Winner Of National Playwriting Award Announced
Winner Of National Playwriting Award Announced
Paul Rothwell has been awarded New Zealand’s most significant national theatre award, the Bruce Mason Playwriting Award. The emerging playwrights’ award for 2008 was announced at Downstage Theatre Wellington by Playmarket, New Zealand’s playwrights’ organisation. Rothwell’s award recognises his dedication as a playwright and its recognition by critics and audiences.
The Bruce Mason Award is
decided through voting by a panel of leading directors and
play developers throughout New Zealand. The award sees
Rothwell awarded a $10,000 full-length play commission, to
be given a playreading in 2010.
Five of Paul
Rothwell’s plays, including Hate Crimes, Golden
Boys and Deliver Us, have been mounted in the last three
years providing both delight and controversial insights into
the heart of New Zealand society. He has been widely
heralded as one of this country’s most exciting new
playwrights. Rothwell has twice been nominated for the
Chapman Tripp Theatre Award for Most Outstanding New
Playwright and is a previous winner of Playmarket’s New
Zealand Young Playwrights Competition. A new work Christmas
Indoor premieres in Wellington in December, and another new
play The Blackening had a reading with Auckland Theatre
Company this year.
This prestigious annual award
has since 1983 recognised the work of an outstanding
emerging New Zealand playwright. Such a playwright has had
one or more full-length plays produced to acclaim. Previous
winners include many of this country’s most celebrated
writers, including Briar Grace Smith, David Geary and Toa
Fraser. The award is sponsored by the Downstage Theatre
Society, The FAME Trust, the Bruce Mason Estate and
Playmarket.
Twisted, dark and often very funny,
Rothwell’s plays have often led to debate amongst critics
and audiences for their pointed commentary on New Zealand
middle class suburbia, where families struggle under the
weight of society’s expectations. Rothwell’s
latest Christmas Indoors, opening at BATS Theatre in early
December, is described as an unashamedly anti-Christmas
comedy about family; exploring how sometimes the things that
bring us together are the same things that push us
apart.
The Award is named after the man considered
to be New Zealand’s first most significant playwright,
Bruce Mason who died in
1982.
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