Aotearoa Playwrights Conference 2003 - Programme
Playmarket's
Aotearoa Playwrights Conference 2003
in
association with UNITEC
UNITEC, Auckland September
22-28
Auckland Festival 2003
ePROGRAMME
A
Playmarket Event Dedicated to Script Development for New
Zealand Theatre Writers.
Brought to you by Playmarket, in
association with Creative New Zealand, UNITEC, British
Council and Radio New Zealand.
With major funding from
Creative New Zealand
Director: Anna Cameron
Programme
Director: Mark Amery
Event Manager: Sandi
Goodwin
UNITEC Producer: Norelle Scott
Administrator:
James Hadley
Publication designer: Liana Nobilo
eProgramme Contents
1. From Playmarket
2. Conference
Schedule
3. Programme
Pacific Island Playwrights
Forum
Lunchtime Forums
The Workshop Series
The
Writers' Intensive
Masterclasses
The Writers Lab
Series
4. Biographies
Schedule
Notes
*Bolded
events are open to the public and all APC participants.
Except masterclasses, open to all playwrights (register with
Playmarket)
*See further in for more details on events
listed.
Monday
9am Powhiri
10am Writers Lab Group
10am Workshop: Stuart Hoar's
Bright Star
11am Lab I - writers1-5
1pm Lunchtime
Forum: The Playwright and the Deviser
2.30pm Reading:
Writers Lab
2pm-5 Workshop: Bright Star
3.30-5pm Lab
I - writers 6-10
Tuesday
9am Readings: Writers Lab
9am Workshop directors,
dramaturgs and writers meet
10am Workshop: Bright Star
and Windhorse
1pm Lunchtime Forum: Script Development
2-5pm Workshop: Bright Star
2.30-5pm Masterclass:
Mark Amery - Redrafting
2pm Rehearsal Two Fish 'n a
Scoop
5pm Public Presentation: Banging Cymbal, Clanging
Gong, Jo Randerson
Wednesday
9am Lab II:
writers 1-5
10am Workshop: Windhorse
11am Lab II:
writers 6-10
1pm Lunchtime Forum: The Playwright and the
Dramaturg
2-5pm Workshop: Windhorse
2.30pm RNZ Writing
For Radio Seminar
2-5pm Rehearsal Two Fish 'n a
Scoop
5pm Rehearsed Reading: Two Fish 'n a Scoop
Thursday
9-1pm Rehearsal Two Days in
Dream
10-1pm Workshops: Bright Star and
Windhorse
10am Writers Lab Group
meeting
10.30am Masterclass: Peter Matheson - Ribbons of
Words
1pm Lunchtime Forum: APC and Playmarket - The
Future
2pm Lab III: writers 1-5
2-5pm Workshops:
Bright Star and Windhorse
10.30pm Late Night Playreading
at Silo Theatre
Friday
9am Masterclass: Ben
Twist - New Media and Technology in
Theatre
10-1pm Workshops: Bright Star and
Windhorse
11am Lab III: writers 6-10
1pm Lunchtime
Forum: Getting Produced
2-5pm Workshops: Bright Star and
Windhorse
2.30pm Writers Lab Group
6pm Aotearoa
Playwrights Dinner
10.30pm Late Night Playreading at Silo
Theatre
Saturday
10-1pm Workshop:
Windhorse
10-5pm Pacific Island Playwrights Forum
1pm
Lunch
Sunday
12noon Workshop
Presentation: Windhorse
2pm Workshop Presentation:
Bright Star
4pm Rehearsed Reading: Two Days in
Dream
5pm Drinks
Pacific Island Playwrights
Forum
Steered by Creative New Zealand's Anton Carter, this day focuses on an exciting group of writer and practitioners who are providing Aotearoa New Zealand with a dynamic Pacific Island voice and bringing new colour and sophistication to our playwriting practise. Join us as we weave through a day of discussions and presentations which celebrate the establishment of contemporary Pacific Island Theatre. All conference participants and members of the public are welcome. This is a free event.
