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Edinburgh Preview: Precious Cargo at Summerhall (Demonstration Room)

Precious Cargo credit Miguel Rodriguez
Precious Cargo credit Miguel Rodriguez

Summerhall, Demonstration Room

1 - 26 August

Book Tickets

15:10

Contains distressing or potentially triggering themes

A stage, strewn with cardboard boxes, the setting for the most extraordinary of human stories.

50 years ago during the Vietnam War, thousands of babies and young children were flown out of Vietnam to new homes across the western world, many of them packed in boxes. Some of these children were not orphans at all, but young children tragically separated from their families in a war zone.

This Precious Cargo crossed oceans to America, Australia, the UK, Canada, and Germany, where children were raised; often alongside their parents’ biological children, often in very middle class families, and often with any link to their family or heritage in Vietnam gone. 50 years later, the story of some of those children, and their ensuing lives, comes to the Edinburgh Festival Fringe.

       

A one-person play with original compositions, Precious Cargo is a visually striking piece of documentary theatre which tells the story of the lives of six Vietnam war adoptees and how they were always connected.

In 2021, Australian-raised actor Barton Williams came to Uig on the Isle of Lewis to work on the feature film Silent Roar, which went on to open the Edinburgh International Film Festival 2023. During his time filming on Lewis, a chance meeting led to discussion of his heritage – then one chance became another when he was introduced to musician and composer Andy Yearley, raised in the Outer Hebrides, and also a Vietnam war orphan.

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Raised in strikingly similar circumstances – the only Vietnamese children in small, predominantly white communities – Barton and Andy immediately formed a bond unlike any other they had known in their life. Precious Cargo, which Barton had already begun to write, expanded to become a unique creative collaboration between two orphans who grew up on opposite sides of the world.

Andy said: “It’s not every day you meet a fellow Vietnamese war orphan! Seeing Barton for the first time was like finding a childhood brother who shared deeply personal experiences. I’ve done music for countless projects over the years, but this one’s truly unique and special to me, and I’m thrilled to be working with an extremely creative team of Andrew, Laura, Barton and many others involved.”

Barton added: “Life is full of experiences and Scotland has given me another chapter of life that is unique. Meeting and working with Andy and sruth-mara is both surreal and rewarding.”

Birthed in a warzone, raised on the beaches of Adelaide, Australia, to a bothy under the Northern Lights in Uig. This is the true story of lives well travelled, well lived, and a lot of fate.

       
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