Lally Katz

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Lally Katz
BornDecember 3, 1978
New Jersey, United States
Nationality American
Australian
OccupationWriter

Lally Katz (born 1978or1979) is an American and Australian dramatist writing for theater, film, and television. She now resides in Los Angeles.

Contents

Early life

Katz was born in New Jersey, United States. [1] She moved with her family to Miami, and then to Canberra when she was eight and three-quarters. She moved to Melbourne when she was eighteen to attend university and pursue a career as a playwright. [1] She graduated from the University of Melbourne’s School of Studies in Creative Arts. She trained with the Australian Theatre for Young People in 2000. She studied playwriting at London’s Royal Court Theatre. [2]

Career

Katz began her career self-producing her own plays in Melbourne, Australia when she was eighteen. From there she began to get commissions to write for Youth Theatre Companies such as St Martins Youth Theatre and PACT Youth Theatre. When she was 23, she joined Stuck Pigs Squealing Theatre Company.

Stuck Pigs Squealing Theatre produced a series of Katz's early plays: The Black Swan of Trespass which played at Malthouse, Belvoir, and the New York International Fringe Festival where it won the Producer’s Choice Award after winning several Green Room Awards in Melbourne; Eisteddfod premiered in Melbourne at the Storeroom Theatre and transferred to Malthouse Theatre, Belvoir and PS 122 and Richard Foreman’s Ontological-Hysteric Theatre in New York City.

After several successful shows with Stuck Pigs Squealing, Katz began to receive commissions from Australia's main-stage theatre companies.

In 2007 Katz co-wrote Criminology with Australian playwright Tom Wright, which was produced by Malthouse Theatre and Arena Theatre, and two short plays Waikiki Palace and Hip Hip Hooray formed a double bill premiering at Sydney Theatre Company that same year.

Katz’s adaptation of Frankenstein was directed by Ralph Myers at Sydney Theatre Company in 2008.

Goodbye New York, Goodbye Heart opened in New York in late 2010. The Apocalypse Bear Trilogy played at the Melbourne Theatre Company as part of the Melbourne International Arts Festival in 2009. Katz adapted stories from the bible for The Mysteries: Genesis at Sydney Theatre Company in 2008. When the Hunter Returns was commissioned and produced by The Gaiety School of Acting in Ireland and had a return season at the Dublin Theatre Festival. Her play Goodbye Vaudeville Charle Mudd premiered at Malthouse Theatre (co-produced by Arena Theatre).

In 2011 she had three premieres on the main stages of Australia: A Golem Story at Malthouse Theatre, Neighbourhood Watch at Belvoir, and Return to Earth at Melbourne Theatre Company.

Starchaser, a play for children, was produced by Arena Theatre in 2012 and performed at the Arts Centre Melbourne.

In 2013 Katz’s one-woman show, Stories I Want to Tell You in Person, played to packed audiences at Belvoir and Malthouse Theatre. It later toured to Joe's Pub in New York, Mexico City and other cities in Australia before being adapted into a two-part television series for the ABC starring Katz and Robyn Nevin.

In 2014 Katz adapted Henrik Ibsen's A Doll's House for La Boite Theatre Company and Brisbane Festival, directed by Steven Mitchell Wright.

In 2015 Katz's play The Cat was part of a sold-out double bill with Brendan Cowell's "The Dog" at Belvoir in Sydney. She also wrote the libretto for The Rabbits, composed by Kate Miller Heidke, which premiered at Perth Festival and then had sold out season in Melbourne and Sydney festivals, going on to win several Helpmann Awards, including the award for Best New Australian Work. It also won the Australian Writer's Guild Award for best libretto.

In 2017 The Cat/The Dog was remounted for another sold-out season at Belvoir. That year Katz had a premiere of her play Minnie & Liraz at Melbourne Theatre Company".

Katz participated in the attachment programme at the Studio at the National Theatre in London in 2009 and won a British Council Realise Your Dreams grant for 2010. She was a Churchill Fellow in 2010 and was appointed a Writer In Residence at Melbourne University in 2011. In 2012 Katz won InStyle Magazine's Women Of Style Award in the arts category and in 2013 she was the inaugural recipient of an Australian Writers’ Foundation Playwriting Grant.

Katz’s work for television includes adult one-hour dramas Wonderland , Wentworth , and Spirited and children’s series The Elephant Princess . Stories I Want to Tell You in Person was adapted as a two-part television series by the ABC in 2017, starring Katz and Robyn Nevin. She has also written for Squinters seasons one and two and for Hit The Road starring Jason Alexander.

