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Dennis Watkins (playwright)

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Dennis Watkins
Other namesLamont Cranston

Dennis Watkins is an Australian playwright, producer and performer.

Watkins used the stage name Lamont Cranston[1] who was also a character he played in some of his productions.[2][3] He wrote or co-wrote Newton Newton,[1] Stalin - The Musical,[4] The Iceberg Cometh,[5] Dingo Girl, Beach Blanket Tempest,[6] Entertainment This Week Salutes The Worst of Lamont Cranston, Ho Ho Ho It's Lamont Cranston,[2] Pearls Before Swine,[3][7] Burger Brain - The Fast Food Musical,[8] and The Eighth Wonder.[9] He was the lead singer of the band Men of Harlech[10] and brought Theatre Sports to Australia and appeared as judge when it was made into a television series.[11][12]

Watkins worked for the ABC as their commissioning editor for comedy,[13][14] was the artistic director of the Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras,[15] was a board member of Company B and an associate director at the Sydney Theatre Company.[16]

References

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  1. ^ a b Brooks, Geraldine (24 April 1982), "Six who heard a different drummer", The Sydney Morning Herald
  2. ^ a b Pollak, Alex (7 December 1984), "Cranston is so bad, he's terrible!", The Sydney Morning Herald
  3. ^ a b Schembri, Jim (18 July 1986), "Days of Swine poseurs", The Age
  4. ^ "Stalin The Musical", Tharunka, 3 March 1980
  5. ^ Courcier, Bill (24 March 1981), "Ups and downs of the idiotic", The Sydney Morning Herald
  6. ^ Healey, Ken (23 September 1984). "Shakespearean surf-rock musical unlike anything seen in Canberra". The Canberra Times. p. 10. Retrieved 25 November 2024 – via National Library of Australia.
  7. ^ Stapleton, John (16 May 1986), "Pearl from a heart of darkness", The Sydney Morning Herald
  8. ^ Evans, Bob (29 September 1988), "Fast food frolics", The Sydney Morning Herald
  9. ^ Morrison, Peter (20 October 1995), "Australia's coming of age?", The Australian Jewish News
  10. ^ Moore, Sandra (17 June 1981), "Men of Harlech's right royal hit", The Australian Women's Weekly
  11. ^ Evans, Bob (30 January 1986), "Theatre sports: gladiatorial contests without the blood", The Sydney Morning Herald
  12. ^ Visontay, Michael (14 January 1987), "The TV cheque book whirligig", The Sydney Morning Herald
  13. ^ Squires, Tony (30 September 1996), "A laughing matter", The Sydney Morning Herald
  14. ^ Usher, Robin (28 January 1998), "Artsbeat", The Age
  15. ^ Cochrane, Peter (13 December 1995), "We're out, proud and loud", The Sydney Morning Herald
  16. ^ Cosic, Miriam (16 September 1995), "Watkins the wonder boy", The Sydney Morning Herald
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