Eleanor Bishop (director)

Last updated

Eleanor Bishop
CitizenshipNew Zealand
Alma mater Victoria University of Wellington, Carnegie Mellon University
Occupation(s)Theatre director and playwright
Known forYes Yes Yes a play about consent for young people
Website https://www.eleanorbishop.org/

Eleanor Bishop is a New Zealand stage director, producer and playwright. Her play Yes Yes Yes co-written with Karin McCracken for young people about relationships and consent has been seen throughout New Zealand, in Montreal, Wales and Catalonia.

Contents

Career

Bishop is from Wellington. [1] She graduated from Victoria University of Wellington where she completed Bachelor of Arts with Honours in Theatre [2] and from Carnegie Mellon University with a Master of Fine Arts in directing. [1] She is a founding member of Wellington-based theatre company The PlayGround Collective. [2]

Following university Bishop directed the play The Intricate Art of Actually Caring, initially presented at the New Zealand Fringe Festival in the bedroom of a flat. This play won the two wards, Best Theatre in the Fringe (Fringe Festival Awards) and Most Original Production (Chapman Tripp Theatre Awards). It went on to tour New Zealand. [2]

Plays that Bishop is the writer-director of include an adaption of Foreskin's Lament by Greg McGee called Boys. [1]

Bishop directed a digital version of Chekhov’s The Seagull in 2019 for Auckland Theatre Company brought about by the Covid-19 pandemic. [3]

Opera directing experience with New Zealand Opera includes assistant director for The Marriage of Figaro and director of The Strangest of Angels composed by Kenneth Young featuring Anna Leese about Janet Frame. [4] [3]

Bishop has a creative partnership with actor and writer Karin McCracken, their company is called EBKM. They won the Bruce Mason Playwriting Award in 2022, which was the first time it went to a partnership. [5] Productions they have co-created include Jane Doe (2017) about rape culture which toured New Zealand and was presented at the Edinburgh Fringe 2017 and Sydney Fringe in 2018 gathering awards in New Zealand and Australia [6] and Yes Yes Yes, that examines 'healthy relationships and consent' and is for a youth audience. [1] Yes Yes Yes was a development from Jane Doe and their research included interviewing students and workshopping with young people too and premiered in 2019. McCracken had previously worked as an educator with Wellington’s Sexual Abuse Prevention Network. [7] [5] Yes Yes Yes it has been presented throughout New Zealand and Montreal, Canada. It is descibed as: "Part confession, part documentary, part open conversation," and won an award for Excellence in Theatre for Social Change at the Wellington Theatre Awards. [5] Early in 2024 the theatre company Theatr Genedlaethol Cymru in Wales presented a bi-lingual version of the play (Ie, Ie, Ie), and the Catalonian theatre company Teatre de l'Aurora in Igualada produced a version of it too (Si, Si, Si). [8] [9]

They created with Julia Croft Body Double, about rules that define sexuality. Bishop and McCracken co-created Heartbreak Hotel presented in 2023 Auckland at Q Theatre and the Hawkes Bay Arts Festival. [1] [10] In this production McCracken performed alongside Simon Leary and Bishop directed, it was produced by Melanie Hamilton. [11] It received positive reviews and was described by one reviewer as a 'music-comedy concoction'. [10] [12] An autobiographical fiction about author Chris Kraus is the subject of Bishop and McCracken's 2024 play Gravity & Grace. [13]

Bishop has worked with Marianne Weems and the multimedia theatre company The Builders Association. [14]

Awards

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Oscar Kightley</span> Samoan-New Zealand actor and writer

Oscar Vai To'elau Kightley is a Samoan-New Zealander actor, television presenter, writer, journalist, director, and comedian. He acted in and co-wrote the successful 2006 film Sione's Wedding.

