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New Generation Awards
Jo Randerson
Jo Randerson
Nabullah
Writer/Actor
  • Jo Randerson
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Related links

NZ Book Council;
Jo Randerson;
Barbarian Productions

Milestones
  • 1973
    born Auckland
  • 1991-93
    majored in Theatre and Film Victoria University of Wellington
  • 1995
    co-founded the theatre group 'Trouble'
  • 1996
    Phoebe Maunsell Award for Artists Most Original Production, Black Monk, Chapman Tripp Awards
  • 1997
    Fold won the Bruce Mason Award
    Prize for Best Portfolio, Victoria University Creative Writing Course;
    Most Original Production, Mouth, Chapman Tripp Awards
  • 1998
    Bleach performed at NZ Fringe, Edinburgh and the Tramway Festivals;
    The Knot published, Wedge Press
  • 2000
    The Spit Children published, VUP
  • 2001
    Wellington Fringe Best Comedy
    Robert Burns Fellow, Dunedin
    Founded Barbarian Productions
  • 2002
    Wellington Fringe Best Comedy, Creative NZ/Department of Conservation Wild Creations Residency
  • 2003
    Winston Churchill Fellow (Russia)
  • 2003
    Melbourne Fringe Best Comedy Award
  • 2004
    Melbourne Comedy Festival Golden Gibbo Award
    The Keys to Hell published, Victoria University Press; Premiere of All Natural, Brussels, Company Kate McIntosh, writer
  • 2005
    Nominee Billy T James Comedy Award
  • 2006
    Most Original Concept, Wellington Fringe, Absolutely Positively Walking; Premiere of Hair From the Throat, devisor/performer, Paris, with company Kate McIntosh
  • 2007
    Curated My House Surrounded By A Thousand Suns exhibition
    Premiere of Loose Promise, Berlin, company Kate McIntosh, writer
  • 2008
    Arts Foundation New Generation Award
  • 2009
    Through the Door (illustrated by Seraphine Pick) published, Wedge Press;
    Good Night – The End premieres at Downstage Theatre

Biography

Jo Randerson - Writer/Actor
Nabullah

'As a writer, it is not cold hard, logical fact-based truth thatI seek, but rather the more elusive kind: deep, universal truth thatcannot be logically understood but can only be felt as an internal andinexplicable stirring of the soul.'


Jo was born in Auckland to father Richard Randerson, a priest of the Anglican Church, and Jackie Randerson, a teacher, mother and guidance counsellor. The family (with older sister Rebecca and younger brother Jeremy) moved to Wellington in 1977.  Jo studied at Wellington Girls College, and then went on to Victoria University of Wellington to major in English, Theatre and Film.

She became involved as a writer, director and performer in theatre productions for the University’s Student Drama Club. At the same time she also wrote for and performed at BATS Theatre, Wellington, and made television appearances as a stand-up comedian. After graduating, she spent a year in Australia working at an old people’s rest home and as a church youth worker before co-founding the theatre group ‘Trouble’ on her return in 1995 with Jo Smith, Jason Whyte, Andrew Foster and others.

Trouble made several award-winning shows: The Girl Who Died, Black Monk, Mouth, The Lead Wait and Bleach (a co-production with Boilerhouse theatre, Scotland). Bleach was part of the 1998 New Zealand Fringe Festival and went to the Edinburgh Festival and the Tramway Festival of site-specific theatre in Glasgow. Jo participated in Bill Manhire's creative writing course at Victoria University in 1997 where she was awarded the Prize for Best Portfolio. That year she also received the Bruce Mason Award after her first play Fold (part of the Young and Hungry season at BATS).

Jo then founded her own theatre company, Barbarian Productions, whose award-winning shows – performed and created with brother Jeremy, Jackie van Beek, Mel Hamilton and Gentiane Lupi - have played in Melbourne, Prague, Edinburgh, Adelaide, Norway and Brisbane as well as around New Zealand. In 2005 she befriended the Circus Ronaldo (Belgium) and apprenticed herself to Danny Ronaldo and Karel Creemers, learning an outsider style of clown and commedia dell’arte. Jo was then offered a position as a writer and devisor with Company Kate McIntosh of Brussels, where she lived and worked in 2006.

Her writing has twice been shortlisted for the International Institute of Modern Letters Prize and has earned her the following writing fellowships: Robert Burns Fellow (Dunedin), Winston Churchill Fellow  (Russia) and the Creative New Zealand/Department of Conservation Wild Creations Residency at Cape Kidnappers She was also a Billy T James Comedy Award Nominee in 2005.

Jo’s writing includes The Knot and Through the Door, (Wedge Press), and The Spit Children and The Keys to Hell (VUP). Jo has been involved in numerous theatre collaborations including The Sojourns of Boy with inaugural Laureate Briar Grace-Smith, and halo with Douglas Wright. Her most recent projects have been as curator of My House Surrounded By A Thousand Suns, an exhibition of artists with experience of mental illness and intellectual disability at The New Dowse in 2008, and the premiere of her new play Good Night - The End at Downstage Theatre in Wellington - the tale of three Grim Reapers pondering their existence.

Jo lives in Wellington with her husband Thomas LaHood and son Geronimo.


 Jo Randerson was interviewed by broadcaster Kim Hill
at the 2008 New Generation Awards held in Christchurch.
Image by Ken Baker

 

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