Thomas Duncan-Watt | |
---|---|
Born |
Sydney, Australia |
Nationality | Australian |
Occupation(s) | Screenwriter, playwright |
Years active | 2012−present |
Known for |
Dennis & Gnasher Pirate Express Winston Steinburger & Sir Dudley Ding-Dong Beat Bugs Alien TV Space Nova Home and Away |
Awards |
Australian Screenwriters Guild Award John Hinde Award for Excellence in Science Fiction Writing |
Website |
www |
Thomas Duncan-Watt is an Australian screenwriter and playwright. [1] He has won three AWGIE Awards [2] [3] [4] for his screenplays from five nominations. [5] [6] [7] His work on UK series Dennis & Gnasher earned the series its first BAFTA nomination. [8] [9] [10] In 2017, he was one of the mentors at the Arts/Screen Hackathon, along with Sarah Houbolt and others, which was organized by Australia Council for the Arts. [11] In 2021, he won the John Hinde Award for Excellence in Science Fiction Writing for his work on the series Space Nova. [12] In 2022 his original series The Eerie Chapters of Chhaya was announced as the winner of the Kindred co-production initiative between the ABC and CBC networks. [13]
Duncan-Watt began his career as a writer on Australian comedy series Good News Week. [14] His series credits include Dennis & Gnasher, Pirate Express, Winston Steinburger & Sir Dudley Ding-Dong, [15] Beat Bugs, Alien TV. In 2018, Duncan-Watt was brought on as one of the writers on sci-fi action series Space Nova, [16] for which he also wrote the pilot. [17] The series was subsequently nominated for two AWGIE Awards, with Duncan-Watt winning the award for his episode Ghost Station. In 2019, Duncan-Watt, and collaborator, Suren Perera won Best in Show [18] [19] at the Asian Animation Summit in Seoul for their 'original concept', Escape from Pirate Asylum. [20] [21] Duncan-Watt and Perera were also the first international winners of the Ottawa Animation Festival’s ‘Pitch THIS’ competition, for their original series, Owl & Cloud. [22] [23] [24]
Duncan-Watt is the co-creator of two comedy plays, Thank You For Being a Friend [25] [26] and That Golden Girls Show: A Puppet Parody, [27] [28] both of which use Muppets-style puppets to parody the 1980s television series The Golden Girls. [29] Thank You For Being a Friend toured Canada, where it won ‘Best Independent Theatre Production’ at the Broadway World Awards. [30] That Golden Girls Show: A Puppet Parody debuted in 2016 Off-Broadway. The show commenced a US tour in 2019. [31] [32]
In 2016, Duncan-Watt, with the producers of the show Thank You For Being a Friend, Neil Gooding and Matthew Henderson, sued long-term collaborator Jonathan Rockefeller and his companies in New York state court over his puppet parody "That Golden Girls Show!"; alleged breaches of the license agreement, fraud, tortious interference with contract, defamation, other claims. [33] The complaint by Duncan-Watt and his producers claimed that Rockefeller "stole the show"; deprived them of royalties; and harassed them. [34] The suit was only partially dismissed in 2018 with presiding Judge Justice Andrea Masley allowing several complaints against Rockefeller to proceed. [33]
In a separate case in Australia filed in 2017, Rockefeller and his company sued Duncan-Watt for defamation. In 2020, the Federal Court of Australia dismissed Rockefeller's defamation claims. [35] [36] In his ruling, Justice Thomas Thawley concluded that the Gooding's post was not defamatory because it was "substantially true" that Rockefeller had stolen the show from Duncan-Watt. [35] [37] [38]
Year | Award | By | For | Nomination
/Won |
---|---|---|---|---|
2014 | British Academy Film Awards | The British Academy of Film and Television Arts | Dennis & Gnasher | Nominated |
2015 | AWGIE Awards | Australian Writers' Guild | Pirate Express | Nominated |
2017 | AWGIE Award for Best Screenplay | Australian Writers' Guild | Winston Steinburger & Sir Dudley Ding-Dong | Nominated |
2017 | AWGIE Award for Best Screenplay, C- Classification | Australian Writers' Guild | The Deep | Won |
2018 | British Academy Film Awards | The British Academy of Film and Television Arts | The Deep | Nominated |
2019 | AWGIE Award for Best Screenplay, Animation | Australian Writers' Guild | Beat Bugs | Won |
2020 | AWGIE Award for Best Screenplay, Animation | Australian Writers' Guild | Space Nova | Won |
2021 | John Hinde Award for Excellence in Science Fiction Writing | Australian Writers' Guild | Space Nova (s1, e11, "Ghost Station") [39] | Won |
