In 1972, women from the
Australian Performing Group (APG) devised and performed
Betty Can Jump at the
Pram Factory, Melbourne, which had a significant impact on the development of
feminist theatre and thought through the 1970s. The performance was created partly as a reaction to working in the male-dominated APG, and had a very positive response. It inspired many performers, writers, directors and others around the country, such as the Adelaide Women's Theatre Group and the Fool's Gallery in
Canberra, as well as the acrobatic group
Circus Oz.
Betty Can Jump was devised and performed by
Helen Garner, her friend Kerry Dwyer, and four women from the Carlton Women's Liberation Group and APG: Claire Dobbin, Evelyn Krape, Yvonne Marini, and
Jude Kuring. Circus Oz was based at the Pram Factory, located in the Melbourne suburb of
Carlton. Women in this group included Robin Laurie, Sue Broadway, Jane Mullett, Celeste Howden,
Laurel Frank, and Hellen Sky. Ollie Black was living in
Fremantle,
Western Australia, around 1977, when she, along with Micko O'Byrne and Duncan Campbell, formed the political and feminist
community theatre group Desperate Measures, Sarah McNamara joined the group. McNamara and Black moved to Melbourne and, along with Rose Wise and Christine Evans, were co-founders of the Wimmins Circus in 1979. Black and others first formed a one-off group called the Mighty Bonza Whacko Women's Circus, which included some of the Circus Oz performers and proved to be a huge success, with
feminism in Australia at a peak at the time. Mighty Bonza Whacko Women's Circus gave their debut performance at "Art Attacks", which were held at
Swinburne College of Technology, in July 1979. Wimmins Circus performed under this name in August 1979. Robin Laurie, Jane Mullett, Ursula Harrison, and Hellen Sky helped establish the group out of Circus Oz, and Sky stayed on with the group after leaving Circus Oz. Kerry Dwyer, who had been a founding member of APG as well as
La Mama Theatre in Melbourne, became a circus performer, later directing the Wimmins Circus. She also toured with Circus Oz in 1981, and appeared in the films
On Guard (1984) and Molly. Wimmins Circus finally disbanded in Sydney in 1981, after a sold-out season of their final show at the Pram Factory, directed by Kerry Dwyer. ==Description==