UNITEC Theatre. Saturday 27 September. 10am-5pm
Lunchtime Forums
Daily
steered discussions on current key issues for New Zealand
playwrights, with contributions from leading theatre
professionals who specialise in the areas covered. All
sessions are at 1pm and are free for all to attend.
„«
Monday -The Playwright and the Deviser: Getting involved in
collaborative work. Increasingly, theatre work begins on the
workshop floor with actors. Where does the playwright fit
into this? What script development process is best for
devised work? How do we ensure good writing practise in
theatre as a collaborative artform?
„« Tuesday - Script
Development: What process suits you best? How do you avoid
having your script ripped to shreds in a workshop? How
useful are public rehearsed readings? What makes a good
workshop?
„« The Playwright and the Dramaturg: How to
make it work for you. Friend or challenger? Who should lead
a workshop? Where can a dramaturg help where a director
can't?
„« APC: the future. Where to next for the
national playwrights conference? Have your say.
„«
Getting Produced. The ins and outs of getting commissioned,
why theatre's programme what they do and the relationship
between the theatres and script development.
The
Workshop Series
As part of the conference week
Playmarket are workshopping two significant new full-length
works for the stage, which we believe have strong
professional potential. The playwrights will work in
workshop with a dramaturg, director and actors over a four
day period, with a presentation of the work to the public on
Sunday September 28.
Between 1980 and 1994 Playmarket workshop series were biannual and have brought to light the likes of Greg McGee's Foreskin's Lament, Renee's Wednesday to Come and David Geary's Lovelock's Dream Run. The workshop series was reinstituted in 2002, and two works presented last year are in professional production at the time of the conference as part of AK03: Carl Nixon's The Book of Fame and Albert Belz's Awhi Tapu.
Windhorse - Janie
Walker
Director: Anna Marbrook
Dramaturg: Elizabeth
O'Connor
Cultural Advisor: Hone Kouka
A young Maori
woman leaves New Zealand to climb the Himalayas and connects
with a Tibetan community in India. She faces challenges that
not only find her reaching Himalayan peaks, but also
challenges that unravel the armour of her life. Janie
Walkers first full-length play looks at what it is to live
in exile; from a country, whanau and ones own
spirituality.
Presentation: Sunday 28 September, 12
noon.
Public ticket price $5. Door sales only.
Bright
Star - Stuart Hoar
Director: James Beaumont
Dramaturg:
Philippa Campbell
Cultural Advisor: Hone Kouka
In 1842
Charles Armitage Brown, a recent settler to New Zealand and
close friend of the English poet John Keats, died in New
Plymouth. Intriquing, entertaining and multi-layered, Stuart
Hoar's new play weaves together fresh looks at love, the New
Zealand bicultural colonial experience and the Victorian
literary landscape.
Presentation: Sunday 28 September,
2pm
Public ticket price $5. Door sales only.
Late Night
Playreadings
Join us at the bar at Silo Theatre (Lower
Greys Ave, behind the Auckland Town Hall) for two special
nights in which you can share in the magic of hearing new
work come off the page in an informal social setting. We
invite you to join us at the bar before the readings start
at 10.30pm. Plays to be announced.
Playreadings:
Thursday and Friday, September 25 and 26, 10.30pm
The Writers Intensive
With generous support from
The British Council, Playmarket are pleased to welcome back
to New Zealand, British director and script developer
Benjamin Twist. Ben is working in development with two New
Zealand playwrights on early drafts of their new plays.
Prior to the conference Ben will be in email conversation
with the writers from the UK and will work for a further
week with the playwrights and workshop actors in Wellington.
He will then direct rehearsed readings of new drafts of
these plays during the conference week.
Two Fish 'n a
Scoop Carl Nixon
Set in a typical New Zealand fish and
chip shop, Carl's new play explores issues of racism and
belonging among Asian immigrants and first generation Kiwis
in this country's rapidly diversifying social
landscape.
