Syron did not identify as Aboriginal through the 1950s and 1960s. He moved to
King's Cross in
Sydney, Syron left Australia in 1961 to work in Europe as a fashion model with
Dior,
Cardin and
Balenciaga. In 1961, he moved to
New York City, living initially on
Fifth Avenue with one of Australia's first "
supermodels", Pauline Kiernan. He was accepted as a student with the
Stella Adler Studio, where he studied with fellow students
Robert De Niro,
Warren Beatty and
Peter Bogdanovich, and became a teacher himself.
Lloyd Richards, then head of acting at
Yale University and artistic director of the
American National Playwrights Conference wrote to the
Aboriginal Arts Board of the
Australia Council in September 1993: The National Playwrights Conference of Australia exists because Brian Syron visited the National Playwrights Conference in
Waterford, Conn. and recognised it as an important idea for Australia, and he went back to champion the possibility. Others visited and the rest is history." {
Lloyd G. Richards, 9.5.1993} Syron returned to the theatre again in 1976 with his direction of
Dimboola (written by
Jack Hibberd) in
Newcastle as well as at Bonapartes Theatre Restaurant,
Kings Cross, Sydney, where his stage production ran continuously for the next two years and four months. He followed "Dimboola" with a production of the American play
Falling Apart by
Monte Merrick at the
New Theatre,
Newtown, Sydney, and in 1978 he played the role of "The Actor" in a production of
Maxim Gorky's
The Lower Depths which ran for six weeks at the
Sydney Opera House. In this same year, he opened the New Group Theatre at the All Nations Club, Kings Cross, where he directed among other productions
A Tribute to Tennessee Williams, before the ongoing costs of keeping an independent theatre going forced Syron to close after 12 months.
Aboriginal Theatre Company He co-founded the
Aboriginal Theatre Company (ATC) in 1981 with scriptwriter/playwright/director
Bob Merritt in order to tour Merritt's play
The Cake Man, under Syron's direction, to the 1982
World Theatre Festival in
Denver, Colorado, where the play received a tremendous audience response. Following this success, the play then toured various colleges around the United States.
The Cake Man was performed at the
World Theatre Festival in
Denver, Colorado, Returning to Australia, Syron directed a season of
The Cake Man at the
Universal Theatre in Fitzroy,
Melbourne after which it was funded by Australian federal government's Ministry of Aboriginal Affairs to play at the 1983
Warana – Commonwealth Arts Festival, Brisbane in Queensland where it was performed at the Edward Street Theatre. In 1986, Syron, on behalf of the Aboriginal Arts Board, published a "Questionnaire seeking support for establishment of National Aboriginal Theatre Company", ahead of a National Black Playwrights Workshop at
James Cook University in
Townsville.
National Black Playwrights Conference In January 1987, Syron founded the National Black Playwrights Conference (NPBC), which was held at the
Australian National University, Canberra. In an interview with Angela Bennie, Australia's leading Indigenous actress
Justine Saunders commented : It was Brian Syron, in fact, who was the instigator not only of the first National Black Playwrights Conference but the National Playwrights Conference. Syron always said our culture is an oral one, it comes through our painting, through our singing, through our stories that's how we pass down our laws, that's how we have passed down our history for 60,000 years
Eva Johnson was writer/director of the conference. During the conference, the delegates awarded Syron the 1987 inaugural
Harold Blair Award for his Lifetime Achievements in the Performing Arts, which brought with it the additional honour of the title "Elder".
ANTT As a result of the first NBPC, Syron, as a member of a
steering committee which included
Rhoda Roberts,
Kevin Gilbert,
Lydia Miller, Michael Johnson (who presented two
SBS Television series in 1989 and 1991), Suzanne Butt, and Lesley Fogarty, with
Justine Saunders as adviser, proposed and co-founded the
Aboriginal National Theatre Trust (ANTT). ANTT was constituted as a
limited company in May 1988, and was staffed by Aboriginal artists who were committed to the promotion and protection of all Aboriginal arts. It founded a National Aboriginal Theatre, and provided advice to a number of Aboriginal and non-Indigenous production companies, theatre companies and educational institutions, and individuals.), at the
Victorian Arts Centre. In June 1991, after its board of directors in protest against the lack of financial support from government, the ANTT ceased operations.
Last work Syron carried out a two-week workshop, a stage reading, plus a production in 1991 at the
Belvoir Street Theatre, Redfern, Sydney of
Mudrooroo Narogin's "courageous and brave new play"
The Aboriginal Demonstrators Confront the Declaration of the Australian Republic on 26 January 2001 with the Production of "Der Auftrag" by Heiner Muller and starring Justine Saunders, Michael Watson, David Kennedy, Pamela Young, Ray Kelly and Graham Cooper. The play and the production are also the subject of Mudrooroo Narogin's book
The Mudrooroo/Muller Project – A Theatrical Casebook, with a chapter by Syron and edited by Gerhard Fischer in collaboration with leading Indigenous academic Paul Behrendt and Syron. Syron was too ill to do more than direct the stage reading of the play. ==Teaching ==