Family Values is a 2020 play by David Williamson. It was inspired in part by Williamson's anger at Australia's treatment of refugees.
A judge is about to retire. On his 70th birthday, his eldest daughter attempts to shelter an asylum seeker, originally from Nauru, from the Australian Border Patrol, which causes familial strife.
Williamson said, âÂÂWhat kind of country have we become, to send people fleeing persecution to Nauru?â In particular he family of Tamil asylum seekers from Biloela. âÂÂMy play is based on a lot of real events. I researched Nauru as fully as I could, I looked at the makeup of the people there and the women too, and it is an attempt to depict the situation truthfully.â He added, I also depict a family coming apart at the seams. There are lots of blackly funny moments based on the ideological positions of the children, which differ so widely.âÂÂ
Williamson also wanted to explore the growth of religion in Australia.â The influence of evangelism seems to be growing. When our current prime minister invites cameras into church to see him asking God for a favour ... it's troubling.âÂÂ
âÂÂItâÂÂs a play in which people who shouldnâÂÂt be in the same room together have to be in the same room together because theyâÂÂre related,â Williamson says. âÂÂSo drama ensues â and comedy, too. Without that, the situation would be unbearable... ItâÂÂs a big ask for any play, but I think itâÂÂs right on the fault lines of where we are now. Australia today is a deeply divided nation.âÂÂ
The play had its world premiere at the Griffin. âÂÂI couldnâÂÂt be happier than having the circle close at Griffin,â he said. âÂÂJohn BellâÂÂs production of The Removalists in 1972 was on that stage â back when it was called the Nimrod Theatre â and that established me as a writer more than anything else. My career as a playwright took off from there and itâÂÂs terrifically satisfying to come back to that wonderful. IâÂÂm back where I started, but IâÂÂm terribly happy to be there.âÂÂ