Last Cab to Darwin is a 2003 Australian drama/comedy stage play written by Reg Cribb and based upon the true story of taxi driver Max Bell who was diagnosed with terminal stomach cancer in the early 1990s. The 2003 production was presented both at the Sydney Opera House and the Octagon Theatre in Perth.
Variety wrote that the story of Rex Bell's journey was "a great premise for drama". Bryce Hallett of Sydney Morning Herald wrote that the play was "a big-hearted, sprawling, dry-humoured, unwieldy saga which splendidly evokes the landscape of knotted trees, furnace sunsets and the dual feeling of liberation and terror on the journey from Broken Hill to Darwin." Adelaide Review wrote "It is not surprising that playwright Reg Cribb saw the story of Max Bell as ready-made for the telling. It has all the elements of a mythic quest with a sturdy, self-deprecating hero meeting a host of different characters as he travels a last time through his native land." In their announcement of casting in 2012 for a production of the play, director Steve Wiegerink of Off the Leash Theatre stated "Both humorous and tragic, Last Cab to Darwin proves once again why Reg Cribb is one of Australia's best playwrights."
2005, winner of Drovers Australian Performing Arts Centres Association Excellence in Touring for 'Excellent Audience Response'
2005, winner of Drovers Australian Performing Arts Centres Association Excellence in Touring for 'Touring Excellence'
Film adaptation
Last Cab to Darwin is also the title of an Australian comedy-dramabiopic directed and produced by Jeremy Sims and based on the 2003 play of the same name by Reg Cribb. Actors Michael Caton and Jacki Weaver have starring roles in the film. Central to the plot is the controversial theme of voluntary euthanasia. The script for the film was adapted as a screenplay by Sims and Cribb. Sims' association with Reg Cribb began when his production company, Pork Chop Productions produced the successful stage version of Last Cab. In 2006, Sims directed Last Train to Freo, an adaptation of Cribb's The Return. The film was given the green-light by Screen Australia in October 2013 as one of six films to share in $5.4 million government funding. In 2012, it was confirmed that Michael Caton has been cast for the lead role and Jacki Weaver, who played several parts in the stage production, will also have a major role. Ningali Lawford will play Polly, Rex's neighbour. By February 2014, actress Emma Hamilton had joined the cast. Hamilton plays an English nurse, engaging in backpacker tourism. It was earlier reported that the producers had been in discussions with Rebel Wilson for this role.