Showing posts with label ABC Radio National. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ABC Radio National. Show all posts

Sunday, 2 September 2018

Congratulations Noëlle!


Happy news for 7-ONer Noëlle whose radio script, Seoul City Sue, won the 2018 AWGIE Award for Radio on Thursday. The piece is Noëlle’s attempt to trace and understand how a Methodist missionary from Middle America ended up broadcasting propaganda for the North Koreans during the 1950-53 Korean War. You can listen to or download the program from the ABC Radio National website here

Also congratulations to playwriting winners Angela Betzien, Finegan Kruckemeyer and Michele Lee, and to Sue Smith, the very deserving recipient of the Australian Writers' Guild's Lifetime Achievement Award.
The woman kneeling in this 1951 photo is Ann Wallis Suhr who was Seoul City Sue ... probably.


Friday, 7 August 2015

AWGIE nominations

Congratulations to our Donna and Noëlle for their 2015 AWGIE nominations.

Donna's play Jump for Jordan, produced by the Griffin Theatre Company in 2014, is one of 3 nominees for the Stage Award.

Noëlle's ABC nonfiction feature The Other Polish Explorer is nominated for the Radio Award.

Monday, 25 August 2014

Noëlle Janaczewska


Yellow Yellow Sometimes Blue, 2018. Photo by Teniola Komolafe

Noëlle Janaczewska is Sydney-based playwright, poet, essayist, and the author of The Book of Thistles (UWA Publishing)—part environmental history, part poetry, part memoir. She is the recipient of multiple awards, fellowships and residencies, including the 2020 NSW Premier’s Digital History Prize, a Queensland Premier’s Literary Award, the Griffin Award, ten AWGIE (Australian Writers’ Guild Industry Excellence) Awards and a Windham-Campbell Prize from Yale University for her body of work as a dramatist. Noëlle’s recent productions and publications include: Experiment Street (ABC Radio National, 2019); Yellow Yellow Sometimes Blue (Q Theatre /Joan Sutherland Performing Arts Centre, Sydney, 2018); Seoul City Sue (ABC Radio National, 2018); audio scripts for the National Museum of Australia and the British Museum’s Rome: City and Empire exhibition, and Good With Maps (Siren Theatre Company, multiple seasons 2016 – 2021). Noëlle’s latest book is Scratchland (UWA Publishing Poetry Series, 2020). 

Read more at noelle-janaczewska.com or check out her food blog at eatthetable.com

Noëlle is represented by Cameron Creswell. Contact them at info@cameronsmanagement.com.au

Friday, 23 November 2012

ABC's response to our petition


7-ON has just received a response from an Arts Manager at the ABC. We delivered a petition protesting the cutting of radio drama at Radio National to the ABC on 31st October (see previous post). We weren’t the only petition – there were several circulating. But we were gratified that we attracted over 800 signatures (and still counting), and some really cogent, well-argued comments.

Dear Ms Zimdahl

Thank you for your petition regarding Radio Drama. The Chairman and Managing Director have asked me to respond on their behalf.

Airplay has been formally decommissioned by ABC Radio. This decision was taken only after looking very closely at the ongoing viability of producing radio plays on the network. While you will no doubt be unhappy with this decision, we believe that it was absolutely necessary in terms of the overall sustainability of the network, both in terms of our budgetary framework, and attracting and engaging with audiences who are looking for different sorts of audio performance.

It is clear that the resources required to produce radio plays are better served in making, and experimenting with, different sorts of radio. This is not the end of radio drama and fiction on RN, but a recognition that our audience is looking for different ways of engaging with Australian voices and stories on radio and online.

Radio plays have, for many years, faced declining audience numbers, while remaining an expensive activity for the network. We have always said, and continue to believe, that ratings are not the only measure for RN, but the decline in listenership does indicate a lack of engagement in radio plays amongst our audience.

Further, we believe that by maintaining our current model of radio plays, we will no longer be able to engage with young writers and artists looking for different ways of working with sound and story.

Our new Creative Radio Unit, charged with our two new programming slots “Sounds Like Radio”, will provide an opportunity for a new generation of creative audio performance specialists to engage with the network and the audience. I do hope you come to enjoy the performance material we offer in 2013 and beyond.

Thank you for taking the time to write.

We find this answer rather insulting. It is a regurgitation of the press release, that does not address any of the specific points raised in the petition.

It particularly does not address our core concern. It's not about us “enjoying the performance material on offer" next year, it's about WORK, JOBS, LIVELIHOODS. Someone somewhere needs to make known the guidelines for pitching and commissioning in this new environment.

The letter from the ABC also flourishes the furphy that – somehow – a new generation of writers will by definition attract the fabled new demographic of listeners. No. They may attract some new listeners, of course. They also may lose some others who won’t come back. Nobody worries that there aren't enough people in the 50+ demographic going to pop concerts or hip hop. A bum on a seat is a bum on a seat, whether said bum is 27 or 77.

The Airplay demographic was 40 - 70. Why not serve it? Why not let audiences arrive there as they get older? Demographic is closely linked to advertising, but surely that shouldn't be a consideration for the federally funded ABC.

It is also insulting to imply that only young writers are able to tell stories in new ways. Where does that put the mother of formal experimentation, octogenarian Caryl Churchill?

And we just heard, in the middle of all this, that Arts NSW have defunded Hothouse Theatre. WHAT????

Funding used to get slashed when organisations embezzled or went off the artistic rails. These days funding is withdrawn from viable and functioning enterprises that have been already cut to the bone but have been working double to survive and create despite the constraints. Funding is cut so that other organisations can cannibalise on them, because the purse just doesn't get any bigger. The regions were / are massively important and distinct, and deserving of their own initiatives. As the country in general is deserving of its own radio drama. What about the ABC's glorious radio drama back catalogue? Will it now simply go into an archive? It's a body of work as vital as the work that got to the stage, and it will now evaporate. Heritage obliteration. Isn't that a war crime? Artists need comparatively so little, but often get less than they can live or work on. There are public servants on salaries larger than Powerhouse Youth Theatre's annual budget. It’s a crying shame how pathetic and mean things are.

Friday, 12 February 2010

There's Something About Eels ...

There's Something About Eels … which won the 2009 AWGIE (Australian Writers’ Guild) Award for best Original Radio Script, is being repeated on Saturday 20 February. Produced by ABC Radio National the piece is written & narrated by me (Noëlle), produced by Sharon Davis and sound engineered by Russell Stapleton.


The eel has an image problem. Koalas, giant pandas, dolphins, butterflies, kittens—some of nature’s creatures are Hallmark-cute and appealing. Others inspire respect and awe. But some—like the eel—make us shudder. A slippery fish that lurks in the mud of river beds, or coils up from the ocean floor to scare divers. But there’s much more to the eel than meets the eye. It’s an elusive creature, and a tasty one—eels are one of the human race’s survival foods. A creature with not only a remarkable life cycle, but also one with a long cultural history across cultures and continents. There's Something About Eels … combines science, literature, history, anecdote, reverie and culinary art in a radio portrait of this maligned, misunderstood and unusual creature.

ABC Radio National: 360documentaries

Saturday 20 February at 2:00 pm
&
Wednesday 24 February at 1:00 pm
&
downloadable for 4 weeks after initial broadcast

Hope you can listen.