from 20th-century intrusions.  

   Missionary Annie Lock (Laurie Ellington), also for her own reasons, wants these painted people to wear pants, read books, tell time, live indoors and take quinine to combat malaria.   

   The two women, tough, rigid, both right and both wrong, duke it out entertainingly, Daisy assisted by desert neighbor King Billy (Donald Sosin); Annie by her church and its power to feed people.

   While the two battle to save the Aborigines (one pressing choice, the other, tradition), big government and big business sweep the two aside and destroy the Aborigines in their own special way. And though the tale is devastating, the characters, the acting, the moody sound, the spirits and Gloria Miller’s fine direction make this staged reading of “Daisy in the Dreamtimeâ€� an adventure.

   Aglet is presenting another staged reading of Lynne Kaufman’s “Daisy in the Dreamtimeâ€� March 20, 7 p.m., at Berkshire Theater Festival’s Unicorn Theatre in Lenox, MA. Telephone 860-435-6928.

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