Rehearsed Reading: Wednesday September 24,
5pm, UNITEC
Two Days in Dream Mario Gaoa
Mario's is a
story that spans the life of one man and the things that
make him that man. A death a life and a death
again.
Rehearsed Reading: Sunday September 28, 4pm,
UNITEC Theatre
Masterclasses
Redraft Mark
Amery Tuesday September 23, 2.30pm
A collaborative
workshop on approaching play redrafting: we'll look at what
you know you have to do when you redraft, the problems you
encounter, and tools to overcome them. As an example, we'll
follow a scene from a play through several drafts and check
the changes, before then collectively writing a scene and
redrafting it.
Ribbons of Words Peter Matheson Thursday
September 25, 10.30am
A practical intensive looking at
form, and different techniques and components for building
effective dialogue. Bring a writing implement, some paper
and a character you know very well.
New Ways of Telling
Old Tales Benjamin Twist Friday September 26, 9am
Theatre
has always stolen the best new technologies. Our generation
has to find out how to use the new media in
theatre-enhancing ways. This starts with the writer. We'll
discuss how new media might add to theatre, and how we need
to change our approaches to incorporate video projection,
digital graphics, live video action and other media into our
work.
The Writers Lab Series
Over the course of the conference week ten writers will work individually and as a group with five script developers on projects, ranging from scripts at the ideas stage to first, final and post-production drafts. The script developers are: Benjamin Twist, Peter Matheson, Emma Willis, Andrew Foster and Mark Amery.
Playreadings - Writers Lab: Monday September 22,
2.30-3.30pm and Tuesday September 23,
9am-1pm.
Presentation - Banging Cymbal, Clanging Gong, Jo
Randerson: Tuesday September 23, 5pm.
Beauty Mark -
Kathyrn Van Beek/3girls6legs
Oho Ake - Miria
George
Epidemic - Thomas Sainsbury
Te Kauta - Moira
Warama
Wild Horses - Mike Hudson
Hate Crimes - Paul
Rothwell
Banging Cymbal, Clanging Gong - Jo
Randerson
Identity Card - Craig Thaine
Kikia te Poa
(Kick the Boer) - Matthew Saville
Feedback - Toa
Fraser
Featured Playwrights
The Workshop
Series
Stuart Hoar
Stuart's first stage play was
Squatter (Mercury Theatre, 1988) and his most recent The
Face Maker (Court and Circa Theatres, 1999-2000). He has
been Playwright in Residence at the Mercury Theatre
(1988/89) and was awarded the Bruce Mason Award in 1988. In
1990 he was Literary Fellow at Auckland University and in
1993 was Burns Fellow at the University of Otago. One of the
films for which he wrote the screenplay was selected for Un
Certain Regard at the 1994 Cannes Film Festival. The
screenplay for the short film Lovelock won the New Zealand
Writers¡¦ Guild Best Screenplay Award 1993. He has had over
thirty radio plays produced (Mobil Award Finalist 1990 and
1994, Mobil Award winner 1995) as well as various opera
libretti. The libretto for the opera Bitter Calm was a
finalist in the Pater World Media Award¡¦s Music and
Literary Division in 1990. His first novel The Hard Light
was published by Penguin in 1998. He returned from England
in 2000 to be Writer in Residence at Canterbury University
and now lives in Christchurch.
Janie Walker
Before
completing Ken Duncum's MA Scriptwriting course at Victoria
University last year, Janie has been a producer for the
performing arts and advertising industries, both here and in
Australia. This year she has written for a TVNZ children's
show and been a postie. Windhorse is her first full-length
play.
The Writers Intensive
Mario Gaoa
Mario is an
actor and writer, and founding member of The Naked Samoans.
Mario has appeared in numerous theatre productions including
Dawn Raids and most recently Island Girls. He is currently
breakfast host on Niu FM - New Zealand's only nationwide
Pacific Island radio station.
