Catherine Ryan Catherine Ryan i(A109273 works by)
Gender: Female
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BiographyHistory

Catherine Ryan is a graduate of the Victorian College of the Arts School of Drama. She co-founded Barking Owl Theatre in central Victoria in 2001. In 2006, Ryan won the Theatrelab National Regional Playscript Award.

Most Referenced Works

Personal Awards

2021 recipient Creative Victoria Auspicious Arts Projects $5,000 Creative development and presentation of A Perfect Day, a new performance by Catherine Ryan, mentored by Mish Grigor, in partnership with APHIDS.
2020 recipient City of Melbourne COVID-19 Arts Grants for Krell and the Destruction of Worlds
2018 recipient Australia Council Grants, Awards and Fellowships Theatre Arts Projects For Individuals and Groups $16,355.00

Awards for Works

y separately published work icon Dogged 2021 Strawberry Hills : Currency Press , 2021 20801111 2021 single work drama

'In alpine Victoria, on Gunaikurnai country, a flock of sheep are found with their throats torn open. A woman, a farmer’s daughter, is on the hunt—looking for feral dogs. Rifle at her side, she camps down, thinking she’s alone.

'But she’s not.

'From deep between the eucalypts, a dingo watches her. Heart beating through skin. Bristling with hunger and grief. Waiting for the slightest show of weakness. From Picnic at Hanging Rock to Wake in Fright, the greatest works of Australian Gothic tease a uniquely antipodean horror from the anxiety of living on stolen country.

'In a work of startling poetry, tenderness, and violence, Andrea James (Sunshine Super Girl) and AWGIE-winner Catherine Ryan ratchet this anxiety to epic proportions, in a bloody confrontation between two elemental forces, played out on contested territory.'

Source: Griffin Theatre Company.

2022 nominated AWGIE Awards Stage Award Original
2021 nominated Sydney Theatre Awards Best New Australian Work
2021 nominated Sydney Theatre Awards Best Costume Design of a Mainstage Production
2022 highly commended Victorian Premier's Literary Awards Prize for Drama
Precipice 2011 single work drama

'"Precipice" is a play about two characters balanced right on the edge, hovering, held in the moment before inevitable change. It's about recent times — the tensions between anxiety, threat and compassion. About a society where some desperately want to raise the barricades, while others weep as they feel humanity slipping away.

It's about the bridges between us. About how powerful and how fragile they are. The Tasman, the Westgate, the one over your favourite creek bed in a childhood memory. How deeply these engineering marvels, these sites of suspension, imagination and tension are stamped in the Australian psyche. And it's about how potent, but often how seemingly insignificant and mundane, the chasms that divide us can be. And the awakening of the discovery that we may not just be simply divided after all.

Mel is a 40-year-old single working mother, struggling but strong, trying to maintain family, job and herself in a harsh world. A potent childhood incident has left her suffering from chronic vertigo, which she is only able to relieve by running. Al is older, a compulsive reader of death notices, and an obsessive attendee of the funerals of strangers. Through interior monologues and far-reaching conversations they reveal their pasts, presents, inner worlds and differing levels of consciousness as their lives converge. Source: http://castlemainefestival.com.au/ (Sighted 19/04/2011).

2009 winner Inscription/Theatrelab Script Development Award
2009 winner George Fairfax Memorial Award
2011 shortlisted Griffin Award for New Australian Playwriting
form Aurora Calling: The Results of A Joint Observation 2008 single work drama radio play

'Based on the real-life experiences of two Australian women, Aurora Calling is a fascinating exploration of both the world of science and the realm of human experience and emotion.

'Trisha and Jackie became friends when they were studying at the Mawson Institute for Antarctic Research. Both women are upper atmospheric physicists investigating auroras. To further their research they travel to the polar regions where this amazing phenomenon occurs. Trisha goes to Alaska and Jackie to Antarctica.

'Poles apart, the two must rely on email to keep in touch and support each other as they try to juggle professional and personal life.'

Source: ABC Radio National's Airplay, http://www.abc.net.au/rn/airplay/
Sighted: 08/12/2008

2009 winner AWGIE Awards Radio Award Adaptation
Last amended 18 May 2021 15:52:54
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