Currency Press

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Currency Press Pty Ltd
The Performing Arts Publisher
Slogan Sharing Australian stories since 1971
Currency Press is Australia's oldest, independently owned performing arts publisher.
Website currency.com.au

Currency Press is Australia's only specialist performing arts publisher and its oldest independent publisher still active. Their list includes plays and screenplays, professional handbooks, biographies, cultural histories, critical studies and reference works.

Currency Press was founded by Katharine Brisbane, then national theatre critic for The Australian newspaper, and her husband Philip Parsons, a lecturer in Drama at the University of New South Wales.[1] After Philip’s death in 1993, Katharine remained at the helm of the company until she retired as Publisher in December 2001 in order to devote her energies to Currency House, a non-profit association dedicated to the Australian performing arts.[2]

In 2011, Currency Press received the Dorothy Crawford Award for Outstanding Contribution to the Profession at the AWGIE Awards.[3]

Notable Titles

Plays

  • Away by Michael Gow (1986) - winner of the 1986 New South Wales Premier's Literary Award - Play Award
  • Blackrock by Nick Enright - It’s Toby Ackland’s birthday party down near the surf club — and that means grog, drugs and fun; by the morning a young girl is dead — raped and bashed with a rock
  • The Chapel Perilous by Dorothy Hewett - depicts the painful and sometimes farcical life of a defiant young poet, Sally Banner
  • The Club by David Williamson - a play set behind the scenes of a football club; a head-on tackle of brawn versus bureaucracy
  • Così by Louis Nowra - winner of the 1992 New South Wales Premier’s Literary Award - Play Award
  • Dead Heart by Nick Parsons - winner of the 1994 Australian Human Rights Award, the 1993 NSW State Premier's Literary Award - Play Award and the 1993 AWGIE Award for Drama
  • Don's Party by David Williamson - Williamson's brilliant satire examines a society on the threshold of emerging from a generation of comfortable, conservative political and social values
  • Ham Funeral, The by Patrick White - an early expressionist drama which explores the spiritual forces that propel us forward
  • Hotel Sorrento by Hannie Rayson (1990) - winner of the 1990 AWGIE Award - Stage Award, 1990 NSW Premier’s Literary Award for Drama and the 1990 Green Room Award for Best Play
  • Macquarie by Alex Buzo - traces the decline of Governor Lachlan Macquarie’s authority in the infant colony of New South Wales; it was the first play published by Currency Press
  • No Sugar by Jack Davis - winner of the 1992 Kate Challis RAKA Award for Drama and the 1987 WA Premier's Book Awards - Special Award
  • Norm and Ahmed by Alex Buzo creates an image of race prejudice as a profoundly irrational force in the behaviour of ordinary Australians
  • The Removalists by David Williamson - winner of the 1972 AWGIE Award - Best Stage Play and Best Script, as well as the Evening Standard Award for Most Promising Playwright
  • Season at Sarsaparilla, The by Patrick White - neighbours are held by their environment, waiting with determination, but little expectation, for the inevitable cycle of birth, copulation and death
  • Speaking in Tongues by Andrew Bovell (1996) - winner of the 1997 AWGIE Award - Stage Award; this is the play upon which Lantana was based
  • Stolen by Jane Harrison - this tender and moving story brought the tragic history of the Stolen Generations to the Australian stage; winner of the 2002 Kate Challis RAKA Award
  • The Time is Not Yet Ripe by Louis Esson - a political comedy from 1912 in which the forces of socialism, feminism and conservatism fight out an election and an engagement to marry

Screenplays

  • Blue Murder by Ian David - a powerful and frightening story about police corruption and Sydney’s underworld
  • Chopper by Andrew Dominik - goes inside the mind of Mark Brandon ‘Chopper’ Read, one of Australia’s most notorious criminals
  • Muriel's Wedding by P. J. Hogan - Muriel, an unhappy young woman in dismal surroundings, sets out to overcome obstacles such as her family, her joblessness, and her obsession with 70s glam rockers ABBA
  • Rabbit Proof Fence by Christine Olsen - three Aboriginal girls are forcibly removed from their outback families in 1931 to be trained as domestic servants as part of official government policy

References

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External links