Rosie Waterland
Rosie Waterland | |
---|---|
Born | |
Nationality | Australian |
Occupation(s) | Comedian, author, television writer, actress |
Years active | 2013-present |
Rosanna Alish Waterland (born 30 May 1986[citation needed]) is an Australian comedian, author, screenwriter, and actress. Waterland first rose to popularity in 2013 with her satirical recaps of the first season of The Bachelor Australia. Fellow author and ABC presenter Richard Glover called what she did "the best television writing since Clive James".[1] Waterland has also published two best-selling books: The Anti Cool Girl, Every Lie I've Ever Told.
Books
Waterland's first book, The Anti Cool Girl, published by HarperCollins in 2015,[2] was a critically acclaimed national bestseller. It was shortlisted for two Indie Book Awards, the Russell Prize for Humour Writing and two Australian Book Industry Awards, including best biography and best new writer of the year. It won the Australian Book Industry Awards People's Choice Award for Best New Writer of the Year.[3] The Anti Cool Girl sold over 45,000 in its first few months in stores, making it one of the most popular young Australian memoirs in recent memory.[4]
Waterland's second book, Every Lie I've Ever Told, was published in July 2017.[5] It also went on to become a national bestseller, subsequently being named number 41 in the Dymocks Top 101 Books Of All Time list.
In April 2019, it was announced that Waterland had signed a significant two-book fiction deal with HarperCollins Australia. The first of these books will be published in 2021.[6]
Along with her own books, Waterland has also been featured in several popular anthologies. These include Mothers and Others,[7] Better Than Sex,[8] Best Australian Comedy Writing[9] and Choice Words - A collection of writing about abortion[10].
Waterland's written work has also been published by the Mamamia Women's Network (where she was a senior editor until 2015), Huffington Post US, UK and Germany, Role Reboot, Cleo magazine, Cosmopolitan magazine, Harper's Bazaar, Sunday Life and Spectrum.
Television
Waterland has been a contributing writer and actress on multiple Australian TV shows, most notably ABC's Tonightly and Channel Ten's Sisters. She was also co-star and creator of ABC satirical political documentary series, What’s Going On: With Jamila Rizvi and Rosie Waterland, which first aired in 2016 and can now be seen on ABC iView.[11]
Waterland currently has two TV shows in development with Australian production companies.[11]
Stage tours
Waterland debuted her first live one-woman show at the Melbourne International Comedy Festival in March 2016, called "My Life On The Couch (with vodka)". The show sold out every performance, and she took the show on a sold-out national tour in October of the same year. She toured Australia with her second one-woman show, "Crazy Lady", in September 2017.[12]
Waterland's next one-woman show, Kid Chameleon, begins touring nationally in February 2020.[11]
Podcasting
In 2017, Rosie created and produced a podcast based on her first book, The Anti-Cool Girl, called Mum Says My Memoir Is A Lie. Mum Says was hugely popular and critically acclaimed, going on to win the 2018 Australian Commercial Radio Award (ACRA) for Best Original Podcast.[13]
Mum Says My Memoir Is A Lie topped the iTunes Podcast chart in its first week of release and continued to appear on the Top Ten chart throughout its weekly episode drops. To date, Mum Says has been downloaded more than 6 million times.[14]
Rosie's current podcast, Just The Gist, also produced by PodcastOne, rose to number one on the Apple Podcast chart as soon as it was announced in 2019, and has continued to chart highly ever since.
Personal life
In December 2016, Waterland came out publicly as bisexual.[15]
On 25 March 2019 she featured in ABC TV's Australian Story, along with her sisters and mother.[16]
References
- ^ [1][dead link ]
- ^ Waterland, Rosie (26 March 2018). "The Anti-Cool Girl :HarperCollins Australia". Harpercollins.com.au. Retrieved 9 November 2019.
- ^ "Australian Book Industry Awards". ABIA.
- ^ "Jane Caro & Rosie Waterland review: Two fine and very different memoirs". Smh.com.au. 8 January 2016. Retrieved 9 November 2019.
- ^ "Every Lie I've Ever Told by Rosie Waterland". www.readings.com.au. Retrieved 17 November 2018.
- ^ "HarperCollins Publishers to publish two novels from bestselling author, columnist and comedian Rosie Waterland". HarperCollins Australia. Retrieved 9 November 2019.
- ^ Scott, Maggie (2015). Mothers and Others. Sydney, Australia: Pan Macmillan. pp. 95–102. ISBN 978-1-74353-543-1.
- ^ Trenoweth, Samantha (2016). Better Than Sex: women write about sex + romance in the digital age. Richmond, Victoria: Hardie Grant. pp. 81–86. ISBN 978-174379137-0.
- ^ Ryan, Luke (2016). Best Australian Comedy Writing. South Melbourne, Victoria: Affirm Press. pp. 13–22. ISBN 978-1-925475-26-5.
- ^ Swinn, Louise (2019). Choice Words - A collection of writing about abortion. Crow's Nest, NSW: Allen & Unwin. pp. 205–220. ISBN 978-1-76087-522-0.
- ^ a b c Waterl, Rosie. "Rosie Waterland". Rosie Waterland. Retrieved 9 November 2019.
- ^ "Author & Comedian Rosie Waterland Announces 'Crazy Lady' National Tour". oztix.com.au. Retrieved 28 March 2019.
- ^ ACRAs, Australian Commercial Radio Awards (October 2018). "2018 ACRA Winners". Commercial Radio.com.
- ^ "Mum Says My Memoir Is A Lie". Rosie Waterland. 26 July 2014. Retrieved 9 November 2019.
- ^ "Rosie Waterland bisexual: Rosie comes out via emotional Facebook post". Mamamia.com.au. 27 December 2016. Retrieved 9 November 2019.
- ^ Gorman, Vanessa; Barrett, Rosanne (25 March 2019). "'I just want to laugh every day': Why Rosie Waterland is moving on from her traumatic past". ABC News.
- 1986 births
- Australian comedy writers
- Living people
- Bisexual actresses
- LGBT actors from Australia
- Bisexual comedians
- LGBT writers from Australia
- 21st-century Australian non-fiction writers
- 21st-century Australian women writers
- Australian television writers
- Australian women television writers
- 21st-century Australian screenwriters