Winners of National Young Playwrights’ Competition
MEDIA RELEASE - 13 March 2007
WINNERS OF NATIONAL
PLAYWRIGHTS’ COMPETITION ANNOUNCED
Who will be the next
Roger Hall, Briar Grace-Smith or Jo Randerson?
Six young playwrights have been singled out in the Ninth New Zealand Young Playwrights Competition, an event that has established itself as an important stepping- stone in the development of new writers for our theatre. Organised by script development agency Playmarket, the competition (open to those aged between 16 and 24) has recognised six winners:
Northern Region: Ashley Milne (Papakura, Auckland) and Thomas Sainsbury (Ponsonby).
Central Region: Branwen Miller (Brooklyn, Wellington) and Georgina Titheridge (Aro Valley, Wellington);
Southern Region: Kate Morris (North East Valley, Dunedin) and Thalia Henry (Karatane, Otago).
Special mention went to nine other writers: Northern Region: Claire van Beek, Kathryn Haworth and Mike Borgfeldt; Central Region: Samuel Bradford, Sam Gaskin and Biddy McCallum; Southern Region: Pieta Pemberton, Kat Thomas and Faye Tiffin.
The competition was judged by Stephen Sinclair (Ladies Night, The Bellbird, The Bach), Elizabeth O’Connor (a script developer, director and playwright based in Christchurch), and Janie Walker (playwright and Script Development Co-ordinator at Playmarket.)
Ms Walker says there were three-times the amount of entries as the previous competition. “It’s so exciting to see young people still passionate about telling stories on the stage.”
The winning writers will team up with
professional directors, dramaturgs and actors for a week of
workshops and professional development at The Edge in
Auckland, September 3-7. On Friday the 7th of September, the
winning scripts will be presented to the industry and public
as part of the Playmarket at THE EDGE playwright development
programme.
Hear from THE WINNING WRITERS over the next
two pages
WINNERS of The Ninth NEW ZEALAND YOUNG PLAYWRIGHTS COMPETITION
NORTHERN REGION
17 year old Ashley Milne is currently studying for a BA at University of Auckland. She’s worked part time at No.1 Shoe Warehouse and has been involved in acting and dancing at the Papakura Theatre Club. She was a winner at last year’s Flip the Script competition at The Edge. A line from Ashley’s winning play Gotta Light: “Aint no other beat boxin’, out foxin’, bad assed, super fast, fine mother brother that know what he knows.”
“Having the opportunity to have a play produced, directed and acted by professionals is really amazing, especially for someone so young. So I’m really excited to get a glimpse at the professional theatre scene and to see how it compares with what I’ve done in the past, and even more excited just to see my play come alive on stage.”
Thomas Sainsbury is interested in
unusual people and drama. He has had productions/readings at
The Edge (And then you die), Young & Hungry (Butt Ugly) and
Auckland’s Wine Cellar (Caustic). He’s also directed and
produced for theatre and has a first class honours in
English Literature at University of Auckland. He’s been a
Gecko-carer, Deli worker, body double and has sold floral
aquariums and retractable hoses. A line from Thomas’s
winning play Bruised: “I’m sorry, baby. I didn’t mean
to. But sometimes you make me do it. Sometimes you make it
so hard.”
“I entered NZYPC again because it is such a
fantastic opportunity that any young writer shouldn’t pass
up, and it was my last chance to enter. Having your play
workshopped with enthusiastic passionate practitioners is
such a privilege and such a joy.”
CENTRAL
REGION
Branwen Miller discovered her love of playwriting
when she was in America and has a BA in politics, theatre
and development studies from Victoria University. Last year
Branwen also completed the Ken Duncum’s scriptwriting MA
course. She’s served drinks, stuffed envelopes, ushered
people to their seats, and holds high hopes for saving the
world. A line from Branwen’s winning play Armslength:
“They lived on the top of the world, on the axis of this
planet, and the world revolved around them.”
“I entered NZYPC because I wanted to extend the life of my play, and to meet other young writers and industry professionals who support what we do.”
Georgina
Titheridge had acted in seven plays and is about to publish
poems in an anthology of Wellington poets. She’s trained
at Victoria University and Hagley Theatre Company, and can
sing. She says she’s waitressed everywhere in Wellington
and Christchurch and has sold and eaten chocolate. A line
from her winning play We Should Catch: “Kiwibanks great.
It’s great cause it’s Kiwi, ya know. It’s real.”
I entered NZYPC because I was doing temp hospo, and going insane, losing hope in life and all that.. I had three weeks to do it. I had printer issues. When I found out I’d won…how it really felt needs bad language to paint it true.
SOUTHERN REGION
Thalia Henry has written
since she was a “wee dot” and her short story Huriawa
was a runner up in the Clear short story competition. She
has a theatre and film degree from Otago University, has
made fish and chips and worked as a home help for the
elderly. She likes fire-dancing and gliding. A line from her
play Sound of a Car: “Strutting around like you’re the
king of the world you silver BMW mother fucker.”
“The play addresses some gay issues and being gay myself I thought this a key topic to try to make people aware of in today’s society. This is a story about the nature of love. When I discovered that I’d won a place in the competition I just about cried, I must have sounded like a complete idiot on the telephone. This competition is a step in the right direction for me.”
Kate Morris is doing
the MA Scriptwriting course at Victoria University and has
won this compeitition twice before. She also won the 2006
Gibson Award Winner for Favourite New Writer and was a 2004
NZ Film Commission 1st Writers’ Initiative Finalist.
She’s worked for ages at The CD & DVD Store to pay the
bills. A line from her play Waking Monarch: “He’s like a
shaken snow globe. This faint image behind a blizzard. I
just hope when the snow settles, he won’t be forever
buried.”
“To be honest I thought when Playmarket rang me they were going to tell me my entry had been damaged in the post because I put these metal clips in the envelope to keep the pages together and was worried they would poke a hole in the packaging. I can’t wait for the workshop; the only downside is that I have to wait until September. I mean, come on guys, I’m from the generation of impatience and immediacy!”
ENDS