In 1983, David Bowie, video director David Mallet and a skeleton crew traveled from London to the town of Carinda, Australia population: 194 to make the video for Lets Dance, the title track from the singers best-selling album. It was an unusual clip even for Bowie, as the video blended scenes of care-free carousing with a highly politicized statement on the plight of Australias Aboriginal people. That dichotomy is explored in the fascinating short film Lets Dance: Bowie Down Under, set to premiere next week at the Tribeca Film Festivalin New York.
Directed by Rubika Shah, the film interviews crew members, local residents featured in the video and talking heads like music journalist Kurt Loder to explore the clips diverse themes. It was very much Davidsidea and concept, Mallet tells Rolling Stone about the video. It was his idea to shoot in Australia, which in those days was a bold thing to do for a music video. I dont think any of us had any idea how important it was to do and what the reaction would be.
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The roots ofLets Dance: Bowie Down Underdate back to 2008, when Shah visited Australia on an unrelated trip and noticed the divide between whites and Aboriginals. Me being non-white myself, I started to understand some of those things he was saying, Shah says. You dont really see Aboriginal people in the towns or when you go out to bars. I couldnt believe that this story hadnt been told.
When Bowie landed in Carinda, it was, to quote journalist Matt Coyte in the film, like an alien was walking down the street. Imagine David Bowie arriving in this sheep-shearing hamlet with few crew and no huge entourage of bodyguards, Shah adds. It was quite risqu.
It was like the Wild West in those days, Mallet says. You didnt ask; you just did it. Nowadays, there wouldve been a health and safety executive who wouldve been asking the representative of the film company. In those days, you would literally go, Oh, lets go in the street and do this and then someone else holds the traffic up and you do it. It was guerrilla filmmaking.
At the time, it was rare to see Aboriginal people portrayed in a positive light in Australia, much less the rest of the world. Bowie, shifting his position from a reclusive superstar to a responsibility-laden artist, wanted to change that, bringing in Aboriginalpeople he found at dancing and theatre schools and having them dance at the, to quoteMallet, redneck bar seen in the video. Bowie refused to use actors, opting for the real people that were in the bar at the time of shooting. You couldnt pay actors to act the way they looked with these Aborginals dancing in their bar, Ross Cameron, the videos producer, says in the film.
In 1983, memories of the stolen generation the term used to describe Aboriginal children taken by the government and placed in white families were still fresh in many peoples minds. David wanted it to be in Australia and he wanted it to be politicized, Mallet says in the film. That was his bottom line. Bowie inserted numerous direct references to the stolen generation in the video; a young girl scrubbing the street, as one professor notes in the film, refers to Aboriginal children that were trained as domestic servants before being sent to white homes.
Thats down to his genius and boldness in thinking because it wasnt a comfortable subject even in Australia, Mallet tells Rolling Stone. A lot of people were horrified about what we were doing.
We see so many shows about Australia and theyre all very one-dimensional, adds Shah. The glittering harbor. The Outback. [Lets Dance] made Aboriginal people feel proud of their culture. Theyre not a spear-wielding tribal people out in the middle of nowhere. They live like everybody else does. But it was the first time that Aboriginals had been seen on global television like that.
Bowie himself is interviewed in the short, revealing his concept for the video. Its a lot more straightforward than anything Ive done in a long time, he says. Its not so concerned with juxtaposing surreal images together. Its a very direct statement about integration of one culture with another.
For Shah, the years-long project, which she hopes to expand into a longer piece with Down Under producer and co-writer Ed Gibbs, is deeply personal. I was born in the U.K., and my family heritage is partly Persian-Iranian, partly Pakistani-Kashmiri, she says. With that in mind, youre always questioning your identity and feeling issues of belonging. I feel very British, but do other people feel Im British? In terms of this story, its really interesting to ask those questions in a different culture and look at how the Aboriginals fit into Australia. Its not for us to make judgments, but for other people to think about in that light.
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