As Caleena creates her first solo work, she brings her great-grandmother’s story to the stage, before it is lost.
Becoming Mullamar is a feature documentary following First Nations dancer and choreographer Caleena Sansbury as she creates her first major solo work, Mullamar, for the Adelaide Festival Centre’s Our Mob Showcase.
Through dance, Caleena seeks to honour and carry forward the legacy of the Aboriginal women who shaped her family and community. At the centre of that story is her great-grandmother, Aunty Mary Edith Williams-Cooper, known as Mullamar, who was born at Point Pearce Mission in 1920 and helped establish Kalaya Children’s Centre, South Australia’s first Aboriginal community-run childcare service. Caleena’s grandmother, Aunty Joan Lamont-Williams, continued this legacy through decades of cultural leadership and advocacy.
As Caleena transforms this history into contemporary performance, she navigates the competing demands of motherhood, creative practice and family responsibility. The film weaves together rehearsal, oral histories from Elders and family members, archival material and on-Country filming at Point Pearce, exploring how cultural knowledge is preserved, adapted and expressed across generations.
At a critical moment when Elders with first-hand knowledge of this history are still able to share their stories, Becoming Mullamar captures the convergence of memory and artistic creation. The film asks what it means to inherit a legacy and the responsibility of carrying it forward for future generations.