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Louis Esson Prize
Winner & Shortlist 2008
Judges 2008
Winner 2007
Shortlist 2007
Judges 2007
Winner 2006
Shortlist 2006
Judges 2006
Winner 2005
Shortlist 2005
Judges 2005
Winner 2004
Shortlist 2004
Judges 2004
Winner 2003
Shortlist 2003
Judges 2003
 
 

The Louis Esson Prize for Drama: Winner and Shortlist 2008

This was a strong year for drama, with exciting entries from both experienced and emerging writers. Generational inheritance was a prevalent theme, whether as a result of war, imagined pasts and futures, or familial dysfunction. In addition to the shortlist, we commend:

  • Patricia Cornelius’ The Call, which is full with yearning, black humour and inarticulate pain
  • Tom Holloway’s Beyond the Neck, a restrained, orchestrated investigation of grief, centring around the Port Arthur tragedy
  • Kate Mulvany’s The Seed, which grappled with the legacies of family and war, and contrasted with her deliciously humorous The Danger Age.

Judges: Ailsa Piper (Convenor), Mary Lou Jelbart and Wendy Lasica

Winner

The winner of the 2008 Louis Esson Prize for Drama is:

  • When the Rain Stops Falling
    by Andrew Bovell (Brink Productions)

Shortlist


Photo of on-stage scene from 'When the Rain Stops Falling'

When the Rain Stops Falling - WINNER

Andrew Bovell
(Brink Productions)

This structurally daring and complex play is sweeping yet also intimate, epic yet tender. Transporting us across time and continents, Bovell questions our legacy - the environmental inheritance we are in danger of leaving, and the emotional inheritance of four generations of one family. A gripping, moving examination of consequences, responsibilities and birthrights.

Cover of published script of 'The Story of the Miracle at Cookie's Table'

The Story of the Miracles at Cookie’s Table

Wesley Enoch
(Currency Press)

Wesley Enoch places us in the world of the domestic, then weaves a story that invokes the universal from the particular. At the heart of this play is the formidable and engaging Cookie, whose poetic vernacular and wry humour are a joy. From the stories of this one Indigenous family, broad questions of identity and belonging are raised.

Photo of Richard Roxburgh playing Roland, central character of 'Toy Symphony'

Toy Symphony

Michael Gow
(Belvoir Street Theatre)

Michael Gow’s exploration of the genesis of artistic impulse is visceral, poetic and theatrical. His central character, Roland, uses language as both weapon and toy, and is utterly compelling even at his most infuriating. The play is a wild ride, via lost suburban landscapes, through Roland’s psyche and imagination. Funny, witty, bleak, inventive and ultimately, hopeful.

 
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