Krubi of Illawarra is an Australian radio verse play by Coral Lansbury. It was her first notable play and was written when she was nineteen.[3]
Lansbury wrote the play while studying anthropology at university. It was inspired by Professor A.P. Elkins' book The Australian Aboriginie.[4]
The play won the 1948 Henry Lawson prize for poetry.[5]
Lansbury played the title role in the original 1949 production. It was one of the most highly regarded Australian radio plays of the 1940s.[6] The play was produced again in 1951.[7]
Premise
Krubi, a young Aboriginal woman, defies the strictures of her group by enquiring into knowledge normally reserved for men. She refuses to marry Arilla, her bethrothed. Arilla shows Krubi Churinga, the secret place of men's initiations.
^"RADIO". The Argus (Melbourne). No. 32, 826. Victoria, Australia. 17 November 1951. p. 16. Retrieved 11 October 2023 – via National Library of Australia.
Notes
Lansbury, Coral (1949). "Krubi of the Illawarra: A Radio Play". University of Sydney SRC. Hermes, Sydney. pp. 66–76.