Griffin Theatre Company
Griffin Theatre Company is an Australian theatre specialising in new writing, based in Sydney. It is the resident theatre company at the SBW Stables Theatre in Kings Cross. It is the only professional theatre company in Sydney entirely dedicated to the development and production of new Australian writing for the stage.
The Artistic Director is Declan Green, who took up the position in 2020. Previous Artistic Directors include Lee Lewis, Sam Strong, Nick Marchand, David Berthold, Ros Horin, Ian Watson and the original Artistic Director, Peter Kingston.
History
In 1979, actors Peter Carmody, Penny Cook, Rosemarie Lenzo and Robert Menzies banded together under the directorship of Jenny Laing-Peach to present the Irish play The Ginger Man by J.P. Donleavy at the Kirk Gallery in Cleveland Street, Surry Hills. They made a profit and went on to produce two Australian plays by John Stone at the Orange Door in Oxford St, Paddington – Discovering Australia and The Grand Finale of Rene Trouver, directed by Peter Kingston. The name 'Griffin' derived from the name of the street in Surry Hills in which Jenny Laing-Peach lived. Slowly the group enlarged and next presented Joe Orton's The Ruffian on the Stair at the ANU Canberra in March 1980.Bob Ellis and Anne Brooksbank, the owners of The Stables Theatre in Kings Cross, offered Griffin a lease. A month later Ruffian played as a lunch-time and late-night programme with David Williamson's The Coming of Stork in the main timeslot. For the next two years a mixture of overseas and Australian plays were presented at The Stables. But more and more the Company was becoming aware of the amount of Australian writing talent available and in May 1981 after successful readings of four new plays, the decision was made to adopt an all-Australian policy.
With small grants from New South Wales and Commonwealth funding bodies, in 1982 the Company kicked off with Grant Fraser's 'Cheap Thrills' and since then...Australian plays have been produced, most of which have been premieres. Writers represented are Stephen Sewell, Barry Dickins, Ron Blair, Steve J. Spears, Mil Perrin, Craig Cronin, Ingle Knight, Pamela Van Amstel, Ray Mathew, Clem Gorman, Ned Manning, Ross Lonnie, Doreen Clarke, Gordon Graham, Jennifer Paynter, Greg McCart, Mij Tanith, John Stone, Brett Murphy, Hannie Rayson and Michael Gow.
For the 1984 season the Company was awarded The Sydney Critic's Circle Award for "the most significant contribution to theatre that year."
In 1986 Peter Kingston was appointed the Company's first Artistic Director. He was followed into that position by Ian Watson.
In 1999, The Sun Herald described Griffin as Australia's ‘Theatre of the Decade'.
Cate Blanchett and Jacqueline McKenzie began their professional careers at Griffin. The films Lantana, The Boys, and The Heartbreak Kid were based on plays produced by Griffin. Away, Australia's most produced contemporary play, also started at the company.
Recent seasons
Recent Griffin Theatre Company mainstage seasons are listed below.2020 season
- by David Williamson. 17 January – 7 March 2020
2019 season
- ' by Mary Rachel Brown. 22 February – 6 April 2019
- ' by Suzie Miller. 17 May – 22 June 2019
- ' by Meyne Wyatt. 26 July – 31 August 2019
- ' by Hilary Bell. 6 September – 12 October 2019
- by Rita Kalnejais. 6 September – 12 October 2019
2018 season
- ' by David Finnigan. 23 February – 7 April 2018
- ' by Brooke Robinson. 4 May – 16 June 2018
- ' by Kendall Feaver. 27 July – 8 September 2018
- ' by Nick Coyle. 5 October – 17 November 2018
2017 season
- ' by Ross Mueller. 27 January – 11 March 2017
- ' by Declan Greene. 17 March – 29 April 2017
- ' by Michele Lee. 21 July – 26 August 2017
- ' by Katherine Thomson. 8 September – 28 October 2017
2016 season
- ' by Alana Valentine. 5 February – 26 March 2016
- ' by Phillip Kavanagh. 2 April – 7 May 2016
- ' by Justin Fleming. 27 May – 16 July 2016
- ' by Benedict Andrews. 26 August – 8 October 2016
- by Stephen Carleton. 14 October – 16 November 2016
2015 season
- ' by Kate Mulvany. 7–17 January 2015
- ' by Suzie Miller. 27 February – 11 April 2015
- ' by Aidan Fennessy. 15 May – 20 June 2015
- The Bleeding Tree by Angus Cerini. 31 July – 5 September 2015
- ' by Kit Brookman. 9 October – 21 November 2015
2014 season
- Emerald City by David Williamson. 17 October – 6 December 2014
- ' by Rohl Dahl, adapted from the stage play by David Wood. 24 September – 5 October 2014
- ' by Peta Brady. 18 July – 24 August 2014
- ' by Declan Greene. 2 May – 14 June 2014
- ' by Donna Abela 14 February – 29 March 2014
- by Darren Yap and Lee Lewis. 24–27 January 2014
2013 season