Toa Fraser is a New Zealand born playwright and film director, of Fijian heritage. His first feature film, No. 2, starring Ruby Dee won the Audience Award at the 2006 Sundance Film Festival. His second, Dean Spanley, starring Sam Neill, Jeremy Northam and Peter O'Toole, premiered in September 2008. His third film Giselle was selected to be screened in the Contemporary World Cinema section at the 2013 Toronto International Film Festival. His fourth, The Dead Lands, a Maori action-adventure film, was released in 2014.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jacob Rajan</span> New Zealand actor and playwright

Jacob Rajan is a Malaysian-born-New Zealand playwright and actor. His highly successful plays include the trilogy Krishnan's Dairy, The Candlestick Maker and The Pickle King. Another work was The Dentist's Chair. In 2002, he received the prestigious Laureate Art Award. All of Rajan's plays, except his first, Krishnan's Dairy, were originally produced for his theatre company, Indian Ink Theatre Company, and co-written with director/writer Justin Lewis, co-founder of Indian Ink.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bruce Mason</span> New Zealand playwright

Bruce Edward George Mason was a significant playwright in New Zealand who wrote 34 plays and influenced the cultural landscape of the country through his contribution to theatre. In 1980, he was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire. The Bruce Mason Playwriting Award, one of the most important playwrighting accolades in New Zealand, is named in his honour. Mason was also an actor, critic, and fiction writer.

Nancy Brunning was a New Zealand actress, director, and writer who won awards in film and television and made a major contribution to the growth of Māori in the arts. She won the best actress award at the New Zealand Film Awards for her lead role in the film What Becomes of the Broken Hearted? (1999). In 2000, she won the Best Actress in Drama award at the New Zealand Television Awards for her lead role in the television series Nga Tohu.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Victor Rodger</span> New Zealand playwright

Victor John Rodger is a New Zealand journalist, actor and award-winning playwright of Samoan and Pākehā heritage. Rodger's play Sons won acclaim at the Chapman Tripp Theatre Awards (1998) and received the Best New Writer and Most Outstanding New New Zealand Play awards. In 2001, he won the Bruce Mason Playwriting Award. Other plays include Ranterstantrum (2002) and My Name is Gary Cooper (2007), produced and staged by Auckland Theatre Company and starred a Samoan cast including Robbie Magasiva, Anapela Polataivao, Goretti Chadwick and Kiwi actress Jennifer Ward-Lealand.

The New Zealand Fringe Festival is an open access arts festival in Wellington, New Zealand held over several weeks in February and March each year. The 2024 programme marks the festival's 34th anniversary.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jo Randerson</span> New Zealand writer, director, and performer

Joanna Ruth Randerson is a New Zealand writer, director and performer. She is the founder and artistic director of Barbarian Productions, a Wellington-based theatre production company.

Mīria George is a New Zealand writer, producer and director of Māori and Cook Island descent. Best known for being the author of award-winning stage plays, George has also written radio, television and poetry, and was one of the film directors of the portmanteau film Vai. In November 2005, she won the Emerging Pacific Artist's Award at the Arts Pasifika Awards. Mīria George was the first Cook Islands artist to receive the Fulbright-Creative New Zealand Pacific Writer's Residency at the University of Hawai'i.

Lynda Chanwai-Earle is a New Zealand writer and radio producer. Her written work includes plays, poems and film scripts. The play Ka Shue – Letters Home in 1996 is semi-autobiographical and is significant in New Zealand literature as the first authentically New Zealand–Chinese play for mainstream audiences.

Stuart Hoar is a New Zealand playwright, teacher, novelist, radio dramatist and librettist.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ralph McCubbin Howell</span> New Zealand playwright, actor and theatre director

Ralph McCubbin Howell is a Wellington-based New Zealand playwright and actor. He was the recipient of the 2014 Bruce Mason Playwriting Award. His work The Devil's Half Acre was commissioned and produced by the 2016 New Zealand International Festival of the Arts.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Nina Nawalowalo</span> New Zealand theatre director

Nina Nawalowalo is a New Zealand theatre director and co-founder of the contemporary Pacific theatre company The Conch. She is known for directing the stage plays Vula and The White Guitar. The first film she directed A Boy Called Piano - The Story of Fa'amoana John Luafutu (2021) won 2022 Montreal Independent Film Festival Best Feature Documentary.

Emily Tess Duncan is a New Zealand playwright. She is co-founder of Prospect Park Productions, an organisation aiming “to create and produce original New Zealand theatre and collaborative projects that reach into other art forms." Duncan held the 2019 Robert Burns Fellowship at the University of Otago in Dunedin, New Zealand. She lives in Dunedin.

