’Australia in 50 Plays’: In conversation with Julian Meyrick
Not in Print: playwrights off script - on inspiration, process and theatre itself
by Currency Press: the performing arts publisher
2y ago
In this episode of Not in Print Caitlin speaks with Julian Meyrick.  Julian Meyrick is Professor of Creative Industries at Griffith University and an Honorary Fellow at Deakin University. He has directed award-winning productions at Melbourne Theatre Company, Griffin, Sydney Theatre Company, Melbourne Workers Theatre and Kick House Theatre and was Associate Director and Literary Advisor at Melbourne Theatre Company until 2007. In this podcast Julian discusses his most recent book, 'Australia in 50 Plays', published by Currency Press and launched at the inaugural Australian Playwrights’ Fe ..read more
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Andrea James: on collaboration, First Nations‘ storytelling and Sunshine Super Girl
Not in Print: playwrights off script - on inspiration, process and theatre itself
by Currency Press: the performing arts publisher
2y ago
In this episode, Caitlin spoke with playwright, director and dramaturg, Andrea James.   Andrea is a Yorta Yorta/Gunaikurnai woman who is dedicated to the telling of First Nations stories on stage. She was Artistic Director of Melbourne Workers Theatre 2001-2008, was a playwright in residence at Melbourne Theatre Company and is currently an Associate Artist at Griffin Theatre Company.  Andrea’s plays have appeared on stages across Australia and around the world.  Here, we speak about her theatre practice, and her two most recent plays, Sunshine Super Girl, about Aboriginal tennis ..read more
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Gary's House: But is it a home? l Satire becomes drama
Not in Print: playwrights off script - on inspiration, process and theatre itself
by Currency Press: the performing arts publisher
3y ago
Gary's failed in everything he's attempted. But when he inherits a block of land, he gets an urge to build a nest with his angry, pregnant girlfriend, Sue-Anne. A ratbag collection of misfits, loners, drifters and losers are thrown together on this scrubby patch of remote bush - loosely united in a comically desperate project, to build a home. -- Debra Oswald announced to her parents that she was going to be a playwright at twelve years old and she has been sharing stories ever since. Her broad body of work has been seen on screens large and small, watched in darkened theatres across the wor ..read more
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Introduction to Gary's House l On the beauty of failure
Not in Print: playwrights off script - on inspiration, process and theatre itself
by Currency Press: the performing arts publisher
3y ago
John McCallum reads his introduction to Gary’s House, by Debra Oswald. McCallum is one of the country’s most respected critics. He's published widely in the field of Australian theatre and drama and is the long-standing Sydney theatre critic for the Australian ..read more
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Rainbow's End: What's the definition of a hero? l Thought-provoking Australian theatre
Not in Print: playwrights off script - on inspiration, process and theatre itself
by Currency Press: the performing arts publisher
3y ago
Set in the 1950s on the fringe of a country town, Rainbow’s End is a thought-provoking, often hilarious and emotionally powerful snapshot of a Koori family - Nan Dear, her daughter Gladys and Gladys’ daughter Dolly; it dramatises their struggle for decent housing, meaningful education, jobs and community acceptance. -- Jane Harrison is an indigenous Australian writer and playwright. A descendant of the Muruwari people of New South Wales, from the area around Bourke and Brewarrina, Harrison grew up in the Victorian Dandenongs with her mother and sister. She began her career as an advertising co ..read more
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Don's Party: the way we were l Classic Australian theatre
Not in Print: playwrights off script - on inspiration, process and theatre itself
by Currency Press: the performing arts publisher
3y ago
Election night 1969: Don and Kath hope for a change of government and give a party to watch the results. But as the tide turns against Labor, faded ideals and disappointed hopes begin to reveal themselves. This brilliant satire examines a society on the threshold of emerging from a generation of comfortable, conservative political and social values. -- David Williamson is Australia’s best known and most widely performed playwright. He was the first person outside Britain to receive the George Devine Award (for The Removalists) and the awards kept coming. They include: twelve AWGIE ..read more
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Preface to Don's Party l Reflecting on classic Australian theatre
Not in Print: playwrights off script - on inspiration, process and theatre itself
by Currency Press: the performing arts publisher
3y ago
Toby Leon reads H.G. Kippax’s preface to Don’s Party. From the mid-1960s on, Kippax was the authoritative critic at the Sydney Morning Herald and is said to have spotted the talent of the young John Bell, Robyn Nevin, Mel Gibson, Judy Davis and... David Williamson ..read more
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The Floating World: shipped over the edge l Classic Australian theatre
Not in Print: playwrights off script - on inspiration, process and theatre itself
by Currency Press: the performing arts publisher
3y ago
Les and Irene celebrate their wedding anniversary by setting sail on the Women’s Weekly Cherry Blossom Cruise. But amongst the sun hats and piña coladas Les, a former WWII prisoner of war, finds himself confronted by old diggers, enemies and tormented memories. As the cruise ship floats further from home, Les’ grip on reality floats away too. -- John Romeril was born in Melbourne in 1945 and wrote his first plays while at Monash University, including Chicago, Chicago. He has worked extensively in theatre and film over the years, including dramaturgical work—often with young writers—and as Play ..read more
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Introduction to The Floating World l Reflecting on classic Australian theatre
Not in Print: playwrights off script - on inspiration, process and theatre itself
by Currency Press: the performing arts publisher
3y ago
Katharine Brisbane reads her introduction to The Floating World, by John Romeril. Katharine, with her husband Philip Parsons, founded Currency Press, and was also a theatre critic for 21 years. Over the years she has published extensively on the history of Australian theatre, as well as receiving many awards for service to the performing arts ..read more
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Silent Disco: plugging in and tuning out l Award-winning Australian theatre
Not in Print: playwrights off script - on inspiration, process and theatre itself
by Currency Press: the performing arts publisher
3y ago
Tamara and Jasyn are in love. Jasyn wants to take Tamara to the formal, but he hasn’t got the cash. And in a world of absent mothers and distant fathers, Miss Petchall battles to keep another year of students out of the ranks of the vanished. Tamara and Jasyn soon come to realise just how hard it can be to find your own rhythm when everyone is marching to the beat of a different drum. -- Lachlan Philpott is a playwright, director and teacher. He graduated from the University of New South Wales, The Victorian College of the Arts and NIDA’s Playwrights Studio. He has previously been Artistic D ..read more
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