- – by Duncan Graham. 8 February – March 2013
- ' – by Van Badham. 2 May – June 2013
- ' – by Melissa Bubnic. 17 July 31 August 2013
- – by John Romeril. 4 October – 16 November 2013
2012 season
- – by Gordon Graham. 6 January – 3 March 2012
- – by Bojana Novakovic, music by Tim Rogers, after the writings of Mary MacLane. 4 April – 12 May 2012
- Angela's Kitchen – by Paul Capsis and Julian Meyrick. 15 May – 9 June 2012
- – by Rick Viede. 20 July – 1 September 2012
- Between Two Waves - by Ian Meadows. 5 October – 17 November 2012
2011 season
- – by Andrew Bovell. 4 February – 19 March 2011
- Silent Disco – by Lachlan Philpott. 22 April – 4 June 2011
- And No More Shall We Part – by Tom Holloway. 29 July – 3 September 2011
- – by Jane Bodie. 7 October – 19 November 2011
- Museum of Broken Relationships - by the Griffin Audience, in collaboration with Ian Meadows, Kate Mulvany, Shannon Murphy, Paige Rattray
2010 season
- ' – by Angus Cerini, Elise Hearst and Lachlan Philpott. 14 September – 7 December 2010
- ' – by Tom Holloway. 18 March – 11 April 2010
- ' by Anthony Weigh. 16 July – 7 August 2010
- ' by Ian Wilding. 27 August – 2 October 2010
- Angela's Kitchen by Paul Capsis and Julian Meyrick / Associate Writer Hilary Bell. 5 November – 18 December 2010
2009 season
- ' – by Kamarra Bell-Wykes, Jonathan Ari Lander and Catherine Ryan. 19 May – November 2009
- ' – by Ranters Theatre. 4–28 February 2009
- ' by Ross Mueller. 13 March – 4 April 2009
- ' – by Patricia Cornelius. 1 May – 6 June 2009
- ' – by Steve Rodgers. 12 June – 8 July 2009
- '- by Sue Smith. 23 October – 21 November 2009
2008 season
- ' – by Nicki Bloom, Jonathan Gavin, Sue Smith and Rick Viede. 19 January – 8 February 2008
- ' – by William Yang. 19 January – 8 February 2008
- ' – by Michael Gow. 22 March – 26 April 2008
- ' – by Tom Holloway. 4–26 July 2008
- ' – by Damien Millar. 12 September – 11 October 2008
- ' – by Nicki Bloom. 21 November – 20 December 2008
- – by Charlie Pickering. 23 January – 2 February 2008
2007 season
- Holding the Man – Adapted by Tommy Murphy. from the book by Timothy Conigrave
- ' – by Daniel Keene. 9 March – 18 April 2007
- ' – by Ian Wilding. 20 April – 26 May 2007
- ' – by Wesley Enoch. 10 August – 22 September 2007
- ' – by Katherine Thomson. 18 October – 24 November 2007
- – by 7-ON. 27 March – 13 November 2007
- The Emperor of Sydney – by Louis Nowra. 16 August – 23 September 2007
Griffin Independent and Griffin Special Extras
Commissioned and premiered works
Playwrights whose work has premiered at Griffin include:- Glenda Adams – The Monkey Trap
- Richard Barrett – The Heartbreak Kid
- Hilary Bell – Wolf Lullaby, The Falls
- Andrew Bovell – After Dinner, Whisky on the Breath of a Drunk You Love, Speaking in Tongues, Ship of Fools
- Brendan Cowell – Rabbit
- Timothy Daly – Kafka Dances, The Moonwalkers, Private Visions of Gottfried Kellner
- Wesley Enoch – The Story of the Miracles at Cookie's Table
- Gordon Graham – The Boys
- Michael Gow – Away, Europe, Live Acts on Stage
- Noel Hodda – The Secret House, Half Safe,
- Ingle Knight – White Nancy
- Ned Manning – Us or Them, Belonging
- Tommy Murphy – Strangers in Between, Holding the Man
- Louis Nowra – Death of Joe Orton, The Boyce Trilogy:The Woman with Dog's Eyes, The Marvellous Boy, The Emperor of Sydney
- Debra Oswald – Mr Bailey's Minder, The Peach Season
- Stephen Sewell – The Father We Loved On A Beach By The Sea, In Stillness My Sister Speaks to Me, The Secret Death of Salvador Dali, Three Furies Scenes from the life of Francis Bacon
- Katherine Thomson – Wonderlands, "King Tide"
- Ian Wilding – Below, Torrez, "October"
- Catherine Zimdahl – Clark in Sarajevo
Griffin Award
- 1998 – Catherine Zimdahl for Clark in Sarajevo
- 1999 – Neil Cole for Alive at Williamstown Pier
- 2000 – Ian Wilding for Below
- 2001 – Verity Laughton for Burning
- 2002 – Noelle Janacsewska for Songket and Patrick Van der Werf for Presence
- 2003 – Brendan Cowell for Rabbit
- 2004 – Debra Oswald for Mr Bailey's Minder
- 2005 – Ian Wilding for The Carnivores
- 2006 – Mary Rachel Brown for Australian Gothic
- 2007 – Damien Millar for Emergency Sex and Other Desperate Measures
- 2008 – Rick Viede for Whore
- 2009 – Lachlan Philpott for Silent Disco
- 2010 – Aidan Fennessy for Brutopia
- 2011 – Rick Viede for A Hoax
- 2012 – Vivienne Walshe for This is Where We Live
- 2013 – Donna Abela for Jump for Jordan
- 2014 – Angus Cerini for The Bleeding Tree
- 2015 – Stephen Carleton for The Turquoise Elephant
- 2016 – Melissa Reeves for The Zen of Table Tennis
- 2017 – David Finnigan for Kill Climate Deniers
- 2018 – Suzie Miller for On the Face of It
- 2019 – Mark Rogers for Superheroes