Debra Beattie Debra Beattie i(6849207 works by)
Gender: Female
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1 The Art Lovers Debra Beattie , 2018 single work drama
— Appears in: TEXT Special Issue Website Series , April no. 48 2018;

'The feature film script The Art Lovers is the story of the struggles and the triumphs for an early Australian female artist, the ‘girl sculptress’, as Daphne Mayo was known in the early twentieth century, at a time when very few women took on this physically demanding occupation. This excerpt is from that feature screenplay and highlights the challenges she faced especially as an Australian within a rigid British culture when she was the only woman studying sculpture at the Royal Academy in London. Daphne Mayo is engaged in these scenes in a daily prosaic acculturated event, that of a morning breakfast in a patriarchal London establishment in 1923. The excerpt is inspired by a story that Daphne herself penned as prose and which was discovered during research conducted over months in the Fryer Collection of the University of Queensland. The Fryer holds almost 100 boxes of ephemera, newspaper stories as well as correspondence to, and from, Daphne Mayo. The nuance of the voices of all three of the lead characters included in this dramatic recreation, that is to say, those of Lloyd Rees, Vida Lahey and Daphne, were discovered by listening to the 1960s interviews conducted by ABC journalist Hazel de Berg. These interviews are lodged in the Oral History Section of the National Library of Australia in Canberra.' (Publication abstract)

1 John and Jennie Debra Beattie , 2015 single work drama
— Appears in: TEXT Special Issue Website Series , April no. 29 2015;
'This script is dedicated to the memory of all those friendships and loving relationships marred, and often destroyed, by the sectarianism so prevalent in country Queensland in the years before Statehood. John and Jennie draws on accounts from The Gayndah Communes about this period of Queensland history just before the outbreak of the first world war. The script highlights the continued negation and absence of the history of how sectarianism disrupted the lives of ordinary Queenslanders, particularly in terms of who they could marry. In this the year of commemoration of Australia’s involvement in the first world war, it is timely to recall and to reimagine the everyday lives of those who loved and lost in a time of deep prejudices. This script is part of an ongoing research project and creative practice in the area of historical reimagining.' (Publication summary)
1 Scriptwriting as a Research Practice : Expanding the Field Susan Davis , Debra Beattie , Craig Batty , Dallas J. Baker , 2015 single work essay
— Appears in: TEXT Special Issue Website Series , April no. 29 2015;
'In October 2013, special issue 19 of TEXT: Journal of Writing and Writing Courses, ‘Scriptwriting as Creative Writing Research’, presented a landmark collection of scripted works – for stage and screen – under the rubric of verifiable research outputs. Concerned with content, form and context, these seven works from academics working in Australia demonstrated the potential of the script to embody – to perform – research. The works showcased the potential for stage plays and screenplays to be valued as research artefacts in their own right, without the need for them to be performed or produced in order to be ‘counted’ within the higher education sector.' (Authors introduction)
1 2 y separately published work icon TEXT Special Issue Website Series Scriptwriting as Creative Writing Research II no. 29 April Dallas J. Baker (editor), Craig Batty (editor), Debra Beattie (editor), Susan Davis (editor), 2015 8643344 2015 periodical issue
1 The Bounty Debra Beattie , 2013 single work drama
— Appears in: TEXT Special Issue Website Series , October no. 19 2013;

'This script is dedicated to the memory of Susanne Chauvel-Carlsson, and was inspired by a chapter in Elsa Chauvel’s book, My Life With Charles (1973). This is the story of the making of a dream, a dream to capture the essence of a narrative set in the South Seas, a story of a mutiny of the soul when The Bounty sailed into Matavai Bay in 1789. In 1932, the young Australian filmmakers Elsa and Charles Chauvel set sail with their cameraman Tasman Higgins to travel 15,000 miles by steamer to Papeete and Pitcairn. Leaving their toddler daughter Susanne with grandparents back in Stanthorpe, the trio set out on a journey that would take six months to complete, to gather film footage never before seen, of Tahitian dancers on location in Tahiti for their film, In the Wake of the Bounty. ' (Author's abstract)

1 Critical Introduction Debra Beattie , 2013 single work criticism
— Appears in: TEXT Special Issue Website Series , October no. 19 2013;

This special issue of TEXT was proposed in order to address the absence in journal publications of unproduced scripts for either stage or screen. Seven scripts have been included, and each of these is a contemporary intervention in the changing landscape of scriptwriting. This special issue addresses a little of the current political economy that affects that landscape. All seven writers are currently working in higher education and are writing or rewriting scripts of one form or another on a permanent basis. The publication of scripts has traditionally only happened post-production, as a kind of validation of the script’s successful production, either for stage or screen. This special issue is a step towards reading these scripts as valued material culture in, and of, themselves.' (Author's introduction)

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