Thomas Duncan-Watt | |
---|---|
Born |
Sydney, Australia |
Nationality | Australian |
Occupation(s) | Screenwriter, playwright |
Years active | 2012−present |
Known for |
Dennis & Gnasher Pirate Express Winston Steinburger & Sir Dudley Ding-Dong Beat Bugs Alien TV Space Nova Home and Away |
Awards |
Australian Screenwriters Guild Award John Hinde Award for Excellence in Science Fiction Writing |
Website |
www |
Thomas Duncan-Watt is an Australian screenwriter and playwright. [1] He has won three AWGIE Awards [2] [3] [4] for his screenplays from five nominations. [5] [6] [7] His work on UK series Dennis & Gnasher earned the series its first BAFTA nomination. [8] [9] [10] In 2017, he was one of the mentors at the Arts/Screen Hackathon, along with Sarah Houbolt and others, which was organized by Australia Council for the Arts. [11] In 2021, he won the John Hinde Award for Excellence in Science Fiction Writing for his work on the series Space Nova. [12] In 2022 his original series The Eerie Chapters of Chhaya was announced as the winner of the Kindred co-production initiative between the ABC and CBC networks. [13]
Duncan-Watt began his career as a writer on Australian comedy series Good News Week. [14] His series credits include Dennis & Gnasher, Pirate Express, Winston Steinburger & Sir Dudley Ding-Dong, [15] Beat Bugs, Alien TV. In 2018, Duncan-Watt was brought on as one of the writers on sci-fi action series Space Nova, [16] for which he also wrote the pilot. [17] The series was subsequently nominated for two AWGIE Awards, with Duncan-Watt winning the award for his episode Ghost Station. In 2019, Duncan-Watt, and collaborator, Suren Perera won Best in Show [18] [19] at the Asian Animation Summit in Seoul for their 'original concept', Escape from Pirate Asylum. [20] [21] Duncan-Watt and Perera were also the first international winners of the Ottawa Animation Festival’s ‘Pitch THIS’ competition, for their original series, Owl & Cloud. [22] [23] [24]
Duncan-Watt is the co-creator of two comedy plays, Thank You For Being a Friend [25] [26] and That Golden Girls Show: A Puppet Parody, [27] [28] both of which use Muppets-style puppets to parody the 1980s television series The Golden Girls. [29] Thank You For Being a Friend toured Canada, where it won ‘Best Independent Theatre Production’ at the Broadway World Awards. [30] That Golden Girls Show: A Puppet Parody debuted in 2016 Off-Broadway. The show commenced a US tour in 2019. [31] [32]
In 2016, Duncan-Watt, with the producers of the show Thank You For Being a Friend, Neil Gooding and Matthew Henderson, sued long-term collaborator Jonathan Rockefeller and his companies in New York state court over his puppet parody "That Golden Girls Show!"; alleged breaches of the license agreement, fraud, tortious interference with contract, defamation, other claims. [33] The complaint by Duncan-Watt and his producers claimed that Rockefeller "stole the show"; deprived them of royalties; and harassed them. [34] The suit was only partially dismissed in 2018 with presiding Judge Justice Andrea Masley allowing several complaints against Rockefeller to proceed. [33]
In a separate case in Australia filed in 2017, Rockefeller and his company sued Duncan-Watt for defamation. In 2020, the Federal Court of Australia dismissed Rockefeller's defamation claims. [35] [36] In his ruling, Justice Thomas Thawley concluded that the Gooding's post was not defamatory because it was "substantially true" that Rockefeller had stolen the show from Duncan-Watt. [35] [37] [38]
Year | Award | By | For | Nomination
/Won |
---|---|---|---|---|
2014 | British Academy Film Awards | The British Academy of Film and Television Arts | Dennis & Gnasher | Nominated |
2015 | AWGIE Awards | Australian Writers' Guild | Pirate Express | Nominated |
2017 | AWGIE Award for Best Screenplay | Australian Writers' Guild | Winston Steinburger & Sir Dudley Ding-Dong | Nominated |
2017 | AWGIE Award for Best Screenplay, C- Classification | Australian Writers' Guild | The Deep | Won |
2018 | British Academy Film Awards | The British Academy of Film and Television Arts | The Deep | Nominated |
2019 | AWGIE Award for Best Screenplay, Animation | Australian Writers' Guild | Beat Bugs | Won |
2020 | AWGIE Award for Best Screenplay, Animation | Australian Writers' Guild | Space Nova | Won |
2021 | John Hinde Award for Excellence in Science Fiction Writing | Australian Writers' Guild | Space Nova (s1, e11, "Ghost Station") [39] | Won |