Carl Nixon
Carl was born
in Christchurch and has an MA in Religious Studies from
Canterbury University. He taught high school English briefly
before teaching in Japan for two years. He is now a full
time writer. He has twice won the Sunday Star Times Short
Story Contest (1997 and 1999) and was runner up in the
prestigious Katherine Mansfield Literary Awards in 1999. His
stories have been published widely both here and overseas
and many have been broadcast by Radio New Zealand. His
involvement with theatre began in 1986 at The Court. His
recent work for theatre includes Crumpy, The Book of Fame,
Kiwifruits and Kiwifruits 2 - Heaven Sent.
The Writers
Lab Series
Craig Thaine
Craig Thaine has written for
stage, radio and television for the past 25 years. His most
recent work was Telling Stories at Circa Theatre, Wellington
in August. During time working at Centrepoint Theatre he
began writing for the stage. His first performed works,
Gruzzlefummit! (1980) and Stagger (1981) were produced
there. Craig has worked as a playwright in residence at the
New Zealand Drama School, resulting in his play Today's Bay
. His stage play New Day In The Valley was workshopped at
the Playmarket 1982 Playwrights' Conference. Aside from his
numerous plays, Craig has lived in Egypt, England, Italy and
Sweden working as an ESOL (English to Speakers Of Other
Languages) teacher and trainer, written a children's
multi-media English language course for Italian State
Television and written for Shortland Street. He completed an
M.A. in Applied Linguistics in 1995 and his play Retro was
performed as part of the 1998 Young & Hungry Season at Bats
Theatre, Wellington.
Thomas Sainsbury
Thomas grew
up in the Waikato and is now living in Auckland. He works at
an Actors Agency and writes whenever he can. The author of a
number of plays Thomas was a winner in the 2002 New Zealand
Young Playwrights Competition and gained a highly commended
in 2003. He is currently working on a film script about the
1987 stock market crash with a producer and recently
completed a degree in theatre from the University of
Auckland. Says Thomas, "I love acting and comedy but feel
playwriting is a medium in which the writer has a
responsibility. I believe a playwright needs to comment on
and inform society."
Matthew Saville
A graduate of Toi
Whaakari and Otago University, Kikia Te Poa - Kick the Boer
is Matthew Saville's second play. He has twice been
commended in the New
Zealand Young Playwrights
Competition and this year received a scholarship to
attend the Sarkies and Sarkies Script 2 Screen course
from the Film Investment
Corporation. Matthew's first
play The Boxer has been performed at BATS and several New
Zealand regional arts festivals. It will receive another
production in Wellington at Circa Studio later this year as
part of the Fresh at Circa and Playmarket New Writers
Season.
Mike Hudson
After completing a Bachelor of
Arts Degree at Auckland University, Mike travelled to
London, where he spent the next nine years working in film
and video production as well as studying writing for theatre
and film. On his return to New Zealand Mike wrote his first
play Harry, which was performed at the Basement Theatre,
Auckland in 1997. Since 1997 Mike has written two short
films The Sweat, 2000 and Lance 2001, both made in Sydney.
He was also a contributing writer to Club Volcanic at The
Classic 1999. His second play Beautiful Losers premiered at
the Silo Theatre in 2002 as part of the Restless Ecstasy
Festival. Mike is currently working on additional scenes
for a fully realised version of Beautiful Losers that will
open at the Silo in December 2003, as well as two feature
length film scripts which are both in pre
production.
Miria George
Miria George has written two
short plays for Radio New Zealand. She has had a collection
of poetry The Wet Season, published by Wai-te-ata Press,
which is coming out at the end of the year. Her first stage
play Oho Ake received a Highly Commended in the 2003 New
Zealand Young Playwrights Competition. She is a member of
Taki Rua's Writers Block.
Kathyrn Van Beek
Kathryn is a
graduate of UNITEC's School of Performing and Screen Arts
where she majored in writing. Kathryn is a winner several
times of the New Zealand Young Playwrights' Competition and
has successfully staged several of her works at the
Wellington Fringe Festival at BATS Theatre and at the SILO
Theatre, Auckland. In 2002 she completed an MA in
Scriptwriting at Victoria University's Institute of Modern
Letters. Her new play The Language of Angels opens during
the conference week at the SILO Theatre as part of ATC's
Final Draft programme.
