logo
‘Grave robber' posed for the cameras as he pillaged human remains

‘Grave robber' posed for the cameras as he pillaged human remains

The Age31-05-2025
The collecting of human remains on an almost industrial scale began in the 19th century and continued long into the 20th. One of the museums most active in collecting human remains was the Smithsonian Institution in Washington DC, and it was a partner in the expedition to Arnhem Land, along with the National Geographic Society.
Frank Setzler was constitutionally incapable of entering an Aboriginal burial ground without thinking about how to rob it. He had form on this front, having collected many remains of Native American people earlier in his career. They were all accessioned into the Smithsonian's physical anthropology collection, one of the largest collections of human bones in the world.
It is a sign of his brashness that he allowed a colleague to film his 'grave robbing', as other scientists on the expedition called it.
Captured on celluloid, Setzler's actions are repellent yet compelling. Watching it now in the 21st century, with the old 16-millimetre footage converted into a digital file, it is easy to stop and start the film, or to magnify it until the image dissolves into a pixelated blur. In making the film, Setzler transformed the fleetingness of the theft into something that would last forever.
His handwritten diary is as brutally candid as the film. He frankly acknowledges his duplicity towards the Bininj, as the people of west Arnhem Land call themselves. In an entry some weeks earlier, he recorded the moment he first spotted the bones.
At that stage he was still getting his bearings on the hill. When a Bininj guide showed him around, he could hardly believe the abundance of human remains. But he kept his thoughts to himself: 'I paid no attention to these bones as long as the native was with me'.
By the time he was ready to take the bones, he knew the site well, having spent some weeks on the plateau excavating for stone tools. Before he took the bones, he liaised with the expedition's American photographer Howell Walker, who agreed to join him on the plateau and shoot both still and moving footage of their acquisition.
The film shows how they tried to make the theft a pedagogical performance, presumably to give it scientific credibility. Setzler at one point can be seen lifting and handling a skull. He points out distinctive features and then slots its jaw in place before presenting to the camera its largely toothless grin.
The final seconds of the bone stealing show a glimpse of distant scenery. There is a strip of land, the grass yellow-brown. Further away lies the gleaming billabong and beyond it the mission dwellings. The sequence ends when Setzler and the expedition Australian guide Bill Harney (who suddenly appears from nowhere) cross the frame.
Manhandling the now lidded crate, they disappear from the picture.
The film is jarringly out of time. It stinks of the body-snatching of the 19th century. Yet we see it through the medium of cinema, that most 20th-century of art forms, and in colour no less. Another disconnect is the lack of soundtrack.
We tend to expect that a colour film will have audio, but without the lecture that once accompanied it, there is nothing but deadly silence. No voice. No birdsong. Everything is mute.
This sequence is part of the National Geographic Society documentary film Aboriginal Australia. Exhibited only in the US at conferences and in lecture halls, it communicates the story of the 1948 expedition to Americans.
Outtakes – often disposed of by production houses – have in this case survived and they tell a most fascinating tale.
Not only did Setzler perform the theft for Walker's camera, but he re-performed it in various ways, actively experimenting with his presentation. In the footage intended for public exhibition, he assumes the role of a serious field scientist making a significant discovery. That is very different from a take in which he hams it up as a madcap explorer. In that sequence, he marches into frame and feigns astonishment as he 'discovers' the very bones that he first saw weeks earlier. With cartoonish gesticulations, he signals to the out-of-frame Harney to come and look. Not until Harney is fully in view and enacting his own surprise does Setzler begin to reap his grim harvest. Amidst the jumble of takes and retakes, we see him at one point returning a skull to its crevice so he can perform the theft in a different way.
Sixty years later, having recently obtained copies of the film from the National Geographic Society, I sat with the eminent elder Jacob Nayinggul on his veranda in the Banyan Camp at Gunbalanya, watching this material on a laptop.
He, too, was silent – silent with rage.
As the film reveals, Setzler became brasher and bolder as the expedition neared the end. His personal diary reveals pride in the ruses he went to in avoiding the scrutiny of locals. To provide manpower on his digs for stone tools, which occurred in rock shelters on Injalak (conveniently close to the ossuaries), two teenagers from the mission were assigned to him as archaeological assistants.
One was Jimmy Bungaroo, who would become a well-known community leader in Maningrida later in life. The other man was Mickey (whose full name never appears in the expedition records). The pair can be seen in expedition films and photos, sifting soil that throws up great clouds of dust. Setzler supervises, wearing a protective mask. But there were no masks for the two youngsters who were actually performing the hard labour.
The heat of those days was crippling. Setzler estimated that inside the tents, the temperature reached 110 degrees Fahrenheit (43.3 degrees Celsius) during the day. Outside, the air was thick and stagnant. The period known to Territorians as 'the build-up' had begun. High temperatures are matched with high humidity, a sure signal that the wet season is on its way. In these conditions, it is little wonder that Setzler's workers required a siesta after a morning spent shifting and inhaling dirt. This provided the opportunity to acquire another cache of bones, as Setzler explained.
'During the lunch period, while the two native boys were asleep, I gathered the two skeletons which had been placed in crevices outside the caves. These were disarticulated ... and only skull and long bones. One had been painted with red ochre. These I carried down to the camp in burlap sacks and later packed in ammunition boxes.'
On November 1 it rained. The wet season was nigh.
Setzler had discovered more bones that he would have stolen, but he had nothing to pack them in. Even so, he had garnered a rich harvest. He carefully 'painted the ammunition boxes containing skeletal material and numbered them consecutively after my personal box numbers'. He screwed them shut and noted: 'These will go to US without opening in Sydney'.
They were ready for transportation to their eventual destination, the Smithsonian Institution in Washington. There they would remain for the next 60 years.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The country economy of flowers, focaccia and friendship
The country economy of flowers, focaccia and friendship

