STEVE PIRIE WINS THE QUEENSLAND PREMIER’S DRAMA AWARD WITH ‘RETURN TO THE DIRT’

From over 220 entries Brisbane-based, Toowoomba born playwright STEVE PIRIE has won the biggest playwriting award in the country, with his play RETURN TO THE DIRT. The playwright is a graduate of the University of Queensland ‘s Bachelor of Creative Arts degree majoring in theatre. The work will feature in Queensland Theatre Company’s 2021 season.

RETURN TO THE DIRT is a gently humorous meditation on what it means to die in the  21st century and what a final act of love can do for our healing.

Pirie’s work was selected ahead of fellow finalists Anna Loren for Comfort and Maddie Nixon for her work Binnavale. Delivered through Queensland Theatre, the Queensland Premiere’s Drama Award (QPDA) is a prestigious and important award for Australian theatre.  

Set in Toowoomba, RETURN TO THE DIRT introduces you to Steve, a struggling artist who — after a long stint of unemployment — finds work as a funeral director. The play, using Gen-Y wit and pop-culture homage, takes you through the realms of the dead and behind the closed doors of the Australian funeral industry. The play is a celebration of finding your place in the world, the power of personal redemption and humility at the end of all things.

”Steve Pirie’s play is a revelation,” said Artistic Director Lee Lewis, who was part of the judging panel for the awards. “It is one of the best new Australian plays I have read in the last five years. He has done what all great writers do… bravely transform personal experience into story so that we are willing to imagine into the scariest of places. This play is emotionally rich, humane, startlingly funny, spiritually sophisticated and deeply honest.

“In these strange and difficult times this is the kind of writing we need to inspire us. I have not been so deeply moved by a play in years. Our playwrights are our national treasures and great stories are hived in every corner of this great country – this is a story set in Toowoomba which will speak to the world about how we, as humans, value a life.  I can’t wait to share it with our audience on the Queensland Theatre stage next year”.

“The QPDA is the largest playwriting award in the country. The significance of guaranteeing a production to the winning play cannot be overstated. For every playwright in the country, the QPDA offers a career-changing opportunity. Working with the Queensland Government to shine a huge light on the extraordinary writing talent we have in this country is both inspiring and exciting”, Lewis said.

Steve Pirie’s play was inspired by his real experiences working in a funeral home in 2014. He said, “I hope this play is a stepping-stone to one of the most important conversations you need to have.”

The QPDA was launched in 2002, and through it, Queensland Theatre has developed 31 new Australian plays, employed over 220 actors, writers and directors, and fostered audiences of more than 34,500 to engage with new theatre works.

Previous winning works include The Holidays by David Megarrity (2018–19), Rice by Michele Lee (2016–17), Oedipus Doesn’t Live Here Anymore by Daniel Evans (2014–15), Trollop by Maxine Mellor (2012–13) and Fractions by Marcel Dorney (2010–11).

Judges for the 2020–21 Awards included  Ms Christine Castley, Deputy Director-General in the Department of the Premier and Cabinet; Ms Lee Lewis, Artistic Director of Queensland Theatre; Ms Nadine McDonald-Dowd, Executive Producer, Queensland Performing Arts Centre; and Ms Jennifer Medway, Literary Associate, Melbourne Theatre Company.

The Queensland Premier’s Drama Award is an initiative of Queensland Theatre with the support of the Queensland Government.

Featured image – Anna Loren, Steve Pirie and Maddie Nixon Photo Glenn Hunt