Collaborators

Stephen Page AO

Choreographer
Biography

Born in Brisbane, Stephen is a Nunukal/Ngugi Man of Qandamooka Peoples and Munaldjali Man of Yugambeh Nation South East Queensland.

From 1991 – 2023 Stephen was Artistic Director of Bangarra Dance Theatre and has developed a signature body of works that have become milestones in Australian performing arts, culminating over 27 works for the company.

Stephen continues to reinvent First Peoples storytelling within Bangarra, the arts community and through collaborations within the film and TV industry. He directed the Indigenous sections for the 2000 Sydney Olympic Games Opening and Closing Ceremonies and created a new dance work as part of the Gold Coast 2018 Commonwealth Games Opening Ceremony.

Stephen’s  most recent works include Wudjang – Not the Past for 2022 Sydney/Adelaide Festival, Waru – The Journey of the Small Turtle for Bangarra Dance Theatre, Vigil for 2024 Sydney Festival and Baleen Moondjan for 2024 Adelaide Festival. Other works include the Helpmann Award-winning work Bennelong in 2017 and the work Dark Emu in 2018, choreographed together with former Bangarra dancers Daniel Riley and Yolande Brown, and which went on to become one of the most successful productions in the history of Bangarra.

Stephen’s first full-length film Spear premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival before screening at various arts festivals around Australia. He has also directed the chapter Sand in the feature film The Turning (2013) and choreographed the feature films Bran Nue Dae (2009) and The Sapphires (2011).

Stephen was the Artistic Director of the Adelaide Festival in 2004, and currently sits on the Adelaide Festival Board.

In 2015, Stephen was awarded an Honorary Doctorate of Creative Arts by the University of Technology Sydney. In 2016, he received both the NAIDOC Lifetime Achievement Award and JC Williamson Award. In 2017, Stephen was honoured with the Australia Council Dance Award for significant contributions to the cultural and artistic fabric of the nation, and was appointed an Officer of the Order of Australia (AO). Stephen was awarded the prestigious Red Ochre Award at Australia Council for the Arts’ 2022 First Nations Arts Awards. Also in 2022, Performing Arts Connections (PAC) Australia awarded Stephen the Wendy Blacklock Industry Legend Award to honour his role as an artist and cultural leader, establishing and nurturing contemporary Indigenous dance into a place of prominence across Australia.