Canberra Times

timean hour ago

  • Canberra Times

The country economy of flowers, focaccia and friendship

Test your skills with interactive crosswords, sudoku & trivia. Fresh daily! Your digital replica of Today's Paper. Ready to read from 5am! Be the first to know when news breaks. As it happens Get news, reviews and expert insights every Thursday from CarExpert, ACM's exclusive motoring partner. Get real, Australia! Let the ACM network's editors and journalists bring you news and views from all over. Get the very best journalism from The Canberra Times by signing up to our special reports. As it happens Your essential national news digest: all the big issues on Wednesday and great reading every Saturday. Sharp. Close to the ground. Digging deep. Your weekday morning newsletter on national affairs, politics and more. Every Saturday and Tuesday, explore destinations deals, tips & travel writing to transport you around the globe. Get the latest property and development news here. We've selected the best reading for your weekend. Join our weekly poll for Canberra Times readers. Your exclusive preview of David Pope's latest cartoon. Going out or staying in? Find out what's on. Get the editor's insights: what's happening & why it matters. Catch up on the news of the day and unwind with great reading for your evening. Grab a quick bite of today's latest news from around the region and the nation. Don't miss updates on news about the Public Service. As it happens Today's top stories curated by our news team. Also includes evening update. More from National A national directory of stalls can be found via The Roadside Stalls website , while more information about the Adelaide Hills community can be found on their Facebook page . "I really enjoy that - making other people happy." "It's really heartwarming. If you can give a bouquet to the customer and their eyes get happy and sparkly, that's really what makes my day." "She didn't have a mum here, but she has a lovely neighbour who is like her Australian mum. She wanted to say thank you with a bouquet," Ms Boese says. One customer, whose family lives overseas, asked her to create a bouquet ahead of Mother's Day. Though Ms Boese rarely gets to meet those who stop by the stall, she has made memorable connections through the blooms. Katja Boese named her protea and leucadendron stall Blumenfeld for her German heritage. (PR IMAGE PHOTO) "If you just get the stems, it's not a big effort for me and it makes people happy." "It's a good alternative to bouquets because they are quite dear, if you consider how much time and effort goes into it," Ms Boese says. Her customers are encouraged to buy single stems to create their own bunches. Among the 19 hectares was an established crop of proteas and leucadendron Ms Boese sells by the stem at her Blumenfeld stall, named for her German heritage. After spending years looking to escape the pressures of city life, engineer Katja Boese and her partner found a property at Lenswood, in the Adelaide Hills, teeming with native wildlife. "Stalls are popping up a lot more in these sort of places because people are trying to support the smaller people, not the big companies." "There's a lot more people trying to become more self-sufficient out here," she says. Ms Frankish likes to think the stall, adorned with bright yellow bunting and sunflower motifs, helps keep the caravanning community connected through items made with homely care. The Evenindee Homestead farm stall, which sits next to a street library, sells plants, soap, wire art, craft, bath salts and dried flowers. Daneve Frankish's stall at Captain Creek was inspired by a two-year trip around Australia. (PR IMAGE PHOTO) "It was nice to be able to stop and support these little communities we were driving through," Ms Frankish, a part-time teacher's aide, says. The family's most memorable moments on the road included buying sourdough from a vintage fridge in Tasmania and swapping their kids' books at street libraries in countless country towns. Two years travelling around Australia with her young family prompted Daneve Frankish to establish her stall in Captain Creek, in Queensland's Gladstone region. "It's bringing people to our community that have also stopped around at the wineries and the brewery and all the other roadside stalls," she says. Social