Toa Fraser
Toa was born in
Britain in 1975 to a British mother and a Fijian father and
moved to Auckland in 1989. His first play, Bare, premiered
in 1998 and has achieved much national and international
success. In that same year, Fraser wrote No. 2, performed by
Madeleine Sami. No.2 won a prestigious Festival First Award
when it was performed at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival in
2000, and continues to garner rave reviews all over the
world. In 1999, he won the Bruce Mason Playwrights Award.
His work continues to be informed by his Fijian/British
heritage, as demonstrated by his third play, Paradise, which
premiered in Wellington, in April 2001. In September 2001,
Toa was the recipient of the University of South Pacific's
Writer in Residence programme and is a 2003 Sargeson Fellow.
He now lives in Auckland and is working on several film
scripts.
Jo Randerson
Jo is a graduate of Victoria
University, Wellington, and was involved as a writer,
director and performer in productions for VUWSA Drama Club.
After graduating she joined the theatre group Trouble. In
1995 Fold was written and presented at the Young and Hungry
Festival at Bats, and later returned to Downstage and BATS
again. The script was recently published by The Play Press.
In 1996 Jo participated in the creative writing course at
Victoria University with Bill Manhire and has had a book of
short prose work The Spit Children published by Victoria
University Press. With Trouble, Jo has co-written four
plays. Of these Bleach was part of the 1998 Wellington
Fringe and presented at the Edinburgh Fringe and Tramway
Festival of Site Specific Theatre in Glasgow. The author and
co-author of over 25 works for the stage, Randerson has also
performed her own work throughout New Zealand and
internationally. Jo was the 2001 Burns Fellow at Otago
University, Dunedin, and recently travelled to Russia care
of a Winston Churchill Fellowship.
Moira Warama
Moira
is a storyteller, poet, playwright and teacher. She has
performed throughout New Zealand specialising in bi-lingual
tellings of Maori legends and in creating stories around New
Zealand events, art works and life experiences. She has
written for both English and Maori School Journals, and her
first children's book, Alphabet Art, was released last year.
Moira's stage play Questions won a 1999 Fringe Best Award,
and was later adapted for television, receiving the Qantas
Award for Children's/Youth Best Television programme. Most
recently Moira's first radio play, Toll Calls, has been
recorded for Radio New Zealand, and her one act play Te
Kauta, was part of the Taki Toru performance being produced
by Taki Rua, Fringe NZ and Putaanga productions for the NZ
Fringe 2002. It won the Love the Fringe Theatre Award. Moira
also works part time at Te Ara Whanui Kura Kaupapa Maori,
where she teaches a reading support programme.
Paul
Rothwell
Paul Rothwell has been writing plays for two
years. His recent plays were
Cut Out, The Felinity of
Wendel and Undine, all three of which were produced at this
year's Wellington Fringe. A UNITEC writing graduate, he has
also been writing an adaptation of Edgar Allan Poe's The
Cask of Amontillado for an acting
department production
at UNITEC.
International Guests
Benjamin Twist
Ben
is a freelance director and producer of theatre and
music-theatre, with a particular interest in new plays and
comedy. He toured political theatre throughout Scotland with
the Merry Mac Fun Co, and as Associate Director at the
Traverse Theatre in Edinburgh he commissioned, developed and
directed new plays. As Artistic Director of Manchester¡¦s
Contact Theatre he directed classics, modern works and
British premieres. As a freelance director he has directed
throughout Europe. Work with young people includes writing
and directing a project with young refugees for the
MacRobert Arts Centre in Stirling and directing at Ignite01
in Auckland. In music theatre Ben has directed regularly for
the Scottish Chamber Orchestra, Psappha, the Queen Elizabeth
Hall, The Hebrides Ensemble, The Seer Ensemble and Haddo
House Opera.
