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Roger Scholes - Coolbaroo Club.

Coolbaroo Club

Roger Scholes
Australia 1996
55 min

This hour-long documentary gives an astonishing insight into the life of an East Perth dance club—the Coolbaroo Club—run by the Nyoongar Aboriginal community and for all Aboriginal people and their (few) white supporters between 1946 and 1960.

The film gives a very good background to the situation for Aboriginal people in Perth in the post-World War II years. Aboriginal people, excluded from white social clubs and venues, began organising their own dances at a hall in East Perth —the Coolbaroo Club.

The hugely popular dances were attended by Aboriginal people from all over the area. The Coolbaroo Club also attracted black musicians from around the world, including Nat "King" Cole, Harold Blair and the Harlem Globetrotters, who could not perform for Aboriginal people in any other venue.

Although best-remembered for the hugely popular Coolbaroo dances attended by hundreds of Aborigines and their white supporters, the Coolbaroo League, founded by club members, ran a newspaper and became an effective political organisation, speaking out on issues of the day affecting Aboriginal people.

Overall the documentary is powerful and inspiring, capturing an episode of Aboriginal history that is barely known. (edited from greenleft.org.au and roninfilms.com.au)

Cast
Release dates 1996 - Australia
Video/DVD Release Date not available
Awards Winner - 1996 Human Rights Award.
Rating G - general
Language level not available
Distributor Beyond Distribution
Soundtrack Lucky Oceans, performed by Lois Olney
Genre Documentary
Notes
  • Directed in collaboration with Aboriginal historian and author, Steve Kinnane.
  • "More shaming than a hundred news stories, this chirpy, dignified and scathing documentary by Roger Scholes does more than just recall a less tolerant time and place. In a modest way, it lifts the lid on postwar relations in this country. Some wonderful interviews with feisty former club members, especially several still remarkably articulate old women. This is a shaming documentary but an educative and surprisingly forgiving one." - Robert Drewe, Sydney Morning Herald, July 1996.

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