media posts that capture idyllic days in her kitchen and fertile vegetable patch have even helped lure visitors to town. Googies and Greens, which has more than 1000 followers on Instagram, allows Ms Rothe to work at her own pace while raising her children at home. Baked treats like focaccia, brownies, pinwheel biscuits and banana bread are stocked in pastel hand-painted eskies alongside jars of homemade pesto, dried herbs and pickles. "It was supposed to be just a little hobby selling veggies on the side of the road and it quickly expanded." "I needed something else to focus on, so it gave me a project and something to distract myself with," she tells AAP as fresh loaves of bread bake in her oven while her young children nap. Ms Rothe set up the stall in Langhorne Creek, a picturesque wine-growing region 55km from Adelaide, as she recovered from post-natal depression. Mother-of-three Louise Rothe's stall Googies and Greens , which stocks an abundance of homemade food, is so successful she didn't have to return to a previous job in catering. "Fewer income earning opportunities in regional and rural locations see households operate in the informal sector," it wrote. The Tasmanian Women in Agriculture group told a 2023 parliamentary inquiry examining country bank closures that stalls help secure and diversify farming families' earnings. Nearly a century later, roadside stalls still play an important role in many rural households. Roadside stalls dot the Australian landscape, offering an array of flowers, crafts and produce. (PR IMAGE PHOTO) "Everything looks enticing and is good to taste, touch and smell." "Whatever direction you take a run in a motor car on Sundays you will find the road sides lined with stalls and the stallholders are the farmers and their families," Queensland's Western Champion newspaper reported in 1931. These kinds of stalls, which usually operate on an honesty payment system, have a long history of offering fresh, homegrown produce directly to communities. Roadside stalls dot the landscape across Australia, offering fresh fruit and vegetables, nuts, eggs, honey, jam, plants, seeds, books, craft and even bags of horse and sheep manure for garden fertiliser. "It's more of a wholesome life." "It's the environment of living rurally, you make your own fun," she says. With beginnings in a sweet gesture of friendship, The Blue Bee Market has become a way for Ms Smitheman to connect with her neighbourhood, teach local kids about nature and earn some money while raising two daughters. "I finally had my own flowers to give her," Ms Smitheman tells AAP. She gifted her friend a bouquet on the first anniversary of her grandmother's passing. Tiarna Smitheman sells flowers by the bunch from her Blue Bee Market stall southeast of Adelaide. (PR IMAGE PHOTO) In her first season, the stall sparked conversations around town, was a popular choice for Mother's Day presents and captured the imaginations of tourists staying at the motel next door. Ms Smitheman sells bunches of her home-grown blooms from the welcoming wall-papered stall, giving the community of 1400 an alternative to supermarket or servo bouquets. The women's connection through flowers is the inspiration for her little roadside stall, The Blue Bee Market in Keith, a farming hub 230km southeast of Adelaide. A sunny spot in her backyard brims with cosmos, sunflowers, dahlias, billy buttons and zinnias in spring and summer, a reminder of her friend's late grandmother. All other regional websites in your area The digital version of Today's Paper All articles from our website & app Login or signup to continue reading Subscribe now for unlimited access. When Tiarna Smitheman couldn't find fresh flowers to comfort a bereaved friend, she grew her own. Louise Rothe's roadside goodies have sold so well she hasn't had to return to a previous job. Photo: PR IMAGE PHOTO Your digital subscription includes access to content from all our websites in your region. Access unlimited news content and The Canberra Times app. Premium subscribers also enjoy interactive puzzles and access to the digital version of our print edition - Today's Paper. Login or create a free account to save this to My Saved List Login or create a free account to save this to My Saved List Login or create a free account to save this to My Saved List

