Green Room Awards Explained
Green Room Awards |
Subheader: | Current: 2022 |
Awarded For: | Excellence in |
Presenter: | Green Room Awards Association |
Location: | Australia (Melbourne) |
Established: | 1982 |
The Green Room Awards are peer awards which recognise excellence in Cabaret, Dance, Theatre Companies, Independent Theatre, Musical Theatre, Contemporary and Experimental Performance and Opera in Melbourne.[1] [2]
The awards were started in 1982 when Blair Edgar and Steven Tandy formed the Green Room Awards Association. The inaugural awards ceremony was held in 1984 at the Melbourne Concert Hall. The association today is composed of members of Melbourne's performing arts community, including journalists, performers, writers, directors, choreographers, academics, theatre technicians and administrators.
The current patron of the association is Dr Liz Jones AO. Former patrons include Uncle Jack Charles, Rachel Griffiths and David Atkins. Previous winners include Dale Ferguson, David Hersey, Stephen Baynes, Greg Horsman, Eddie Perfect, Laurie Cadevida, Stephen Daldry, Genevieve Lemon, Michael Dameski, Julian Gavin, and Steve Mouzakis.
As at April 2023, the President of the Association is Anton Berezin, Vice President Dean Drieberg, Secretary Weng Yi Wong and Treasurer Emily Harvey.
The 2023 Ceremony, the Association's 40th, took place at Melbourne's Capitol Theatre to a sell-out audience on May 29, 2023.
Award categories
As of 2013, award categories include:
Theatre (companies)
- Production
- Direction
- Female actor
- Male actor
- Ensemble
- Set/costume
- Lighting
- Sound/composition
- Writing/adaptation
Theatre (independent)
- Production
- Direction
- Performers (2 awards)
- Ensemble
- Design
- Lighting design
- Sound/composition
- Writing
Music theatre
Opera
- Production
- Conductor
- Direction
- Principal female
- Principal male
- Supporting female
- Supporting male
- Design
Dance
- Concept and realisation
- Male dancer
- Female dancer
- Ensemble
- Design
- Sound and music
Cabaret
- Production
- Artiste
- Musical direction
- Writing
- Direction
Alternative and hybrid performance
Named awards
Several named awards can be given:
- Lifetime Achievement Award
- made to a person whose outstanding work has had a significant impact in Melbourne.
- Outstanding Technical Achievement Award
- for technical contributions behind the scenes.
- Best New Writing Award
- for an exceptional new script or production.
- Betty Pounder Award for Original Choreography
- in memory of choreographer Betty Pounder whose work encompassed all dance genres and their inclusion in plays and opera, is given for choreographic work in any area.
Recipients
Recipients of the Production award in each category include the following, with the year relating to the year of the award ceremony:
Theatre companies
Independent theatre
- 1997: Verona (Magpie Theatre)
- 1998: Sunrise Boulevard (Rod Quantock presented by Token Productions)
- 1999: Who's Afraid of the Working Class (Melbourne Workers Theatre at Trades Hall)
- 2000: The Terms and Grammar of Creation (Sue Gore & Bill Garner)
- 2001: A Large Attendance in the Antechamber (Brian Lipson/Wendy Lasica and Associates)
- 2002: My Brother the Fish (Dan Scollay)
- 2003: The Grand Feeling (Paradigm Productions)
- 2004: The Black Swan of Trespass
- 2005: The Candy Butchers; The Eistedfodd
- 2006: The Laramie Project
- 2007: For Samuel Beckett (The Eleventh Hour Theatre)
- 2008: Holiday (Ranters Theatre)
- 2009: Oedipus, A Poetic Requiem (Inspired By Ted Hughes) (Liminal Theatre, Mary Sitarenos)
- 2010: Alice in Wonderland (Four Larks Theatre)
- 2011: Us (Grit Theatre / The Function Room)
- 2012: Save for Crying (doubletap / La Mama)
- 2013: Persona (Fraught Outfit and Theatre Works)
- 2014: The Sovereign Wife (Sisters Grimm/NEON)
- 2015: The Trouble With Harry (MKA, Darebin Arts Speakeasy and Melbourne Festival)
- 2016: SHIT (Dee & Cornelius as part of Neon Festival for Independent Theatre)
- 2017: Blood on the Dance Floor (Ilbijerri Theatre Company and Jacob Boehme)
- 2018: Song For A Weary Throat (Rawcus in association with Theatre Works)
- 2019: Apokalypsis (The Substation in association with Next Wave)
- 2020: Mr Burns: A Post-Electric Play (Lightning Jar Theatre in association with fortyfivedownstairs)
