Cultural depictions of Tom Wills

Cricketer and Australian rules football pioneer Tom Wills is the subject of a growing body of works in art and popular culture.

Visual arts

A full-length portrait of Wills, painted by William Handcock in 1870, is held at the National Sports Museum.

Wills is the subject of a series of paintings by Archibald Prize nominee Martin Tighe.

Literature

Martin Flanagan's 1998 historical novel The Call is a semi-fictional account of Wills' life. In it, Wills is cast as a tragic sporting genius,[1] and the dingo is used to symbolise his identity as an "ambiguous creature" caught between indigenous and non-indigenous Australia.[2]

Music

Wills has inspired numerous songs including "Tom Wills" (2002) by Mick Thomas of Weddings Parties Anything fame; "Tom Wills Would" (2004) by the Warumpi Band's Neil Murray;[3] "The Ten Rules" (2010) by folk rock band The Holy Sea;[4] and "Tom Wills" by Goanna frontman Shane Howard, written and performed exclusively for The Marngrook Footy Show.

Film and television

Plans for a feature film about Wills were made in 1989 but later abandoned.

In a yet-to-be-released ABC docudrama on Wills' life, he is portrayed by Nathan Phillips.[5]

Wills and the origins of Australian rules football are the subject of an episode of Australia: The Story of Us (2015), produced by Yahoo!7.

Theatre

In 2004, Bruce Myles adapted Flanagan's novel The Call into a play of the same name for the Malthouse Theatre.

References

  1. Flanagan, Martin (6 November 1998). The Summer Game. Interview with Amanda Smith. The Sports Factor. ABC Radio National. Retrieved 29 August 2013.
  2. Judd 2007, pp. 154–156, 336.
  3. Flanagan, Martin (23 May 2003). "Songs of a defiant heart", The Age. Retrieved 18 October 2013.
  4. Schaefer, René (5 October 2010)."The Holy Sea – Ghosts of the Horizon", Mess+Noise. Retrieved 4 April 2013.
  5. Morreti, Daniel (1 December 2010). "Short Film Big On Action", Film Ink. Retrieved 22 September 2015.

External links

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