‘A risk to society': The next-gen stars tapping into the dark heart of The Talented Mr Ripley
‘A risk to society': The next-gen stars tapping into the dark heart of The Talented Mr Ripley

The Age

time3 hours ago

  • The Age

‘A risk to society': The next-gen stars tapping into the dark heart of The Talented Mr Ripley

For 70 years, the fictional character of Tom Ripley – a misanthropic, morally ambiguous and shape-shifting antihero – has gripped readers and film-lovers. The creation of American writer Patricia Highsmith, he first appeared in her 1955 novel The Talented Mr Ripley, beginning as a near-destitute IRS stockroom clerk and con-artist living in New York City but evolving into a serial killer who murders and then takes over the identity of Dickie Greenleaf, a wealthy, not-so-talented painter living in the fictional Italian coastal town of Mongibello with a lovely house, a boat and an American admirer called Marge Sherwood. Ripley's evolution is enthralling and mind-boggling. His plan to murder emerges as suddenly as his coveting of Greenleaf's privileged life. Now, Highsmith's most famous character comes to the stage in playwright Joanna Murray-Smith's adaptation of The Talented Mr Ripley. Loading Directed by Sarah Goodes (Julia, Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?), with Will McDonald (Heartbreak High) as Ripley, Raj Labade (The Office) as Dickie Greenleaf and Claude Scott-Mitchell (The Dry, The Last Anniversary) as Sherwood, the play is a pin-sharp study of a complex man and a nail-biting psychological thriller. 'Oh, absolutely, the whole story is about suspense,' Goodes says: 'That gap between something happening and what your response is to it. In rehearsals, we've kept talking about the actual definition of suspense. You're suspended between two things. In a way, the whole story of The Talented Mr Ripley is about that. 'Joanna's written a piece that swings between being a noir film, like The Third Man, to being like a Wes Anderson work, to being a classic Strangers on a Train -style Hitchcock. And there's also direct address. He's got a relationship with the audience. You find out who that is later but really Ripley's telling us the story.' But who is Ripley? A relative nobody, he is sent on an all-expenses paid trip by Dickie's father to convince his son to come home to New York. Dickie's mother has leukemia and his father wants him to take over the family's shipbuilding business. But when Ripley encounters Dickie – magnetically carefree and living a life of luxury and culture on the Italian coast – he cannot follow through with his mission. His ardour for Greenleaf's identity, and desire to escape his own dismal existence, propels him to kill. And then, through extraordinary sleight of hand, he becomes Dickie Greenleaf. 'At the core of Tom is a void,' McDonald says. 'Emptiness. He's this black hole that kind of swallows up Dickie and Marge and Dickie's parents. That, and the deep-seated shame of who he is, really drives the whole piece.' Goodes agrees. 'It's a moral tale in a way,' she says. 'If you don't know who you are, if you don't anchor yourself or have a moral attachment to the world, then you are a risk to society. That's the story of the outsider. 'If you feel like you owe the world nothing, then you can be like Ripley. You have no remorse or regret. You can move through it with this real sense of surgical precision and determination.' Ripley is often labelled a psychopath, and Highsmith, who wrote 22 novels including The Price of Salt (later republished as Carol) and Strangers on a Train, another tale of murder and emotional blackmail, clearly had a thing for psychopaths. She even wondered if she was one herself, writing a diary entry in 1943, 'Am I a psychopath?' She also referred to Ripley as her alter ego, sometimes signing letters 'Love from Tom'. What stands out with Tom Ripley – a person whose exploits would necessitate punishment if exposed – is that he is a character that many fans of the book, film and TV adaptations (Andrew Scott played him in the 2024 Netflix series Ripley) root for. This is despite his identity theft, financial crimes, emotional manipulations and murdering. It's a duality McDonald relishes. 