Media Release
23 February 2011
Playwright awarded writer’s residency
Playwright Michelanne Forster has been selected for The University of Auckland/Creative New Zealand residency at the
Michael King Writers’ Centre from July this year.
While she holds the six-month residency, she plans to write a play set in present day New Zealand about a fiercely
ambitious scientist and her family, including a son who questions the ethical basis of her research.
Michelanne Forster has written plays, radio drama, short stories, children’s books, fiction and non-fiction. She has won
numerous awards and her works have been performed by theatre companies in New Zealand, Australia, Canada and the United
States.
Her recent work includes Don’t Mention Casablanca, performed at the Court Theatre in Christchurch last year, Tic Tic
(with Paul Barrett) in the 2010 Auckland International Comedy Festival and The Secret of Dong Ting Lake, performed at
The Edge in 2010. She is currently working with composer Anthony Ritchie on a new opera entitled Te Keni, scheduled to
premiere in 2012. Forster is a graduate of The University of Auckland and Auckland Secondary Teachers College. She began
her career as a script editor/writer for children’s shows at Television New Zealand.
As well as her own writing, Forster teaches creative writing for The University of Auckland’s continuing education
programme and is on the board of the New Zealand Writers’ Guild. While she holds the residency, she will contribute to
the university’s Master of Creative Writing programme and offer a community creative writing class.
The residency is a partnership between The University of Auckland, Creative New Zealand and the Michael King Writers’
Centre. It aims to foster New Zealand writing by providing an opportunity for an established author to work full-time on
a major project in an academic environment. The residency comes with $30,000 in stipend and salary, together with free
accommodation and a studio working space at the Michael King Writers’ Centre in Devonport, Auckland. It is one of four
supported residencies that the Michael King Writers’ Centre has in place for 2011, all with the support of Creative New
Zealand. Playwright Arthur Meek, biographer Nelson Wattie and poet Ben Brown have each been awarded eight-week
residencies this year.
The centre aims to support New Zealand writers and promote New Zealand literature by providing opportunities for authors
to work full-time. At the end of 2010, 14 writers had held supported residencies at the centre. In addition to the
supported residencies, the centre has low-cost accommodation for visiting writers.
ends