Stephen Carlton Stephen Carlton i(A123760 works by)
Gender: Male
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Works By

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1 Conclusion Australian Playwriting in Lockdown Chris Hay , Stephen Carlton , 2022 single work criticism
— Appears in: Contemporary Australian Playwriting : Re-visioning the Nation on the Mainstage 2022;

'In this concluding chapter, we offer a reflection on the stock-taking exercises that took place during the pandemic-enforced closure of Australian theatres. We use the Dear Australia postcard project, which invited 50 playwrights nominated by 25 different companies from around Australia to produce a short piece of writing addressing the nation-in-lockdown. While the project embraced and codified many of the advances we identify in this book, we also read it as a missed opportunity for the industry, with the retrospective nostalgia of the postcard occluding the bold visions of the future that will be needed to reimagine contemporary Australian playwriting in a post-pandemic world.'  (Publication abstract)

1 Telling Stories in Person Chris Hay , Stephen Carlton , 2022 single work criticism
— Appears in: Contemporary Australian Playwriting : Re-visioning the Nation on the Mainstage 2022;

'This chapter turns to autobiography and the body of work from 2007 to 2020 that places the playwright on stage, whether inside or outside the fictional frame, building on the interest in biography and craving for authenticity that has accelerated in the post-truth age. To outline a range of iterations of the autobiographical pact on the Australian mainstage, our three case studies cover: Lally Katz’s Stories I Want to Tell You in Person (2013), Blue Bones (2017) by Merlynn Tong, and Glace Chase’s Triple X (2020) – fittingly, the play we saw together on the last night before Covid-lockdowns kicked in. Chase and Katz then discuss the stories they tell and the parts of themselves they keep offstage in a duologue.'  (Publication abstract)

1 Imagined Lives Chris Hay , Stephen Carlton , 2022 single work criticism
— Appears in: Contemporary Australian Playwriting : Re-visioning the Nation on the Mainstage 2022;

'This chapter considers contemporary re-visions of biographical theatre and maps a movement on the Australian mainstage between 2007 and 2020 away from a reliance on the verifiable facts of a subject’s life to a more theatrical embrace of its affective contours. Each of the case studies theatricalises the life of its subject, from Patricia Highsmith in Joanna Murray-Smith’s Switzerland (2014), through Lindy Chamberlain-Creighton in Letters to Lindy (2016) by Alana Valentine, to Mark Colvin and Mary-Ellen Field in Tommy Murphy’s Mark Colvin’s Kidney (2017). In the following duologue, Murphy and Valentine discuss the burden of truth that falls on the playwright and how they have negotiated the truth claims across their body of biographical theatre works.'  (Publication abstract)

1 Adapt, or Else Chris Hay , Stephen Carlton , 2022 single work criticism
— Appears in: Contemporary Australian Playwriting : Re-visioning the Nation on the Mainstage 2022;

'In this chapter, we take up the question of adaptation on the Australian mainstage. After considering the broader lineage of re-visioning the national literary canon for the theatre, we contend that it is specifically the adaptation of the Australian novel that has characterised the period between 2007 and 2020. In order to illustrate a continuum of adaptation, we offer three case studies of adaptations that deploy somatically othered bodies on stage: Andrew Bovell’s The Secret River (2013), from the novel by Kate Grenville; Kate Mulvany’s Jasper Jones (2014/16) from the novel by Craig Silvey; and Tom Wright’s Picnic at Hanging Rock (2017) from the novel by Joan Lindsay. Then, in a duologue, Mulvany and Wright discuss the status of adaptation on the contemporary Australian mainstage.'  (Publication abstract)

1 Re-visioning Landscape from the Regions Chris Hay , Stephen Carlton , 2022 single work criticism
— Appears in: Contemporary Australian Playwriting : Re-visioning the Nation on the Mainstage 2022;

'This chapter considers how the perennial Australian concern of how to capture and contain the distinctive national landscape on stage has manifested in the period between 2007 and 2020. Analyses of three plays follow: Broken (2016) by Mary Anne Butler, Angus Cerini’s The Bleeding Tree (2016), and Leah Purcell’s adaptation of the iconic Henry Lawson short story The Drover’s Wife (2017). Across each case study, we are also drawn to the distinctive language that is deployed in these rural and regional settings from playwrights deeply familiar with the country they’re evoking on stage: a process of ‘writing from within.’ A duologue between Butler and Cerini follows, which takes up the question of what it means to write from the regions in contemporary Australia.'  (Publication abstract)

1 Theatre of the Anthropocene Chris Hay , Stephen Carlton , 2022 single work criticism
— Appears in: Contemporary Australian Playwriting : Re-visioning the Nation on the Mainstage 2022;