'There was an interview that Andrew Scott gave about playing the character where he said Tom's not inherently bloodthirsty, he's not this horrendous, evil person who just loves murdering people,' McDonald says. 'He's doing it to survive. He thinks it's something that he has to do to just stay alive.' He says Scott-Mitchell is sometimes rattled by his character's duality. 'She says there are times she is looking at me and going, 'Oh, I feel sorry for you',' he says. 'And then other times she is going, 'Oh my god, he's horrible. I hate him'. I love that sense of confusion about him.' Whether you love or hate him, Ripley is a stayer. Anyone wondering if he evades capture need only clock the four subsequent Ripley novels Highsmith wrote, with the last, Ripley Under Water, published in 1991. But is he happy when he gets what he wants? In the 1999 film adaptation directed by Anthony Minghella, Matt Damon as Ripley reflects mournfully towards the final scenes: 'I always thought it would be better to be a fake somebody than a real nobody'. Scott-Mitchell points to strong connections in style and character between Ripley and The Picture of Dorian Gray. 'When you think about it, Dorian and Tom are both characters who are completely consumed by objects and beauty,' she says. 'And they both end up in a very similar place.' McDonald agrees. 'With Dorian, he's beautiful and he's gorgeous, but he is known throughout London as a scoundrel. He's been corrupted,' he says. 'His soul has been destroyed by what he's done and he's alone forever. A similar thing happens to Tom. 'There's this wonderful moment in the book where he realises that, in the process of becoming Dickie Greenleaf and gaining all his things, by murdering him he can never let anyone be close to him ever again. 'He'll have all these beautiful things and live this beautiful life, but what he really wanted and prayed for – love and closeness – he'll never get it. In that sense, he fails in his objective.' He does, however, hold up a mirror to people's secret thoughts. Loading 'Joanna has written the play in a way that talks to the inner demons in all of us,' Scott-Mitchell says. 'We all have something sinister in our minds, whether we want to admit it, or even that we're conscious of it. You have these moments where you're listening to him and you're like, 'Oh, yeah, I see where he's coming from.' Then you step back and go, 'Well, that feels a bit uncomfortable.'' Most of The Talented Mr Ripley's creative team have connections to work about Highsmith. Murray-Smith wrote the play Switzerland, a fictional look at the last years of Highsmith's life, now being turned into a movie starring Helen Mirren. The co-premiere of the production at STC in 2014 was directed by Goodes and designed by Scott-Mitchell's father, Michael Scott-Mitchell. Goodes says one of the reasons Kip Williams commissioned Murray-Smith to adapt the work when he was STC's artistic director was to continue such connections, primarily by giving new roles to the next generation of Australian actors. 'The thing about this piece is that it's about people who are not fully formed yet,' Goodes says. 'They're in their 20s. This is the first time Ripley commits murder. In the other books, he's an established murderer. So the emphasis was to find a group of young, amazing, next-generation actors to play it – to find the next big names on stage and screen. That was a real starting point. 'Theatre companies are under pressure to sell tickets, so they put known people on stage. But you need to be finding the next people that are going to be those known faces in the future.' In that vein, too, The Talented Mr Ripley explores issues confronting the next generation, particularly with social media, surveillance, AI and identity theft. 'There's this whole mirror world of our identity online,' Scott-Mitchell says. 'We might have a social media profile that's a particular way we present ourselves, but then there's us in the flesh. Stripping that whole concept back to theatre is a really wonderful way of looking at it. Who are we? Which one is us? What makes you, you?'

