Page was working in a factory when he was accepted into NAISDA,[4] and in 1994 he moved to Sydney to start his career, training as a dancer and performer at the college.[3][4]
Career
Page is known for his physical theatre, dance, and aerial work.[5] He has developed his skills as a performer as well as movement director, and has started developing his own work.[3] He has worked in film, television, and theatre as a movement director.[4]
Stage and events
Page was only 20 when he joined Bangarra Dance Theatre, which he says changed his life. He received training by Bernadette Walong-Sene, and understudied many of the roles in their performances. He did some backup vocals with Christine Anu, and in Ochres partnered with Frances Rings (later artistic director of Bangarra), Gina Rings, and Marilyn Miller.[4] He performed in an international tour of Ochres in 1995, Earthdancer in 2005, and in Wudjang: Not the Past in 2022,[6][7] As part of Bangarra, he also participated in the 1996 Summer Olympics closing ceremony in Atlanta, Georgia.[8]
In 2013 he participated in dance company Force Majeure's "Cultivate" program to help develop his choreography skills.[19]
In other stage work, he appeared in My Lover's Bones at the 2014 Melbourne Festival;[20][2] and in crime thriller play The Demon in 2022.[21]
Page played Cuddlepie in Snugglepot and Cuddlepie (based on the book by May Gibbs) in July 2015[22] and toured nationally with the show in 2016.[23][24]
NORPA
In February 2017, Page was appointed associate director of Northern Rivers Performing Arts (NORPA) in Lismore, where the artistic director was Julian Louis. The position was created with the support of Arts NSW. The role includes running the community engagement program, in particular a series of dance workshops for Indigenous young people. He was also tasked with using studio space at Lismore City Hall for workshops and developing new works, including providing for artists in residence.[25]
One of his first assignments was to further develop the Three Brothers project,[25] which had been under development since 2013. The story is based on a Bundjalung creation story involving three brothers. The project had been devised by Rhoda Roberts and Julian Louis, who would co-direct, and the creative team included Page, Romaine Moreton, Tibian Wyles, Djon Mundine, Guy Simon, and Mitch King. Other contributing artists included choreographer Frances Rings, writer Melissa Lucashenko, and performers Billy McPherson, Thomas E S Kelly, and Damion Hunter. David Page (a cousin of Kirk Page), who had been also involved in the project, died in 2016, which had a significant impact on the rest of the crew.[26] The Three Brothers project developed into Djurra , which was presented in November 2017 as a performance of dance, song, storytelling, and imagery.[19] The performance tells the story of three Bundjalung brothers growing up in a small town, and examines family relationships, generational trauma, and other issues affecting Aboriginal people.[26][27]
In late August 2024, Page directed a play by Rhoda Roberts, My Cousin Frank, with NORPA in Lismore and Byron Bay. It is about her cousin Frank Roberts, a boxer who was the Aboriginal Australian to participate in the Olympics, at Tokyo in 1964.[28] Roberts narrates the story of "a family's journey from the tumultuous era of dispersal and silence to navigating a world controlled by government policy".[29][30][31] Page talked about the play on the Awaye! program on ABC Radio National.[3]
In 2013 he featured in the first episode of the second season of the TV series Redfern Now, where he played Peter, who is fighting for custody of his daughter after the death of his partner.[33] On screen he also appeared in five episodes of season 2 of Mystery Road in 2020.[34][35]
Other film and TV credits include in children's TV series My Place and the film of Bran Nue Dae (2009).[19]
In 2014, he participated in "Rekindling", a youth dance program run by Bangarra with the aim of connecting Aboriginal teenagers in regional areas with their culture, and encourage them to develop any skills they may have in the performing or other arts. As part of this, he visited Lismore several times.[25][19]
^McCann, Annie (18 February 2022), "Page's journey comes full circle", The Mercury
^"Earthdancer". Bangarra Knowledge Ground. Retrieved 4 September 2024.
^ abPage, Kirk (29 December 2012). "Six burning questions for... Kirk Page". The Sydney Morning Herald (Interview). Interviewed by Mangan, John. Retrieved 5 September 2024.
^"Horses Mouth". NORPA. 4 July 2017. Retrieved 4 September 2024.
^ abSyron, Liza-Mare (2004). Artistic practice in contemporary Aboriginal theatre (Master of Creative Arts Research). University of Wollongong. p. 21. Retrieved 5 September 2024. 'The young Aboriginal actor Kirk Page who is in the play, lost his own brother only a year ago to suicide. Now he found it quite difficult to perform the action of a making and setting a noose.' Enoch