Awards

The Eisteddfod won the Excellence in Direction and Producer's Choice awards at the 2004 New York International Fringe Festival. [3]

Her 2009 play, Goodbye Vaudeville, Charlie Mudd, was performed in the Beckett Theatre at the Malthouse and received the State Library of Victoria's Louis Esson Prize for Drama. [4]

Works

Plays

YearTitleNotes
2003EisteddfodDirected by Chris Kohn [5]
2005Smashed [6]
2005 The Black Swan of Trespass written with Chris Kohn [7]
2006Lally Katz and the Terrible Mysteries of the Volcanodirected by Chris Kohn [8]
2007Hip Hip Hooray [9]
2007Waikiki Palace [9]
2007CriminologyCo-written with Tom Wright [10]
2008Frankenstein [11]
2008When the Hunter Returns [12]
2008The Mysteries: Genesis [13]
2008The Apocalypse Bear Trilogy [14]
2009Return to Earth [15]
2009Goodbye Vaudeville Charlie Muddwon the 2009 Louis Esson Prize for Drama [2]
2010Goodbye New York, Goodbye Heart [16]
2011A Golem Storydirected by Michael Kantor [17]
2011Neighbourhood Watch [18]
2012Starchaser [19]
2013Stories I Want to Tell You in Person One-woman show [20]
2014A Doll's House
2015 The Rabbits
2015The Cat (part of The Dog / The Cat)
2016Back at the DojoAutobiographical play [21]
2017Minnie and Liraz
2017AtlantisAutobiographical play [22]

Screenplays

YearTitleNotes
2006Ingrid Sits Holding a KnifeShort film [23]
2009The Apocalypse Bear: Beyond the SeaShort film
2013Greg's First DayShort film [24]

TV Scripts

YearTitleNotes
2008 The Elephant Princess Episode: "Masquerade Ball" [25]
2011 Spirited Episode: "Blood Sugar Sex Magik"
2013 Wentworth Episode: "Mind Games", with Emma J. Steele
2014 Celblok H Episode: "Mind Games" (Dutch adaptation of her original Australian script)4
2015Stories I Want to Tell You in Personadapted from her one woman show [26]
2018 Squinters [27]


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References

  1. 1 2 "Curious Katz". 5 November 2011.
  2. 1 2 "Lally Katz — The Wheeler Centre".
  3. ""Lally Katz Archives"". PlayLab Theatre. Retrieved 6 August 2024.
  4. "Winners and Shortlist: 2009 Premier's Literary Awards Archived 2010-05-05 at the Wayback Machine , State Library of Victoria. Accessed April 5, 2010
  5. "The Eisteddfod ~ theatre notes".
  6. "Worth the wait to see this delicate production". 13 September 2011.
  7. "The Black Swan of Trespass / Stalking Matilda ~ theatre notes".
  8. "Lally Katz and the Terrible Mysteries of the Volcano ~ theatre notes".
  9. 1 2 "Australian Stage Online - Waikiki Hip | Wharf 2LOUD". Archived from the original on 15 October 2007.
  10. "Review: Criminology ~ theatre notes".
  11. "Lally Katz | Australian Plays Transform".
  12. "Lally Katz | ATYP". Archived from the original on 2 June 2016. Retrieved 12 May 2016.
  13. "The Mysteries: Genesis". December 2009.
  14. "Mainstage explorations ~ theatre notes".
  15. "Review: Return To Earth ~ theatre notes".
  16. "Goodbye New York, Goodbye Heart | Backstage". Archived from the original on 2 June 2016.
  17. "Review: A Golem Story ~ theatre notes".
  18. "NEIGHBOURHOOD WATCH | Australian Plays Transform".
  19. "Review: Another Lament, Starchaser, CIRCA ~ theatre notes".
  20. Herbert, Kate (14 August 2013). "Theatre review: Stories I Want To Tell You In Person". Herald Sun. Retrieved 6 May 2023.
  21. "Back at the Dojo review: Joyous, time-tripping tale of a life rediscovered through karate". 23 June 2016.
  22. "Atlantis review (Belvoir, Sydney)". 2 November 2017.
  23. "Ingrid Sits Holding A Knife (2006) - The Screen Guide - Screen Australia". www.screenaustralia.gov.au. Retrieved 6 May 2023.
  24. "Greg's First Day".
  25. "Australian Television: The Elephant Princess: episode guide: series 1". www.australiantelevision.net. Retrieved 6 May 2023.
  26. "Stories I Want to Tell You in Person | Beat Magazine". Archived from the original on 16 November 2018. Retrieved 16 November 2018.
  27. "Squinters review – Tim Minchin and Jacki Weaver take the low road in glib commuter comedy". TheGuardian.com . 7 February 2018.