Playwrights' Advisory Board


The Playwrights' Advisory Board was an Australian organisation established in 1938 to assist the cause of Australian playwriting. It was established by Leslie Rees, Rex Rienits and Doris Fitton. Its functions included negotiating productions with theatres, acting as an intermediary in the nomination and collection of royalties, advising theatres and playwrights on scripts, and holding script competitions. Members of the board included names such as Dymphna Cusack and Sumner Locke Elliott.
The Board ceased operations in 1963.
The Board's most notable achievement was holding a competition which helped unearth Summer of the Seventeenth Doll.

Competitions

  1. 1944 – winner: Sons of the Morning by Catherine Duncan; second: Positions Vacant by Gwen Meredith; third: They Also Serve by Dymphna Cusack. "Highly commended" were Portrait of a Gentleman by George Farwell and The Gentle Warrior by Hugh Williamson.
  2. 1946 – equal first: Ha Ha Among the Trumpets by George Landen Dann and And the Moon Will Shine by Miss Lynn Foster. Commended plays: Time Shall Be No More by Linus Donnelly, The Countless Hours by Frederick Glover, First Fruits by Arthur Moorhead, The Dark Soldier by Betty Roland. second: Stand Still Time by Dymphna Cusack
  3. 1947 – winner: The First Joanna by Dorothy Blewett
  4. 1955 – equal first: The Torrents by Oriel Gray and Summer of the Seventeenth Doll by Ray Lawler; runner up Pacific Paradise by Dymphna Cusack, Flood by Eunice Hanger and Cornerstone by Gwen Meredith; We Find the Bunyip received a special mention
  5. 1957 – winner: The Shifting Heart by Richard Beynon; second: The Multi Coloured Umbrella by Barbara Vernon
  6. 1960 General Motors Holden competition – no winner but four recommendations, Donny Johnson by Alan Seymour, Zelda Trio by Laurence Collinson, Hateful Face in the Mirror by John Pinkney, Wish No More by Marien Dreyer
  7. 1961 Journalists Club Award – equal first When the Gravediggers Come by Robert Amos and The Tower by Hal Porter

1940 Recommendations

In 1940 the Board recommended the following plays for production:

1953 Play List

In 1953 the Board announced it was acting as agent for the following plays: