Dickon Oxenburgh and Andrew Ross
Dickon (Richard P.) Oxenburgh graduated from the Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts in 1984. For the past twenty years he has worked as a writer, teacher, dramaturg and actor. Dickon has collaborated with Andrew Ross on a number of adaptations for the stage: three of Randolph Stow’s novels: Tourmaline, The Merry-Go-Round in the Sea and the yet-to-be-produced To The Islands; and the novel The Year of Living Dangerously by Christopher J. Koch, all produced by the Black Swan Theatre Company and the Festival of Perth (now PIAF). He dedicates this work to his daughters Eliza and Olivia.
Andrew Ross has been Director of La Boite Theatre in Brisbane, the Melbourne University Theatre Department and Black Swan Theatre which he founded in 1991. He is currently Director of Brisbane Powerhouse. He has directed premieres of a number of significant Western Australian plays including The Dreamers, No Sugar and Barungin by Jack Davis, Meekatharra by Lois Akimovich, Sister girl by Sally Morgan, Bran Nue Dae by Jimmy Chi and Kuckles, Corrugation Road by Jimmy Chi and Plainsong by David Britton. He has directed adaptations of Midnite, Tourmaline and The Merry-Go-Round in the Sea by Randolph Stow. He has taught and directed at the Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts and Victorian College for the Arts. His productions have toured to the UK and Canada and have won a number of awards including a Melbourne Greenroom Award and the Age Melbourne Critics’ Award for Best Production.