‘A risk to society': The next-gen stars tapping into the dark heart of The Talented Mr Ripley
‘A risk to society': The next-gen stars tapping into the dark heart of The Talented Mr Ripley

Sydney Morning Herald

time3 hours ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

‘A risk to society': The next-gen stars tapping into the dark heart of The Talented Mr Ripley

For 70 years, the fictional character of Tom Ripley – a misanthropic, morally ambiguous and shape-shifting antihero – has gripped readers and film-lovers. The creation of American writer Patricia Highsmith, he first appeared in her 1955 novel The Talented Mr Ripley, beginning as a near-destitute IRS stockroom clerk and con-artist living in New York City but evolving into a serial killer who murders and then takes over the identity of Dickie Greenleaf, a wealthy, not-so-talented painter living in the fictional Italian coastal town of Mongibello with a lovely house, a boat and an American admirer called Marge Sherwood. Ripley's evolution is enthralling and mind-boggling. His plan to murder emerges as suddenly as his coveting of Greenleaf's privileged life. Now, Highsmith's most famous character comes to the stage in playwright Joanna Murray-Smith's adaptation of The Talented Mr Ripley. Loading Directed by Sarah Goodes (Julia, Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?), with Will McDonald (Heartbreak High) as Ripley, Raj Labade (The Office) as Dickie Greenleaf and Claude Scott-Mitchell (The Dry, The Last Anniversary) as Sherwood, the play is a pin-sharp study of a complex man and a nail-biting psychological thriller. 'Oh, absolutely, the whole story is about suspense,' Goodes says: 'That gap between something happening and what your response is to it. In rehearsals, we've kept talking about the actual definition of suspense. You're suspended between two things. In a way, the whole story of The Talented Mr Ripley is about that. 'Joanna's written a piece that swings between being a noir film, like The Third Man, to being like a Wes Anderson work, to being a classic Strangers on a Train -style Hitchcock. And there's also direct address. He's got a relationship with the audience. You find out who that is later but really Ripley's telling us the story.' But who is Ripley? A relative nobody, he is sent on an all-expenses paid trip by Dickie's father to convince his son to come home to New York. Dickie's mother has leukemia and his father wants him to take over the family's shipbuilding business. But when Ripley encounters Dickie – magnetically carefree and living a life of luxury and culture on the Italian coast – he cannot follow through with his mission. His ardour for Greenleaf's identity, and desire to escape his own dismal existence, propels him to kill. And then, through extraordinary sleight of hand, he becomes Dickie Greenleaf. 'At the core of Tom is a void,' McDonald says. 'Emptiness. He's this black hole that kind of swallows up Dickie and Marge and Dickie's parents. That, and the deep-seated shame of who he is, really drives the whole piece.' Goodes agrees. 'It's a moral tale in a way,' she says. 'If you don't know who you are, if you don't anchor yourself or have a moral attachment to the world, then you are a risk to society. That's the story of the outsider. 'If you feel like you owe the world nothing, then you can be like Ripley. You have no remorse or regret. You can move through it with this real sense of surgical precision and determination.' Ripley is often labelled a psychopath, and Highsmith, who wrote 22 novels including The Price of Salt (later republished as Carol) and Strangers on a Train, another tale of murder and emotional blackmail, clearly had a thing for psychopaths. She even wondered if she was one herself, writing a diary entry in 1943, 'Am I a psychopath?' She also referred to Ripley as her alter ego, sometimes signing letters 'Love from Tom'. What stands out with Tom Ripley – a person whose exploits would necessitate punishment if exposed – is that he is a character that many fans of the book, film and TV adaptations (Andrew Scott played him in the 2024 Netflix series Ripley) root for. This is despite his identity theft, financial crimes, emotional manipulations and murdering. It's a duality McDonald relishes. 