- 2021: 落叶归根 (Luò yè guīgēn) Getting Home (Cheryl Ho & Rachel Lee as part of Melbourne Fringe)[12]
- 2022: Kerosene (Jack Dixon-Gunn in association with Theatre Works) and The Gospel According to Jesus Queen of Heaven (Ben Anderson Presents in association with Theatre Works) [in-person]; Juniper Wilde: Wilde Night In (The Social Validation Club as part of Melbourne Fringe) [digital]
- 2023: Gene Tree: Listen. Now. Again (St. Martins in association with Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria) and Paradise Lost (Bloomshed in association with Darebin Arts Speakeasy)
- 2024: Animal Farm (Bloomshed and Darebin Arts Speakeasy)
Music theatre
- 1987: Guys and Dolls (Adelaide Festival Centre Trust)
- 1988: Cats (Cameron Mackintosh and the Really Useful Company)
- 1989: My Fair Lady (Victoria State Opera)
- 1990: Anything Goes (Hayden Attractions, Victoria State Opera & Bill Armstrong)
- 1991: Les Miserables (Cameron Mackintosh)
- 1992: The Phantom of the Opera (Cameron Mackintosh, Really Useful Productions)
- 1993: The King and I (Victorian Arts Centre/Victoria State Opera/Gordon Frost/Adelaide Festival Centre Trust)
- 1994: Hot Shoe Shuffle (David Atkins Enterprises)[13]
- 1995: West Side Story (Victoria State Opera, International Management Group)[14]
- 2000: The Boy From Oz (Ben Gannon and Robert Fox)
- 2001-2007: n/a
- 2008: Priscilla Queen of the Desert The Musical
- 2009: Billy Elliot The Musical (Universal Pictures Stage Entertainment, Working Title Films, Old Vic Productions)
- 2010: Jersey Boys (Dodger Theatricals, Newtheatricals, Dainty Consolidated Entertainment and Michael Watt)
- 2011: Mary Poppins
- 2012: n/a
- 2013: Chess (The Production Company)
- 2014: n/a
- 2015: Once (Barbara Broccoli, John N. Hart Jr, Patrick Milling Smith, Frederick Zollo, Brian Carmody, Michael G. Wilson, Orin Wolf, John Frost, New York Theatre Workshop, Melbourne Theatre Company)
- 2016: Strictly Ballroom (Global Creatures and Bazmark)
- 2017: Matilda the Musical (The Royal Shakespeare Company and Louise Withers, Michael Coppel and Michael Watt)
- 2018: Aladdin The Musical (Disney Theatrical Productions)
- 2019: (Michael Cassel Group)
- 2020: Come From Away (Junkyard Dog Productions and Rodney Rigby)
- 2021: n/a
- 2022: The Wedding Singer (David Venn Enterprises)
- 2023: Moulin Rouge! The Musical (Carmen Pavlovic, Gerry & Val Ryan, Bill Damaschke and Global Creatures) and Fun Home (Melbourne Theatre Company)
- 2024: Mary Poppins (Disney, Cameron Mackintosh and Michael Cassel Group)
Music theatre - independent
Opera
Cabaret
Dance
- 1987: After Venice (Sydney Dance Company)
- 1988: The Shining (Sydney Dance Company)
- 1989: Vast (Australian Bicentennial Authority)
- 1990: Onegin (The Australian Ballet)
- 1991: The Leaves Are Falling (The Australian Ballet)
- 1992: Gemini (The Australian Ballet); No Strings Attached (DanceWorks)
- 1993: Nutcracker (The Australian Ballet)
- 1994: Nuti / Kikimora (Meryl Tankard Australian Dance Theatre)
- 1995: Divergence (The Australian Ballet)
- 2002: Tivoli (Sydney Dance Company & The Australian Ballet)
- 2003: Swan Lake (The Australian Ballet); Walkabout (Bangarra Dance Theatre)
- 2019: Overture (Arts House and Jo Lloyd)
- 2020: plenty serious Talk Talk (Vicki Van Hout in association with Arts House and Yirramboi Festival)
- 2021: n/a
- 2022: I am Maggie (Jonathan Homsey as part of Arts Centre Melbourne Take Over for Melbourne Fringe 2020)
Contemporary and experimental performance
- 2017: Complete Smut Art Auction (Punctum)
- 2018: We All Know What's Happening (Samara Hersch & Lara Thoms)
- 2019: Crackers n Dip with Chase n Toey (Carly Sheppard & Josh Twee presented by Arts House)
- 2020: Daddy (Joel Bray presented by Arts House and Yirramboi Festival); Diaspora (A Chamber Made work by Robin Fox and Collaborators in association with Melbourne International Arts Festival and The Substation); Those Who Rock (Joseph O'Farrell presented by Arts Centre Melbourne)
- 2021: n/a
Lifetime Achievement Award
Recipients include (year added where found):[16]
See also
External links
Notes and References
- Web site: 36th Green Room Awards Winners have been announced!. Green Room Awards. 24 November 2019.
