Verity Laughton

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Born1952 (age 7374)
Notable worksThe Mourning After
Verity Laughton
Born1952 (age 7374)
Notable worksThe Mourning After
Website
www.veritylaughton.com

Verity Laughton (born 1952) is a South Australian writer, editor, and playwright.

Laughton was born in Adelaide in 1952.[1] She was educated at the University of Adelaide, graduating with a BA (Hons) in 1973.[1] As a student she appeared in several plays produced by the university's dramatic society.[2][3] She then completed a Diploma in Library Studies at the South Australian Institute of Technology (incorporated in the University of South Australia in 1991) in 1975.[1]

Laughton was awarded a PhD by Flinders University for her thesis "Depicting the Gorgon: the making of theatre about historic-political trauma".[4]

Career

Following graduation, Laughton worked at the State Library of South Australia as a librarian for two years, while co-editing Ash Magazine, a literary magazine. She filled several roles in support of Writers Week at the Adelaide Festivals from 1982 to 1986.[1]

Laughton wrote her first play, I Saw a Dinosaur, in 1987.[5] Numerous plays have followed. The Mourning After, which premiered in 1996 directed by Tony Sheldon and starring Nancye Hayes, was described as "a compelling theatrical experience".[6] She later adapted Patricia Wrightson's The Nargun and the Stars for the stage. It premiered at the 2009 Sydney Festival at the Riverside Theatres Parramatta and was considered "a vividly memorable creation".[7]

Most recently, in 2023 her adaptation of The Dictionary of Lost Words by Pip Williams. It premiered at the State Theatre Company of South Australia, before transferring to the Sydney Theatre Company and then Arts Centre Melbourne.[8][9] The production was described as "a very clever realisation...and gives great power to key moments of this epic story".[10]

She has also written poetry and short stories.[1]

Selected works

  • I Saw a Dinosaur, 1987
  • The Ballad of Bonnie Wheeler, 1988
  • Imagine the Night Sky, 1989
  • Bad Luck Clancy!, 1991
  • Artizane, 1992
  • Tales at Tarpeena, 1993
  • Carrying Light, 1995[11]
  • The Mourning After, Currency Press, 1996[12]
  • Burning, Australian Plays, 2001
  • The Lightkeeper, Australian Plays, 2003[13]
  • The Fox, 2003 (radio play)
  • Davy, 2008 (radio play)
  • Moon Door, 2008 (radio play)
  • The Nargun and the Stars, 2009 (adapted from the book by Patricia Wrightson)
  • The Sweetest Thing, Australian Plays, 2010
  • The Red Cross Letters, 2016[14]
  • Long Tan, Currency Press, 2017[15]
  • The Dictionary of Lost Words, 2023 (adapted from the book by Pip Williams)

Awards and recognition

References

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