AustLit logo

AustLit

Robert Kronk Robert Kronk i(A83991 works by)
Born: Established: 1977 Bundaberg, Bundaberg area, Maryborough - Rockhampton area, Queensland, ;
Gender: Male
The material on this page is available to AustLit subscribers. If you are a subscriber or are from a subscribing organisation, please log in to gain full access. To explore options for subscribing to this unique teaching, research, and publishing resource for Australian culture and storytelling, please contact us or find out more.

BiographyHistory

'Robert Kronk was born in Bundaberg in 1977; he studied drama at Queensland University of Technology. Robert is a co-founder and director of deBASE Productions and was the director of programming and director of operations at Metro Arts. He has worked extensively in the independent theatre sector and as a director and performer.' (Source:http://australianplays.org/playwright/PL-34)

Most Referenced Works

Awards for Works

y separately published work icon The Longest Minute 2018 13739187 2018 single work drama

'Where were you the night of the 2015 NRL Grand Final? The night when long-time underdogs the North Queensland Cowboys won in an all-QLD nail-biter that changed the game, and the state, forever. For one family of Cowboys diehards, their whole lives have led up to this moment.

'Jess was born on the night of the North Queensland Cowboys’ first game in Townsville. Daughter of Foley Shield legend Frank ‘Black Flash’ Wright, she grew up as a footy fanatic with big dreams, silky skills and boundless ambition to play. But as a girl in a male-dominated sport, she faces more than her fair share of knockbacks, just like the luckless Cowboys. Despite their relentless string of losses, Jess still dares to believe in her team, and herself.'

Source: Queensland Theatre Company.

2018 nominated Matilda Awards Best Director

for Bridget Boyle.

2018 joint winner Matilda Awards Best Mainstage Production
y separately published work icon We That Are Left 2015 10274181 2015 single work drama

'We That Are Left is a journey into the lives of local people, from Pittsworth, Queensland, during the years of World War I. It is told from the perspective of Rosie Sticklen, a young girl, frustrated that she can’t join up to fight with her brothers, Henry and Jo, and Dad, Alf. She and her mother Abby bitterly disagree about whether to adapt to their new situation. Abby is content to sing with the choir, led by the indomitable, domineering Mrs Bedford, and to clean the house mindlessly, not even opening the men’s letters, in denial of being left behind, in a world of stopped time; Rosie, however, wants to farm the land if she can’t go with the men.

'Rosie’s frustrations at home and desire to help turn her to nursing and head to France to tend the troops. Rosie knows she must return to the farm, and her mother to face life which will never be the same again. Rosie must make her own decisions about choosing the life her family want for her and a life that she wants for herself with this new confidence brought about from the war.

'The Sticklen family is at the heart of the play; but We That Are Left is a title which encompasses both them and their descendants in our modern times. Rosie’s Great-Granddaughter, Emma, is threaded through the story; she has inherited the farm, and, expecting her first child, seeks to understand the baby’s legacy. The play ends with Emma’s discovery that, for her, the connection to the Anzacs and to those left behind lies within our shared humanity, within people, as long as we remember.'

Source: USQ ArtsWorx (http://artsworx.usq.edu.au/events/we-that-are-left/).

2016 shortlisted AWGIE Awards Community Theatre Award
y separately published work icon Ithaca Road Brisbane : Playlab , 2011 Z1820296 2011 single work drama children's 'Tilly and Ben are twins about to leave their remote property to go to boarding school in town. Tilly is eagerly anticipating a new life with new friends and possibilities, while Ben isn't so sure ... Together, they create an extraordinary imaginative world, where worst nightmares and greatest dreams are vividly enacted, and the ghosts of the past return to help shed light on the future. A play about young people in transition - from primary to high school, from small community to big town, from home to boarding school - Ithaca Road unpacks fears of change and speaks to strategies for resilience.' (Publisher's website)
2011 nominated AWGIE Awards Community Theatre Award Community & Youth Theatre
Last amended 20 Oct 2009 11:26:28
Other mentions of "" in AustLit:
    X