

RICHARD
TULLOCH
Richard Tulloch
is one of Australia's most prolific and popular writers of books,
plays, film and television for young audiences.
His television
series, which include 150 episodes of the phenomenal Bananas
in Pyjamas, as well as episodes of Playschool, The
Magic Mountain and stories for New McDonald's Farm,
have reached an audience of hundreds of millions around the world.
  
Of his 60
children's books, many of them published in a number of languages, Danny
in the Toybox, Being Bad for the Babysitter, Cocky
Colin and the Barry the Burglar series
were nominated by children for KOALA awards as their most popular
Australian books of all time. His popular series of Weird
Stuff novels for 9-14 year olds are published by Random
House.

His 50 plays
for young audiences have been performed in many countries. They
include Year 9 are Animals and Stella and the Moon
Man as well as stage adaptations of Oscar Wilde's The
Happy Prince, Hating Alison Ashley, and Paul Jennings'
stories in Unbeatable! His play Twinkle, Twinkle,
Little Fish, inspired by the books of Eric Carle, won two
Australian critics' awards (best children's theatre and best
visual theatre), played on Broadway, New York, in 2003 and toured
Asia in 2004.
In 1998 he
won his third Australian Writers' Guild AWGIE award for his play Body
and Soul and was also nominated in America for the prestigious
Hollywood ‘Annie' award for his screenplay for the animated
feature film FernGully II: The Magical Rescue.
Over the past
ten years he has performed his ever-changing show Story Man more
than a thousand times in theatres, libraries and schools in the
USA, Europe and Australia. He has performed in the Scottish International
Children's Festival in Edinburgh, the Vancouver International
Children's Festival, in international schools and teachers' conferences
in Europe, Asia, Africa and the Middle East and in many Australian
festivals.
He is a qualified
lawyer and teacher (B.A., Ll.B., Dip. Ed. Melbourne University),
and has taught numerous creative writing classes for children
and for adults at the Centre Europeen d'Ecriture Audiovisuelle
in Paris, the Australian Film, Television and Radio School, the
University of NSW, Thammasat University in Bangkok and Unitec
in New Zealand.
STORY
MAN - THE PERFORMANCE

In a delightful
hour of storytelling, Richard Tulloch uses mime, music, audience
participation and his unique storytelling style to bring his
original stories magically to life.
Each performance
involves a range of stories, selected from his popular children's
books, chosen to suit the age of the audience. The show can be
tailored for students of any age from 4-14. With older children
he tells more complex stories, discusses the writing and publishing
process and encourages students to develop their own writing.
‘One of the highlights of the (WA Children's) festival for me...thoroughly
absorbing, simple, enchanting storytelling.' - LOWDOWN MAGAZINE
‘A delightful
hour of story-telling...insights into the writing process complete
this worthwhile presentation' - NSW EDUCATION DEPT. GAZETTE
‘I am
glad I went there because I do not think I will see anything
as funny in a lifetime.'
LASHKY (aged 10), EASTWOOD PUBLIC SCHOOL
CREATIVE
WRITING WORKSHOPS

Younger children
(aged 4-8) write and illustrate a group picture book.
Richard Tulloch
takes ideas from the group and together with them structures
a story which can be illustrated, bound, and ‘published'.
Reading these class-created books can become a highlight of show
and tell sessions for parents.
Middle school children (aged 9-11) do exercises designed to free the imagination
and create ‘Extraordinary stories from Ordinary Ideas'.
The emphasis
is on showing students that ideas are all around us. All that
is needed to create a crazy story is to grab the idea and develop
it with daring. Some examples from other sessions - a narrow
staircase in the school was the starting point for a hilarious
story about a principal who wanted to build the tallest school
in the world. A rule banning children from retrieving balls from
the roof started a wild adventure about losing a basketball signed
by Michael Jordan. Older students work at ‘writing tips',
helping with such issues as getting an idea, structuring a story,
and solving problems of plot, character and setting.
We all dream
up stories and play out scenarios in our imagination all the
time. But as we get older we may lose confidence in our ability
to tell the stories and write them down. Richard Tulloch looks
at the editing and rewriting process and stresses that good writing
comes less from natural talent than from enthusiasm, courage
and persistence.
WRITER
IN RESIDENCE
During a residency of up to a week, a combination of performances and writing
workshops can be arranged. A residency allows for some classes to have follow-up
sessions in which the writing begun in the initial workshop is taken a step
further.
It also offers the possibility of workshops with staff, assemblies with parents
at which students read their work, and classes with drama or media students.
‘On
behalf of the staff and students, thank you for educating and
inspiring us in such an entertaining way.' - L.Ozgur, Principal,
International School of Tembagapura, West Papua, Indonesia
‘We
are still on a HIGH from Richard Tulloch Week!' - Mario Gauci,
Librarian, International School of Dusseldorf (well, it
was only a week later!)
‘Richard
Tulloch really inspires the children. He puts on a real performance
that the children here, half a year later, are still talking
about.' - Richie Steven, British School of Tokyo.
RECENT CONFERENCE PRESENTATIONS
- 2005 Presenter – ECIS
Librarians Conference - Prague
- 2004 Presenter – The
Arabian Reading Association Conference - Bahrain
- 2003 Presenter
- ECIS Early Childhood Conference – Amsterdam
- 2002 Presenter
- ECIS Conference – Berlin
- Presenter – ECIS
Librarians Conference – Budapest
- Presenter
and Seminar moderator, National Puppetry and Animatronics
- Summit
- Melbourne
AUTHOR
VISITS TO INTERNATIONAL SCHOOLS 2001-05
- Jakarta
International School
- Pasir Ridge
International School, East Kalimantan
- International
School of Tanganyika, Tanzania
- School
of St Jude, Arusha, Tanzania
- Asmara
International Community School, Eritrea
- American
International School of Lagos, Nigeria
- International
School of Uganda
- International
School of Amsterdam
- The American
School of Rotterdam
- American
Community Schools, Hillingdon and Egham
- The British
School in the Netherlands
- Independent
Bonn International School
- The Regional
International School, Eindhoven
- TASIS -
The American School in England
- American
School of Paris
- American
School of Warsaw
- International
School of Prague
- American
International School of Budapest
- American
International School of Vienna
- International
School of Luxembourg
- International
School of Brussels
- American
Overseas School of Rome
- The New
School Rome
- Rome International
School
- Kendale
Primary International School, Rome
- International
School of Lausanne
- Tanglin
Trust School – Singapore
- Australian
International School – Singapore
- United
World College of South East Asia
- Sydney
International Grammar School
- Frankfurt
International School – Wiesbaden
- Bangkok
Patana School
- Frankfurt
International School - Oberursel
- Brussels
English Primary School
- International
School of Stuttgart
- International
School of Frankfurt
- The British
School of Tokyo
- International
School of Dusseldorf, Germany
- Sacred
Heart School, Tokyo
- Montessori
Kindergarten, Tokyo
Back
to Lateral Learning website
|