Philippa "Pip" Hall is a New Zealand stage, screen and radio script writer and actor.
Biography
Background
Pip Hall is the daughter of writer Roger Hall and grew up mostly in Dunedin, New Zealand. She graduated from in theatre studies and drama at the University of Otago and spent time whilst there experimenting with theatre at the Allen Hall, a working theatre space at the university. Her fellow students and contemporaries included Te Radar, Duncan Sarkies and Jesse Griffin.
Career
In the early 1990s Hall started writing for television on Gibson Group sketch shows. She went on to write plays including two plays for Young & Hungry Arts Trust at BATS Theatre in Wellington and has been a full time writer since 1995. Her one-act playShudder is a popular choice to be produced in high schools in New Zealand, she has written over a dozen plays that have been produced and many were commissioned. In 2018 Auckland Theatre Company presented her stage adaptation of New Zealand’s children's novel, Under the Mountain by Maurice Gee. Hall has written comedy, drama and documentary for television. Runaway Millionaires, is the true story of a New Zealand couple Leo Gao and Kara Hurring who in 2009 received $10 million from the bank by mistake, took the money and disappeared. She says when telling a true story:
"One thing that is really interesting for me as I writer is that I try really hard not to judge any kind of behaviour. It's just my job to try and work out why they make the choices they do."
Queen B, commissioned by The Young and Hungry Arts Trust and first produced at BATS Theatre in July 1997, directed by Paula Crutchlow. Published by Playmarket.
No Man's Land, commissioned by Allen Hall Lunchtime Theatre at University of Otago, 1999
Shudder, commissioned by The Young and Hungry Arts Trust and first produced at BATS Theatre in July 2000, directed by David O'Donnell. Published by The Play Press.
Red Fish, Blue Fish, first produced at Silo Theatre in 2000, directed by Rebecca Hobbs
Who Needs Sleep Anyway?, co-written with Roger Hall, commissioned by Plunket Society, first produced at Fortune Theatre in May 2007, directed by Conrad Newport
Up North, first produced by Centrepoint Theatre in 2010
The 53rd Victim, about Rachel Brooke-Taylor, a New Zealand medical editor, who eventually became the 53rd victim of the 2005 London bombings
Ache, produced at Court Theatre in 2014, directed by Daniel Pengelly
Film and Television
Shortland Street, 1998 - 2017, Writer - Television
Skitz, 1994 - 1997, Writer, As: Various roles - Television
Telly Laughs, 1996 - 1998, Writer, As: Various roles - Television