Peter Matheson
Peter is a freelance
dramaturg and script assessor. He came to dramaturgy through
playwriting, having written fourteen plays (all of them
produced - his first was selected for an ANPC workshop in
1975) for companies as diverse as the Hunter Valley Theatre
Company, Newcastle Repertory Company, Melbourne Theatre
Company and Freewheels Theatre In Education Company. He was
Melbourne Theatre Company's dramaturg for over thirteen
years, where his work included literary management and
dramaturgical input. He was the Company's interface with the
writing community and its literary agents. He left MTC in
2001 to write. His other work includes for Sydney Theatre
Company, Queensland Theatre Company, La Boite, PlayLab,
Kooemba Jdarra and Legs on the Wall. He ran the 2002
National Playwrights' Conference Studio, and was involved in
the 2003 Residency Program for the Australian National
Playwrights Conference.
Script Developers
James
Beaumont
James studied fine arts and drama at Warrnambool
Institute, Victoria and received further training at NIDA,
Sydney. He arrived in NZ in the late 1970s, attending
Theatre Corporate. After serving as a company member at the
Fortune Theatre, he moved to Wellington to work with Depot,
Circa, Centrepoint, Toi Whakaari and Bats. James has worked
as a director, playwright, script assessor, actor and
educator. He began writing and directing his own material in
1984. In 1990, he was employed at Taki Rua as the theatre's
first director-in-residence. Subsequently, he was awarded
the Bruce Mason Award. Returning to Australia in 1992, James
worked as an actor for the Melbourne Theatre Company and was
also involved in script assessment and workshop directing
for RAW at Playbox Theatre. Having returned to NZ in 1996,
James directed for the ATC and the Watershed, before
teaching at Waikato University's Drama Department, and now
the University of Canterbury's Theatre and Film Studies
department.
Philippa Campbell
Philippa graduated from
Victoria University and Toi Whakaari New Zealand Drama
School and worked professionally in the theatre as an actor
and director, most notably as a founding member of
Wellington's The Depot, the country¡¦s first theatre devoted
solely to presenting New Zealand work, where she directed
three premiere productions. Throughout her subsequent career
in television and film as a script editor and writer and
most recently as producer of features Via Satellite and the
acclaimed Rain, Philippa has continued work as a dramaturg.
Highlights include Savage Hearts/Manawa Taua, Waiora, Haruru
Mai, Ranterstantrum, Strike, The Young Baron and the NBR
National Opera¡¦s new chamber opera The Prodigal Child. She
is currently working on Fond Love and Kisses by Allen
O¡¦Leary for Downstage and a new chamber opera with Stuart
Hoar.
Anna Marbrook
Anna trained with Philippe Gaulier
in London and has directed and taught in New Zealand and
Australia since 1989. Anna was Co-Artistic Director of
Theatre at Large for eight years, directing and co-writing
an extensive repertoire of new devised works including
Manawa Taua/ Savage Hearts, Henry 8, The Butcher¡¦s Wife and
adaptations of classics such as Cyrano de Bergerac
(Wellington and Perth International Festivals, Adelaide
World Theatre Series), King Lear with Ian Mune, Romeo and
Juliet and Midsummer Nights Dream. After a two year
sabbatical in Paris she formed Marbrook and Lee Films with
Heather Lee and they currently have a feature and a short
film in development. Anna recently completed two projects
with NBR New Zealand Opera - re directing The Prodigal Child
(Christchurch Festival) and a youth opera project (Ignite03)
Anna is currently working with ATC on Language of Angels by
Kathryn Van Beek.
Elizabeth O'Connor
Elizabeth O'Connor
has spent twenty years in professional theatre in various
parts of New Zealand, working as a director, playwright,
dramaturg, producer, administrator and, occasionally,
designer and performer. She helped establish and teach
courses at the National Academy of Singing and Dramatic Art
in Christchurch. With Peter Marshall she co-founded and
continues to co-edit Theatre and Dance News. Currently she
is teaching at the Drama Centre in Christchurch, directing
and acting in independent collective productions, being
dramaturg for The Clinic theatre company, facilitating (for
Playmarket) craft sessions and readings for local
playwrights and collaborating with the Writers Guild and Nga
Aho Whakaari on Christchurch screenwriting workshops.
