Tuesday, 13 March 2012

The Nick Darke Award 2012

This year the School of Media and Performance at University College Falmouth will again be hosting and funding the annual Nick Darke Award. The idea of the Award was initially conceived by his wife, artist and film maker Jane Darke, after Nick Darke's death in 2005. The Award aims to celebrate the best writing for screen, stage, and radio, and this year the winner has the chance to take away £6000 - double what has been offered in previous years.

Every year there is a theme, and this year entrants must pursue an environmental theme, which can be broadly interpreted, and come up with one of the following:
  • Screenplay
  • Stage Play
  • Radio Play
  • Documentary Film
Nick Darke himself wrote in several formats but is best known as a playwrite. At the Archive and Special Collections Service we are privileged to hold the manuscript papers of Nick Darke. The Collection contains preparatory work and scripts for his 30 plays, along with publicity, promotional material, photographs and correspondence.  Nick's work for television, film and radio is also well represented.  The Collection is broad in its appeal, documenting Nick's interest in environmental issues, music, Cornish history and culture, as well as his recovery from a stroke in 2001 and events leading up to his untimely death in 2005.

This year's judges include some pretty prestigious names: Jeremy Howe, Drama Commissioning Editor for Radio 4; Molly Dineen, a BAFTA and Royal Television Society award-winning UK television documentary director, cinematographer and producer; Roger Mitchell, the theatre, television and film director who directed Notting Hill; and Sebastian Born, the Associate Director (Literary) of the National Theatre London.

The Award is a fantastic opportunity for young writers. Our Nick Darke Collection is also a great resource for students wanting to learn about the writing process, for all of the formats mentioned above.

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