Recipients Of Inaugural Screenwriters’ Residency To Draw On Local Inspiration And Expertise
Great Southern Television and Queenstown Lakes District Council (QLDC) are pleased to announce the five recipients of the first ever Tāhuna Writers Residency.
The screenwriters’ residency was created last year as a partnership between Great Southern Television and QLDC’s film office, Film Queenstown Lakes and is supported by the New Zealand Film Commission and NZ On Air.
Danny Aumua, Malinna Liang, Tom Augustine, Isla Macleod and Todd Karehana (Ngāi Te Rangi, Ngāi Tamaoki, Ngāti Tarawhai, Ngāti Ruapani ki Waikaremoana) were selected from more than 150 applicants from across the country for a hosted programme of workshops, mentoring, writing and pitching to be based in Queenstown from 21 March to 14 April.
Great Southern Television CEO Philip Smith said he was thrilled by the incredible calibre and range of applicants.
“It was a highly competitive process. Our exceptional ‘Top Five’ represent a broad range of genres and writing styles, and each has compelling, brave and exciting stories to share with the world. They make us excited about the future of Aotearoa's screen industry and we can't wait to start working with them,” he said.
“Tāhuna is focused on creating gripping television series that could sit on major networks and streamers globally but are shot in hometown New Zealand. In this day and age it's about being brave and thinking big. We want to take these writers on the journey by providing the resources and insights to make their creative visions a reality."
Film Queenstown Lakes Coordinator Kahli Scott said she was excited to welcome the writers to town.
“Danny, Malinna, Tom, Isla and Todd all demonstrated incredible talent in their applications, as well as an enthusiasm for creating stories in and about our district.”
She said that the aim of the residency was to generate home-grown stories leading to more productions filming in the district.
“Film and TV production has a key role to play in diversifying our economy, generating jobs and business, developing local skills, and enriching our communities. The projects that our Tāhuna writers will create during their residency are the type of work that will help us to grow and strengthen the industry further. We’re looking forward to seeing how the writers are inspired by being here and rise to the challenge.”
Over the course of the residency, they will each develop a concept for a scripted drama series to be based and produced in the Queenstown Lakes District.
- More information about QLDC’s film office can be found here: https://www.qldc.govt.nz/community/economic-development/film-queenstown-lakes
- More information about Great Southern Television can be found here: https://greatsouthern.tv/
- Media release, 30 Aug 2021: Tāhuna writers' residency open for applications
- Media release, 15 Jul 2021: Screenwriters Workshop looks to bring television opportunities to the Queenstown Lakes
Writer biographies
Danny Aumua
Danny
Aumua is a 34-year-old Samoan Kiwi filmmaker from Tāmaki
Makarau. He has worked as a creative producer at networks
such as TVNZ, Discovery Channel, Disney and Fox Sports
Australia. He recently directed and wrote 26:29, an
episode of TVNZ’s new horror anthology, and directed the
documentary series Lions Roar for Asahi TV.NIPW World
in Japan. He is currently a video producer for digital
entertainment company BuzzFeed.
Todd
Karehana
Todd Karehana (Ngāi Te Rangi, Ngāi
Tamaoki, Ngāti Tarawhai, Ngāti Ruapani ki Waikaremoana) is
a 34-year-old emerging Māori writer, director and producer
based in Tāmaki Makaurau. Previous credits include:
storyliner, writer and script editor on Ahikāroa;
storyliner and co-writer on The Exceptional Squad;
storyliner on Inked; storyliner on SE2 of The
Panthers; and writing support on feature film We Are
Still Here. His director credits include The Kweenz
of Kelston, My Brother Mitchell, Night
Ride for Loading Docs, and Young and on the
Paepae for TVNZ.
Malinna
Liang
Malinna Liang, 26, is a first generation
Chinese-New Zealand writer based in Auckland. She is a
writer on TVNZ/Greenstone’s My Life is Murder and
was a storyliner on Vegas. She has placed in several
international screenwriting competitions, including most
recently as a semifinalist in the 2021 Academy Nicholl
Fellowship. Her prose has been published in Landfall and
Auckland University Press’s A Clear
Dawn.
Isla Macleod
Isla Macleod is
a 27-year-old writer/director residing in Tāmaki Makaurau.
She graduated from the NZBS (Julian Walker Scholarship for
top graduate) and Victoria’s IIML (Project Scholarship for
her thesis feature script). She co-created the web series
Oddly Even that won TVNZ’s inaugural New Blood
competition. She has written/directed several shorts and
been employed across Netflix series, domestic features,
AMAs, international reality formats, a Globe Theatre
(London) summer internship and TV3’s commissioning
department.
Tom Augustine
Tom
Augustine, 30, is an Auckland-based filmmaker and writer. In
2019 Tom was awarded the New Zealand Writers Guild Seed
Advanced Grant to develop his debut feature film screenplay,
Arsonist, which he then developed further when he was
selected to attend Script to Screen’s Story Camp 2020. In
2019-20 Tom also wrote, directed and produced The Story
of Te Awe a four part docu-series for Auckland Museum,
premiering on Radio New Zealand. In 2015 Tom graduated from
the University of Auckland Screen Production Masters
programme with his short film Long Time Coming, which
won the Geoff Evans Memorial Prize. His writing includes
articles published in Little White Lies, North + South,
Metro, The Spinoff, The Pantograph Punch, Canvas, The New
Zealand Herald, and Birth Movies Death, as well as numerous
episodes of Shortland
Street.
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