Hone
Kouka
Ngati Porou, Ngati Kahungungu and Ngati Raukawa,
Hone is a graduate of Otago University (BA) and studied at
Te Kura Toi Whakaari o Aotearoa: New Zealand Drama School.
Hone has worked as a sawmiller, journalist, dramaturg and
director, but is best known as a playwright. He ran Taki Rua
Productions in Wellington and now works as a producer at
Radio New Zealand. Well known for his play Waiora, which
toured the UK and NZ, he is also known for Nga Tangata Toa
and Ahi Kaa - Homefires. Hone has won a string of
playwriting awards and was Writer in Residency at Canterbury
University (1996). Hone also writes for television, acts as
a script advisor and recently finished his first novel. He
edited a collection of Maori Plays for VUP. He currently
facilitates Writers Block, a group for emerging Maori and PI
writers at Taki Rua. Hone's new work The Prophet received a
lab production in 2002. He recently returned from a
programme at the Maurits Binger Institute, Amsterdam where
he worked on his film adaptation of Witi Ihimaera¡¦s novel
Bulibasha.
Emma Willis
Emma is a script developer,
writer and director. She is a graduate of Victoria
University, and is currently undertaking an MA in Theatre
Studies at the University of Auckland. She has trained in
theatre with Christian Penny, John Downie, Philip Mann, Min
Tanaka and Enrique Pardo. Most recently she travelled to
Spain to study choreographic theatre and voice with Pardo,
and voice teacher Linda Wise of Pan Theatre. Emma has
directed a number of new award-winning New Zealand theatre
works in Auckland and Wellington, including The Swimming
Lessons, Never Never, Milk, Flood, Fever and A Perfect Plan.
She has worked as a script consultant for ATC and currently
as a script assessor for Playmarket. She has directed
workshops for Playmarket and the Silo Theatre. She was
assistant director of initial ATC workshops of Stephen
Sinclair's The Bellbird. For four years she was co-director
of Jealous Theatre Company. Emma is currently developing a
new stage work with Creative New Zealand
assistance.
Andrew Foster
Andrew Foster specialsies in
the development and presentation of new works. Favouring
both devising (having worked with companies as diverse as
Under Lilly's Balcony and recently Three Pesos on Little
Che), and collaborations with new writers (in particular Jo
Randerson, Oscar Kightley and Duncan Sarkies). He is perhaps
best known for his work with 'Trouble' where he is the
Artistic Director, Designer and a co-founder. Trouble¡¦s
site specific and installation theatre projects have become
a ¡¥flagship¡¦ for the new wave of theatre making in
Wellington. Andrew will travel later this year to take up a
residency at the Royal Court Theatre in London, to work on
the development of new texts with writers from around the
world. He is currently writing and directing dramas for
Radio New Zealand.
Mark Amery
Mark is Script
Development Manager and dramaturg at Playmarket, which runs
NZ's national script development programme. He is a graduate
of Auckland University (BA/LLB). Mark works closely with
most emerging and established NZ playwrights to assist in
taking their work from page to stage. Recent workshops have
included Craig Thaine's Telling Stories, Lynda
Chanwai-Earle's Heat and Monkey, Mike Hudson's Beautiful
Losers and Bevin Linkhorn's Motormouth. Programme Director
for APC2003 and National Playwrights Forum 2002, he has been
a script advisor since 1995 and was Chair of the Playmarket
Executive 2001-2002. Recently, he was a drama tutor at
Interplay, an international festival for emerging
playwrights and at Ignite03 in Auckland. He continues to
work across the visual and performing arts, and radio and
print media in a career where developing emerging voices in
the arts has been a particular passion. An occasional
playwright and actor, he is also known for his work as a
theatre and visual arts critic and commentator and as a
photographic artist.
ENDS.