'There was an interview that Andrew Scott gave about playing the character where he said Tom's not inherently bloodthirsty, he's not this horrendous, evil person who just loves murdering people,' McDonald says. 'He's doing it to survive. He thinks it's something that he has to do to just stay alive.' He says Scott-Mitchell is sometimes rattled by his character's duality. 'She says there are times she is looking at me and going, 'Oh, I feel sorry for you',' he says. 'And then other times she is going, 'Oh my god, he's horrible. I hate him'. I love that sense of confusion about him.' Whether you love or hate him, Ripley is a stayer. Anyone wondering if he evades capture need only clock the four subsequent Ripley novels Highsmith wrote, with the last, Ripley Under Water, published in 1991. But is he happy when he gets what he wants? In the 1999 film adaptation directed by Anthony Minghella, Matt Damon as Ripley reflects mournfully towards the final scenes: 'I always thought it would be better to be a fake somebody than a real nobody'. Scott-Mitchell points to strong connections in style and character between Ripley and The Picture of Dorian Gray. 'When you think about it, Dorian and Tom are both characters who are completely consumed by objects and beauty,' she says. 'And they both end up in a very similar place.' McDonald agrees. 'With Dorian, he's beautiful and he's gorgeous, but he is known throughout London as a scoundrel. He's been corrupted,' he says. 'His soul has been destroyed by what he's done and he's alone forever. A similar thing happens to Tom. 'There's this wonderful moment in the book where he realises that, in the process of becoming Dickie Greenleaf and gaining all his things, by murdering him he can never let anyone be close to him ever again. 'He'll have all these beautiful things and live this beautiful life, but what he really wanted and prayed for – love and closeness – he'll never get it. In that sense, he fails in his objective.' He does, however, hold up a mirror to people's secret thoughts. Loading 'Joanna has written the play in a way that talks to the inner demons in all of us,' Scott-Mitchell says. 'We all have something sinister in our minds, whether we want to admit it, or even that we're conscious of it. You have these moments where you're listening to him and you're like, 'Oh, yeah, I see where he's coming from.' Then you step back and go, 'Well, that feels a bit uncomfortable.'' Most of The Talented Mr Ripley's creative team have connections to work about Highsmith. Murray-Smith wrote the play Switzerland, a fictional look at the last years of Highsmith's life, now being turned into a movie starring Helen Mirren. The co-premiere of the production at STC in 2014 was directed by Goodes and designed by Scott-Mitchell's father, Michael Scott-Mitchell. Goodes says one of the reasons Kip Williams commissioned Murray-Smith to adapt the work when he was STC's artistic director was to continue such connections, primarily by giving new roles to the next generation of Australian actors. 'The thing about this piece is that it's about people who are not fully formed yet,' Goodes says. 'They're in their 20s. This is the first time Ripley commits murder. In the other books, he's an established murderer. So the emphasis was to find a group of young, amazing, next-generation actors to play it – to find the next big names on stage and screen. That was a real starting point. 'Theatre companies are under pressure to sell tickets, so they put known people on stage. But you need to be finding the next people that are going to be those known faces in the future.' In that vein, too, The Talented Mr Ripley explores issues confronting the next generation, particularly with social media, surveillance, AI and identity theft. 'There's this whole mirror world of our identity online,' Scott-Mitchell says. 'We might have a social media profile that's a particular way we present ourselves, but then there's us in the flesh. Stripping that whole concept back to theatre is a really wonderful way of looking at it. Who are we? Which one is us? What makes you, you?'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store