
Baz Luhrmann and Felix Meagher. Photograph courtesy Opera Australia
Baz Luhrmann grew up in Herons Creek, a village near Port Macquarie, where his mother taught ballroom dancing.
But while many might know his journey from Strictly Ballroom to now, what's often overlooked is Crocodile Creek: a 1986 community musical staged in Rockhampton, Queensland.
This oblivion is undeserved. Certainly the production made a long-lasting impact on those involved – and that includes Luhrmann, its professional director.
Only 23 at the time, he had just graduated from NIDA. Young Baz had to fit the Rockhampton job around other commitments, such as a group trip to present their student play at a drama festival in Bratislava, Czechoslovakia. This early version of Strictly Ballroom, mounted on a budget of $50, won first prize at the festival, and Luhrmann himself was proclaimed best director.
When asked why he went to regional Queensland immediately after those triumphs, Luhrmann says that he was attracted by ‘the sheer adventure of going to an unknown place with unknown people to try and create a piece of theatre’. He had been recommended for the job by Jim Sharman, who was his mentor at NIDA.


