- News: Bennett. Sally. 21 February 2012. Malthouse Theatre cleans up nominations for Green Room Awards. Herald Sun. Sydney. 24 November 2019.
- Web site: Full list of 2014 Green Room Award Recipients. 2021-06-26. www.australianstage.com.au.
- Web site: Green Room Award Recipients 2015 Stage Whispers. 2021-06-26. www.stagewhispers.com.au.
- Web site: 2016-03-21. 2015 Green Room Award Winners News. 2021-06-26. AussieTheatre.com. en-AU.
- Web site: Winners of the 34th Green Room Awards announced. 2021-06-26. Limelight. en-AU.
- Web site: 2018-04-10. All the winners from Melbourne's 35th Annual Green Room Awards. 2021-06-26. The AU Review. en-AU.
- Web site: 2019-04-02. All the 36th Annual Green Room Award Winners News. 2021-06-26. AussieTheatre.com. en-AU.
- Web site: Miller. Nick. 2020-04-06. Camp Dogs run away with Melbourne's annual theatre awards. 2021-06-26. The Age. en.
- Web site: 2022 Green Room Awards Recipients Stage Whispers . 2022-07-12 . www.stagewhispers.com.au.
- Web site: Review . Arts . 2024-04-09 . 2024 Green Room Award Winners Announced . 2024-04-13 . Australian Arts Review . en-AU.
- Web site: Woodhead. Cameron. 2021-06-29. Melbourne's theatre awards night was an eccentric, apocalyptic trip. 2021-07-01. The Age. en.
- News: Green Room awards . . 60 . 24 . Victoria, Australia . 4 March 1994 . 18 July 2021 . 5 (Life/Style) . National Library of Australia.
- News: arts Gideon wins Green Room award . . 61 . 26 . Victoria, Australia . 10 March 1995 . 18 July 2021 . 30 . National Library of Australia.
- News: Stars are honoured in Green Room awards . . 98 . 21 . New South Wales, Australia . 26 February 1993 . 18 July 2021 . 7 (Life/Style) . National Library of Australia.
- News: Arts & Entertainment . . 57 . 20 . Victoria, Australia . 8 February 1991 . 17 December 2022 . 30 . National Library of Australia.
- News: Theatre awards . . LI . 23 . Victoria, Australia . 1 March 1985 . 17 December 2022 . 26 . National Library of Australia.
- News: Pamela Ruskin's Arts Roundabout . . LIV . 21 . Victoria, Australia . 19 February 1988 . 17 December 2022 . 20 . National Library of Australia.
- News: Arts & Entertainment Victoria ready for Green Room awards . . 57 . 20 . Victoria, Australia . 8 February 1991 . 17 December 2022 . 30 . National Library of Australia.
- News: Green Room Award winners . . 58 . 25 . Victoria, Australia . 28 February 1992 . 17 December 2022 . 28 . National Library of Australia.
- News: Stars are honoured in Green Room awards . . 98 . 21 . New South Wales, Australia . 26 February 1993 . 17 December 2022 . 7 (Life/Style) . National Library of Australia.
- News: What's on A Guide to Arts — Second wind for the Melba . . 64 . 35 . Victoria, Australia . 5 June 1998 . 17 December 2022 . 1 (What's On) . National Library of Australia.
- News: arts Gideon wins Green Room award . . 61 . 26 . Victoria, Australia . 10 March 1995 . 17 December 2022 . 30 . National Library of Australia.
- News: Shows and artists honoured . . 62 . 22 . Victoria, Australia . 1 March 1996 . 17 December 2022 . 28 . National Library of Australia.
- News: Winners of Green Room Awards . . 64 . 21 . Victoria, Australia . 27 February 1998 . 17 December 2022 . 5 (What's On) . National Library of Australia.