Taki Rua is a theatre organisation based in Wellington, New Zealand that has produced many contemporary Māori theatre productions. Taki Rua has been going since 1983 and has had several name changes over that time including The New Depot, Depot Theatre and Taki Rua / The Depot. The full current name is Taki Rua Productions. Since inception the mission of Taki Rua has been to showcase work from New Zealand. Because of this and the longevity of Taki Rua many significant New Zealand actors, directors, writers, designers and producers have part of the history including Riwia Brown, Nathaniel Lees, Rachel House and Taika Waititi.

Ahilan Karunaharan is writer, director, actor and producer of Sri Lankan descent from New Zealand. He is a recipient of the New Zealand Arts Laureate Award.

The Bruce Mason Playwriting Award is an annual award that recognises the work of an outstanding emerging New Zealand playwright. The winner is decided by the votes of a panel of leading New Zealand artistic directors and script advisors.

Suli Moa is a New Zealand playwright, actor, screenwriter and teacher of Tongan descent. He wrote and performed the first Tongan Play in New Zealand, Kingdom of Lote. As a playwright Moa has been awarded the Adam New Zealand Play Award for Best Pacific Play, 12th Round (2016), and Tales of a Princess (2018). Moa's acting credits include A love yarn (2021) andSweet Tooth (2021). His writing credits include The Panthers (2021) and Shortland Street (2021-2022). Moa has also appeared in multiple short films as an actor and served as a cultural advisor.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Amanaki Prescott-Faletau</span> Tongan-New Zealand performer and director

Amanaki Lelei Prescott-Faletau is an actor, writer, dancer, choreographer, producer and director of Tongan descent, living in New Zealand. As a playwright, she became the first fakaleitī to have her work published in New Zealand with Inky Pinky Ponky. This play was awarded Best Teenage Script (2015) by New Zealand Playmarket. As an actor, she was awarded best performance at the 2015 Auckland Fringe Festival for Victor Rodger's Girl on the Corner. Her acting credits include The Breaker Upperers (2018), SIS (2020), The Panthers (2021), The Pact (2021) and Sui Generis (2022), in which she is also a writer for the TV series. Faletau competed as a dancer in the World Hip Hop Dance Championships in 2011 and has been a judge at the National Hip Hop Championships in New Zealand over several years.

Sophie Roberts is a theatre director and actor of New Zealand. She is the artistic director of Silo Theatre in Auckland, New Zealand.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Brookes, Emily (November 12, 2023). "Eleanor Bishop's favourite heroines are the ones pushing boundaries". The Post. Retrieved 2024-03-02.
  2. 1 2 3 "Eleanor Bishop". Victoria University of Wellington. School of English, Film, Theatre, Media and Communication, and Art History. Retrieved 2024-03-02.
  3. 1 2 "Eleanor Bishop, theatre director and alumna | Wellington Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences". Victoria University of Wellington. 2022-02-24. Retrieved 2024-03-02.
  4. "Eleanor Bishop". RNZ. 2021-05-30. Retrieved 2024-03-02.
  5. 1 2 3 "Bruce Mason Playwriting Award Winners 2022". Playmarket. Retrieved 2024-03-02.
  6. "About". EBKM. Retrieved 2024-03-02.
  7. Essuah, India. "We Need To Talk About Sex In Schools". Pantograph Punch. Retrieved 2024-03-02.
  8. "Ie Ie Ie". theatr.cymru. Retrieved 2024-03-04.
  9. l'Aurora, Teatre de. "Sí Sí Sí - De Eleanor Bishop y Karin McCracken | Teatre de l'Aurora". www.teatreaurora.cat (in Spanish). Retrieved 2024-03-04.
  10. 1 2 Morris, Jo (27 October 2023). "Nuanced and powerful; hilarious, heartwarming and moving. You won't leave heartbroken". Theatreview. Retrieved 2024-03-02.
  11. "Heartbreak Hotel". Q Theatre. Retrieved 2024-03-02.
  12. Jamieson, Hannah. "REVIEW: Heartbreak Hotel (Q Theatre)". Theatre Scenes: Aotearoa New Zealand Theatre. Retrieved 2024-03-02.
  13. "Chris Kraus' life brought to the stage by Eleanor Bishop and Karin McCracken". RNZ. 2024-01-24. Retrieved 2024-03-02.
  14. "Eleanor Bishop". The Court Theatre. Retrieved 2024-03-02.
  15. 1 2 "Eleanor Bishop". Eleanor Bishop. Retrieved 2024-03-04.

https://www.eleanorbishop.org/