Short list for Playwriting Award Announced
SHORT LIST FOR NZ’S NATIONAL PLAYWRITING AWARD
ANNOUNCED
Playmarket is proud to announce the four playwrights shortlisted for one of New Zealand’s most significant national theatre awards - the Bruce Mason Playwriting Award.
They are
Arthur Meek, Eli Kent, Lynda Chanwai-Earle and
Thomas Sainsbury.
Each of these playwrights has been
nominated in previous years.
The Bruce Mason Playwriting Award has since 1983 recognised the work of an outstanding emerging New Zealand playwright who has had one or more full-length plays produced to acclaim. Previous winners include many of this country’s most celebrated writers, including Toa Fraser, Hone Kouka and Jo Randerson, and was last year awarded to Pip Hall. The winner will be announced and the award - sponsored by the Bruce Mason Estate, Downstage Theatre Society, The FAME Trust, and Playmarket - presented at Downstage Theatre on 3 December.
Nominations and the award winner are decided through voting by a panel made up of leading directors and script advisors throughout New Zealand and Playmarket staff. The winner will be awarded a $10,000 cash prize.
The Award
is named after the man considered to be New Zealand’s
first most significant playwright, Bruce Mason, who
died in 1982. His plays are still produced widely today and
many, such as The Pohutakawa Tree and
End of the Golden Weather, have come to be
considered New Zealand classics.
The
nominees:
Arthur Meek’s plays
include Young & Hungry commission Yolk, Mando the
Goatherd, Fringe hit The Cottage and On the
Conditions and Possibilities of Helen Clark Taking Me as Her
Young Lover which toured nationally in 2008.
Collapsing Creation premiered in Christchurch and was
produced at Downstage last November as part of the worldwide
celebrations of the 150th Anniversary of the publication of
Charles Darwin's The Origin of Species. Arthur is
currently working on a commission for ATC – On the
Upside-Down of the World – based on Our Maoris,
the 1840s memoirs of Lady Martin.
Eli Kent
emerged on the scene in 2008 with Rubber Turkey,
performed at BATS and The Basement Theatre, and won
“Best New New Zealand Playwright Award” at that year’s
Chapman Tripp Theatre Awards.
Last year The Intricate
Art of Actually Caring was produced in Eli’s bedroom
in the Wellington Fringe, going on to pick up “Best
Theatre” at the Fringe Awards and transfer as part of the
Best of the Fringe to Downstage. It also gathered
“Most Original Production" at the 2009 Chapman Tripp
Theatre Awards. This year the play has toured extensively to
much critical acclaim and audience delight.
His 2010
Young & Hungry commission Thinning, about six high
school graduates apple picking for the summer, was performed
in both the Wellington and Auckland seasons.
This year
Lynda Chanwai-Earle’s company Ice Floe
Productions toured festivals with her award winning play
Heat. The innovative production runs solely on
alternative energy, with a solar panel and wind turbine
powering all lights and sound.
Lynda’s groundbreaking
one-woman play Ka Shue (Letters Home) toured to
Ireland in 1997 and Hawaii in 2004. Semi-autobiographical,
Ka Shue is the first authentically New
Zealand–Chinese play for mainstream audiences. Together
with her second play, Foh-Sarn (Fire Mountain) it was
published by The Women’s Play Press in 2003. Both plays
are prescribed texts with the NCEA (National Certificates of
Educational Achievement) and Victoria University.
Ka-Shue has been published in Canada and Hawaii and
is now in its third print. Nominated for two Chapman Tripp
Awards, Lynda’s play Monkey premiered at the 2004
International Festival of the Arts and toured as part of
Capital E National Theatre for Children programme.
Lynda
is currently working on a commission with The Court Theatre
- Man in a Suitcase.
Thomas
Sainsbury is one of New Zealand’s most prolific and
popular playwrights, gaining considerable attention and
praise in the past few years for productions of his dark
comedies in Auckland, Wellington, Australia and London. His
plays include Sunday Roast, LUV, The
Mall, Loser, Beast, The Christmas Monologues
and the collaboration Gas. He has previously been
selected three times for Playmarket’s New Zealand Young
Playwrights Competition. The Mall, Loser and
The Christmas Monologues have been published
by The Play Press.
Thomas is currently working on
several plays including The Canary, and directing a
regular series of monologues with a different theme each
time, including - The Masculine Monologues, The Awkward
Monologues, Monster Monologues and the latest: Fairy
Tale Monologues.
The award is sponsored by the
Bruce Mason Estate, Downstage Theatre Society and the FAME
Trust.
Playmarket receives major funding from
Creative
NZ
END