47th ANNUAL AWGIE AWARDS WINNERS

47th ANNUAL AWGIE AWARDS WINNERS

Playwrights Katherine Thompson, Andrew Bovell, Sue Smith and Finegan Kruckemeyer were amongst the writers recognised by their peers at the 47thAnnual AWGIE Awards, held on Friday September 5, 2014 at Doltone House, Sydney.

Distinguished writers for both stage and screen, Katherine Thompson and Andrew Bovell each won $25,000 for the Australian Writers Foundation Fellowship and the David Williamson Prize respectively.  Thompson’s fellowship was awarded to entice her back to the stage where her career started with an impressive body of work. Bovell’s prize is in recognition of the most outstanding play of the year - The Secret River.

Sue Smith, widely praised for her television work, this year won a $15,000 Australian Writers Foundation Fellowship to further her recent move into theatre. Her play Kryptonite opens at the Sydney Theatre Company Sept 11th.

Finegan Kruckemeyer won two awards, for his children’s play,The Grumpiest Boy in the World, and for The Violent Outburst That Drew Me To You  in the Theatre for Young Audiences category.  This category saw joint winners this year – a rare event, as Tom Holloway was also a winner for his adaption of Storm Boy.

In addition to the AWGIE awards for the most outstanding scripts of the year the night also sees writers taking the opportunity to single out and celebrate individuals who have made contributions so special that they have helped shape the industry.  Special awards for the night were:

· Everett DeRoche was posthumously awarded the Dorothy Crawford Award for Outstanding Contribution to the Profession.  “Almost everything that Everett DeRoche wrote is one of my favourite films,” proclaimed US filmmaker Quentin Tarantino in 2008. The prolific DeRoche began his career with Crawford Production writing classics such as Homicide and Division Four before making his name for the Ozploitation thrillers Patrick and Razorback. As one of the most-produced screenwriters in Australia, the montage of his incredible body of work amazed the AWGIE crowd. 

· The Fred Parsons Award for Outstanding Contribution to Australian Comedy was presented by Julian Morrow to Andrew Denton, a man who needs no introduction to Australian comedy writers or audiences. Denton has done as much behind the scenes as in front of it – nurturing and investing in new generations of Australian comedy talent.

· The Hector Crawford Award for an Outstanding Contribution to the Craft via a Body of Script Editing Work went to Peter Matheson. And while the general public may not understand the work of a dramaturg, writers most certainly do – and they know how writers, the industry and audiences are served by them.  Matheson was recognized by the Guild for his generous and creative work with playwrights and theatre companies across Australia.

· The Richard Lane Award for Outstanding Service and Dedication to the Australian Writers' Guild was awarded to Jon Stephens and Bruce Pulsford. Considered the Guild’s highest honour, the award recongises the all too often unsung heroes who have given long and generous service to the Guild in support of writers around the country.

Winner of the Foxtel Fellowship, established to recognize and reward a writer with an impressive and significant body of work in television, was Kelly Lefever.  Lefever’s credits span Australian television history from Prisoners to Home and Away to the prize-winning drama The Circuit where she both wrote scripts and nurtured new writers.

The yet to be seen TV mini-series, The Code, was the winner of the Original Television Mini-Series Award, and also took out the Major AWGIE – given to the best of the best - selected from all of the night’s winners across stage, screen, new media and radio. The winning writers are Blake Ayshford, Shelley Birse and Justin Monjo. The six-hour political thriller filmed in Canberra, Broken Hill and the outback, promises a new “Australian noir” when it screens September 21(ABC).

New writers breaking through were the winner of the feature film award, Adelaide writer Matthew Cormack, for his first feature, the “bold” and “structurally adventurous” film 52 Tuesdays, and winner of Best Documentary writer Sally McKenzie for A Woman’s Journey Into Sex. The category-busting AUTHENTIC IN ALL CAPS, which is billed as “an web audio adventure” won the Interactive Media Award for creator Christy Dena.

