Jump to content

Duncan Sarkies

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Duncan Sarkies
Sarkies in 2024
BornNew Zealand
MediumStand-up, screenwriter, playwright, novelist
NationalityNew Zealand
Notable works and rolesTwo Little Boys (novel)
Two Little Boys (film)

Duncan Sarkies is a New Zealand screenwriter, playwright, novelist, stand-up comic and short story writer.

Sarkies grew up in the South Island city of Dunedin and is the brother of Robert Sarkies a New Zealand film director who is also a scriptwriter. Sarkies is best known for writing Scarfies, a black comedy-crime thriller about university students in Dunedin who discover a vast crop of marijuana in a house they are squatting in. He wrote New Fans, the tenth episode of the comedy series Flight of the Conchords.

Sarkies debut novel Two Little Boys was published in March 2008, and is being made into a film (also called Two Little Boys) during 2011.[1]

Awards

[edit]

Sarkies was awarded the Sunday Star Times Bruce Mason Playwriting Award in 1994.[2] In 1995, he won the Chapman Tripp Theatre Award for Best New Zealand Play for his 1994 work Saving Grace. In 1998 he was awarded the Louis Johnson New Writers Bursary. His book of short stories Stray Thoughts and Nose Bleeds won the Montana New Zealand's Hubert Church NZSA Best First Book of Fiction Award in 2000.

Sarkies' works

[edit]

Plays

[edit]
  • The Ceramic Camel (1993)
  • Lovepuke (1993)*
  • Saving Grace (1994)
  • Snooze (1997)
  • Twelve (1997)
  • Blue Vein (1997)
  • Special (1997)
  • Bystander (1998)

*Published in Eleven Young Playwrights (1994)

Podcasts

The Mysterious secrets of Uncle Berties Botanarium

Novels

[edit]

Films

[edit]

Television

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Two Little Boys Archived 29 July 2012 at the Wayback Machine, Southland Institute of Technology.
  2. ^ "Bruce Mason Playwriting Award". teara.govt.nz. Archived from the original on 14 June 2015. Retrieved 15 August 2020.
[edit]