Louis Nowra (b. 1950), writer, grew up in dire family circumstances on a housing commission estate in Melbourne. Through his uncle, who was a stage manager for JC Williamson, he developed an interest in theatre. In 1973, having abandoned his literary studies at La Trobe University, he began his career as a playwright with several pieces for the avant- garde Melbourne theatre company La Mama. In the mid-70s he changed his name and moved to Sydney, where John Bell directed his play
Inner Voices at the Nimrod Theatre in 1977, and Rex Cramphorn his
Visions in a converted cinema near Hyde Park in 1978. Over the 1980s he was resident dramatist with the State Theatre Company of South Australia, wrote
The Golden Age(1985), and adapted Xavier Herbert’s
Capricornia for the Belvoir Theatre (1988). His first semi-autobiographical play,
Summer of the Aliens (1992), was followed immediately by his second,
Così (which won the New South Wales Premier’s Literary Prize) and, much later, a third,
This Much is True (2017). Along with dozens of plays including
Radiance (1993) and the ‘Boyce trilogy’ of 2004-2006 he has brought forth the memoir
The Twelfth of Never (2000), which won the
Courier-Mail Book of the Year Award, and the novel
Ice (2009) which was shortlisted for the Miles Franklin Award. He was a member of the writing team for the acclaimed SBS TV series,
First Australians, which took out several major writing awards in 2009. His non-fiction writing includes the long essay
Bad Dreaming (2007),
Kings Cross: A biography (2013) and
Woolloomooloo: A biography (2017).
Updated 2018