Andrew Knight continued his winning streak, which the last the two years was for Rake, but this year it was for his script for the telemovie The Broken Shore, his adaption of the Peter Temple novel.  Rake was still a winner though, with writer/director Peter Duncan winning best script for a Television Series. ANZAC Girls won for best adapted mini-series, and Stephen Vagg’s Neighbors script for best serial. 

The AWGIE Awards are the only awards for writers, judged by writers, and based solely on the script – the writer’s own intention. Each award is judged by a jury of their peers – other writers.

RECIPIENTS AT 47thANNUAL AWGIE AWARDS

Children’s Theatre

The Grumpiest Boy in the World

Finegan Kruckemeyer

Community and Youth Theatre

Comin’ Home Soon

Alana Valentine

Theatre for Young Audiences (Joint winners)

Storm Boy

Tom Holloway

The Violent Outburst That Drew Me To You

Finegan Kruckemeyer

Theatre - Stage

The Secret River

Andrew Bovell

Monte Miller – Long Form

Vanished

Alexei Mizin andRyan van Dijk

Monte Miller – Short Form

Paradise

Anya Beyersdorf                                                 

Children’s Television - P                                               

Hoopla Doopla! ‘Snow Business’

Kym Goldsworthy

Children’s Television - C

Nowhere Boys: Episode 3

Craig Irvin

Animation

Get Ace: ‘Ace Gets Braced’

Raymond Boseley

Interactive Media

AUTHENTIC IN ALL CAPS

Christy Dena

Radio – Original Broadcast

My Life in Cookbooks

Noëlle Janaczewska

Documentary - Public Broadcast

A Woman’s Journey Into Sex

Sally McKenzie

Documentary - Corporate and Training

Indigenous Cultural Awareness

Charles Hamlyn-Harris

Short Film

Baby Baby

Billie Pleffer

Comedy - Sketch or Light Entertainment

Wednesday Night Fever: Series 1

Mat Blackwell, Rick Kalowski, Steve Lynch, Sammy J, Ian Simmons, Joel Slack-Smith and Stephen Walsh with Anne Edmonds, Heath Franklin and Richard Thorp                                   

Comedy - Situation or Narrative

The Moodys: ‘Australia Day’

Phil Lloyd and Trent O’Donnell                                                                                                            

Television - SerialNeighbours: Episode 6857

Stephen Vagg

Television - Series

Rake: Series 3 ‘Their Lordships v. Finnane’

Peter Duncan

Television Mini Series - Original

The Code

Blake Ayshford, Shelley Birse and Justin Monjo

Television Mini Series - Adaptation

ANZAC Girls

Niki Aken and Felicity Packard

Telemovie - Adaptation

The Broken Shore

Andrew Knight

Feature Film - Original

52 Tuesdays

Matthew Cormack

Major AWGIE

The Code

Blake Ayshford, Shelley Birse and Justin Monjo

SPECIAL AWARDS

DAVID WILLIAMSON PRIZE

In Celebration and Recognition of Excellence in Writing for Australian Theatre

Andrew Bovell

AUSTRALIAN WRITERS FOUNDATION PLAYWRIGHTS FELLOWSHIP 

Sue Smith

Katherine Thomson

DOROTHY CRAWFORD AWARD

For Outstanding Contribution to the Profession

Everett DeRoche

RICHARD LANE AWARD

For Outstanding Service and Dedication to the Australian Writers’ Guild

Jon Stephens &

Bruce Pulsford

FRED PARSONS AWARD

For Outstanding Contribution to Australian Comedy

Andrew Denton                                                  

HECTOR CRAWFORD AWARD

For Outstanding Contribution to the Craft via a Body of Script Editing Work

Peter Matheson

FOXTEL FELLOWSHIP

In Recognition of a Outstanding and Significant Body of Work in Television

Kelly Lefever