Michael Gurr
Michael Gurr (29 October 1961 – 2 May 2017) was an Australian playwright, author, speech writer and screenwriter.
Career
Gurr studied at National Theatre Drama School (NTDS) in St Kilda, Victoria, and while there wrote a number of short plays which were sent to Ray Lawler, then Literary Advisor to the Melbourne Theatre Company (MTC). In 1982 Gurr was invited to be Writer in Residence at the MTC and it was there that his first plays were produced.[1]
His best-known plays include Crazy Brave and Sex Diary of an Infidel.
He worked as a speechwriter for a number of years for John Brumby and Steve Bracks, both of whom became Labor Premiers of Victoria.[2][3]
He died on 2 May 2017. He is survived by his four siblings and his partner Brandon Hardie Jones.[4][5]
Bibliography
Autobiography
- Days Like These (2006)
Drama
- A Pair of Claws (1983)
- Magnetic North (1983)
- Imitation Real (1983)
- Dead to the World (1986)
- Worlds Apart (1987)
- What You Wanted (1988)
- This and That (1988)
- These Days (1988)
- The Hundred Year Ambush (1990)
- Victoria Bitter (1990)
- Sex Diary of an Infidel (1991)
- Desire Lines (1992)
- Underwear, Perfume and Crash Helmet (1994)
- Jerusalem (1996)
- Anna (1998)
- Shark Finn Soup (1998)
- Crazy Brave (2000)
- The Simple Truth (2002)
- Something to Declare (2003)
- Julia 3 (2004)
- Our Beautiful Daughter (2008)
- Mercy (2009)
- Test Pilot (2010)
Poetry
- Four Poems (1982)
Television
- Departure (1986) – an adaptation of his radio play A Pair of Claws (1983)[6]
- WTF – With Tim Ferguson (2010)[7]
References
- ^ Austlit – Michael Gurr
- ^ "The Premier and the playwright", The Age, 27 August 2006, accessed 25 June 2013
- ^ Biography at ABC
- ^ 'Genius' playwright and speechwriter Michael Gurr dies aged 55
- ^ Michael Gurr, Days Like These, p. 3. Retrieved 18 April 2014
- ^ IMDB – Departure (1986)
- ^ With Tim Ferguson – About the Show
External links
- 1961 births
- 2017 deaths
- Australian screenwriters
- Gay writers
- LGBT writers from Australia
- Australian male dramatists and playwrights
- Male screenwriters
- 20th-century Australian dramatists and playwrights
- 21st-century Australian dramatists and playwrights
- 20th-century Australian male writers
- 21st-century Australian male writers