'In this chapter, we consider Australian mainstage theatrical responses to the climate emergency that has dominated the period from 2007 to 2020, both through its urgency and the absurd political intransigence it generated. The case studies begin with Andrew Bovell’s landmark When the Rain Stops Falling (2008), the most internationally successful new Australian play of the decade, before considering two threads of practice that developed in its wake. The first, more resolutely realist strand is considered via Between Two Waves (2012) by Ian Meadows and the more absurdist turn by a pair of Griffin Award winners, The Turquoise Elephant (2016) by Stephen Carleton and Kill Climate Deniers (2018) by David Finnigan. Bovell and Finnigan then try to find some hope amongst the wicked problems of the age of the Anthropocene in a duologue.' (Publication abstract)

1 Re-visioning Political Theatre and ‘Aussie Naturalism’ Chris Hay , Stephen Carlton , 2022 single work criticism
— Appears in: Contemporary Australian Playwriting : Re-visioning the Nation on the Mainstage 2022;

'This chapter considers how Australian playwrights have been pushing at the edges of the realist frame between 2007 and 2020 by employing exaggerated dramaturgies and direct address that transcends and remakes the Aussie Naturalism that predominated on the mainstage in decades prior. Far from the dour realism political theatre might conjure, these plays are instead boldly theatrical and playful without losing any of their accusatory edge. This lineage is illustrated with reference to: Patricia Cornelius and her play Savages (2013); Mortido (2016) by Angela Betzien; and Meyne Wyatt’s City of Gold (2019) in both its theatrical and extra-theatrical performances. A duologue between Betzien and Cornelius follows, in which they discuss the usefulness of realism and political theatre as analytical frames for their work.'  (Publication abstract)

1 Postmigrant Plays in Australia Chris Hay , Stephen Carlton , 2022 single work criticism
— Appears in: Contemporary Australian Playwriting : Re-visioning the Nation on the Mainstage 2022;

'This chapter proposes the category of postmigrant play to describe the re-visioned migration narratives and migratory aesthetics on the Australian mainstage. Understanding the work of three writers of diverse identities, some of which do and some of which do not map directly onto their subjects, helps us to think through how globalisation has re-visioned the dramatisation of migration. To pursue this argument, our case studies are: Jump for Jordan (2014) by Donna Abela; Michele Lee’s Rice (2017); and Counting and Cracking (2019) by S. Shakthidharan. Lee and Shakthidharan then offer us a more detailed description of how their second-generation experience of migration informs their playwriting in the duologue that follows.'  (Publication abstract)

1 Re-visioning the Comedy Chris Hay , Stephen Carlton , 2022 single work criticism
— Appears in: Contemporary Australian Playwriting : Re-visioning the Nation on the Mainstage 2022;

'In this chapter, we trace the development of a vibrant sub-genre of female-led anti-racist comedies on the Australian mainstage that invites the other to laugh back, drawing in particular on Jonathan Rossing’s conception of emancipatory racial humour. Significantly, our three focus plays owe debts to established comedic genres: Single Asian Female (2017) by Michelle Law to the singleton comedy; Nakkiah Lui’s Black is the New White (2017) to the rom-com and the family play; and Anchuli Felicia King’s White Pearl (2019) to the workplace comedy. This is followed by a duologue between King and Law, where they discuss how their identities have both empowered and constrained their playwriting practice.'  (Publication abstract)

1 Introduction : Re-visioning the Nation on the Mainstage Chris Hay , Stephen Carlton , 2022 single work criticism
— Appears in: Contemporary Australian Playwriting : Re-visioning the Nation on the Mainstage 2022;
'In 2007, the most-produced playwright in Australia was William Shakespeare. This is as it had ever been: Julian Meyrick goes so far as to claim that Shakespeare's work "forms part of the structural unconscious of the country's resident imagination" ("Shakespeare" 2). In 2019, though, the most-produced playwright across the ten largest professional theatre companies constituting the Australian mainstage was Nakkiah Lui, a Gamillaroi and Tones Strait Islander woman who could rightly claim in her Twitter bio to be "more produced than Shakespeare." Three of Lui's plays were produced on the mainstage around the country that year - Black is the New White, Blackie Blackie Brown: The Traditional Owner of Death and How to Rule the World - versus none of Shakespeare's, absent for the first time in the period that we are investigating.1 In Contemporary Australian Playwriting, we ask what has happened both on stage and off to generate this remarkable change. The Australia outside the theatre was in flux during this period, dominated by political instability and global economic and environmental crisis. We take the period from 2007 to 2020 as focus for this study, encapsulating as these years do a definitive turning and forced end point in Australian socio-political and cultural life. ' (Introduction)
 
1 form y separately published work icon Forbidden Tongues Whispered in a Night of Desert Rapture Stephen Carlton , 2009 Australia : ABC Radio National , 2009 Z1589601 2009 single work radio play

'Two inner-city men, Toby and Chance, become stranded in the Australian desert with their dog Ginger. They are forced to wait in a roadside diner with the rather surly waitress Lurleen while their money is cleared at the bank. One night they all experience a meteor shower which changes the men's relationship forever.'

Source: http://www.abc.net.au/rn/airplay/
Sighted: 18/05/2009

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