Vanessa Badham (born 1974) is an Australian writer and activist. A playwright and novelist, she writes dramas and comedies. She is a regular columnist for the Guardian Australia website.
Early life and education
Vanessa Badham was born in Sydney in 1974.[2] Her parents worked in the New South Wales gaming and track industry, with her father eventually working as a manager in the registered club industry.[3]
She studied creative writing and performance at the University of Wollongong,[1] graduating with Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Creative Arts (Honours) degrees.[4] At university, Badham won the Philip Larkin Poetry Prize in 1997, and the Des Davis Drama Prize and Comedy Prize in 2000.[5] In 2001, she went on an exchange with the University of Sheffield in the UK to study English literature.[6]
At the University of Wollongong she was drawn into involvement in student politics and left-wing activism,[6] and she was elected editor of the Student Representative Council newspaper, Tertangala. She worked with the Student Union as Media Officer and Women's Officer, and sat on the Academic Senate and University Internationalisation Committee.[7] While a student, she was associated with anarchist and anarcho-syndicalist causes; more recently, she describes her politics as democratic socialist.[8][9]
In 1999 Badham won the Naked Theatre Company's first "Write Now!" play competition and with it a production of her winning play, The Wilderness of Mirrors, at the Sydney Theatre Company's Wharf studio. About secret service infiltration of an activist organisation, the play brought her to public attention and she began to stage more work across Australia.[10]
In 2001, she relocated to the United Kingdom.[citation needed] Her work was discovered by the Crucible Theatre in Sheffield, who staged a collaborative production of Kitchen with Nabokov Theatre in 2001. A play about marriage as a metaphor for capitalism, it then toured to the 2002 Edinburgh Festival Fringe,[11] Her 2003 play Camarilla was a critical success at the 2003 Edinburgh Festival Fringe, cementing Badham's international reputation as a proponent of radical political theatre.[12]
In 2009 it was announced that Badham had been signed for a three-book deal by Pan Macmillan Australia.[24] Her first book, Burnt Snow, was released in September 2010. In November 2021 she released her debut non-fiction book with Australian independent publisher Hardie Grant Books, Qanon and On.[25]
Media career
In 2013 Badham began publishing political commentary and arts criticism for the Guardian Australia website.[26]
^Robert Reid Making the improbable inevitable: A history of the Malthouse Theatre. Reid, Robert. Australasian Drama Studies; Melbourne, Vic. (April 2012) 170–184.