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Billy marshall stoneking

Billy Marshall Stoneking. Courtesy Twitter.

Template:Refimprove Billy Marshall Stoneking (born 31 August 1947) is an American-born Australian poet, playwright, filmmaker, and teacher.

Life[]

Youth and education[]

Marshall-Stoneking was born William Randolph Marshall in Orlando, Florida, the second child of Charles and Florence Marshall. (His sister, Barbara, named him 'Randolph' after her favorite movie actor, Randolph Scott, and his mother selected 'William', after an old family friend, later aide de camp to President John F. Kennedy. The name "Stoneking" derives from his paternal great-grandfather, Reuben Stoneking (of Hundred, WV, Wetzel County), who abandoned mother and child shortly after his grandfather was born.)

Stoneking's early years were spent growing up on military bases around the United States, including Randolph Field (Texas) and Fort Slocum (New York). When his father retired in 1961, the family moved to northern California where he attended high school in Folsom and Rancho Cordova, California. He graduated from California State University (Sacramento) in 1970, majoring in English, with minors in philosophy and education; and in 1972, he migrated to Australia. "The bumper stickers said, 'America, love it or leave it', so I left."[1] In 1983, after more than a decade living in Australia, four years of which were spent living with tribal Aboriginal people 275 km west northwest of Alice Springs, Stoneking graduated from the Australian Film, Television and Radio School in Sydney, specialising in screenwriting.

Teaching[]

After completing a year's post-graduate credential in teaching, Stoneking migrated to Australia and spent five years teaching high school English and humanities subjects in Lake Bolac and Cobden, Victoria, before travelling to Papunya Aboriginal Settlement, Central Australia in 1979 where he was employed to set up a "literature production" programme for tribal Aboriginal people to enable them to teach their children to read and write in their native language, Pintupi/Luritja.

Writing[]

By this time, Stoneking had already been publishing his poems in little magazines around Australia for a number of years. He was also active in the burgeoning performance poetry movement, which included fellow poets, Pi O, Amanda Stewart, Jas H. Duke, and others. His poems have been featured in the Oxford Book of Australian Poetry (edited by Les Murray), and The Penguin Book of Modern Australian Poetry (edited by John Tranter and Philip Mead). He is also the author of seven books, including Lasseter, In Quest of Gold (Hodder & Stoughton, 1989), Singing the Snake (Angus & Robertson) and Taking America Out of the Boy (Hodder Spectrum). In 2008, his poem "The Seasons of Fire" was chosen by Australian poet, Les Murray, as "one of the 10 best Australian poems ever written." All ten selections, including Stoneking's, are featured in the Fall issue of the University of Liverpool's literary journal, The Reader.

Screenplays[]

After four years at the Papunya Aboriginal Settlement in the Northern Territory, Stoneking returned to Sydney, and, in 1982, was admitted to the full-time screenwriting program of the Australian Film, Television and Radio School.

Stoneking's first films were made in the mid-1980s, including a chronicle of his work at Papunya Aboriginal Settlement, Desert Stories. He also had success writing for television, including the AFI award-winning drama series, Stringer, which he created and wrote for ABC TV.

These early successes were followed by scripts for Paramount Television's Mission: Impossible, and the full-length stage play, Sixteen Words for Water, which went on to successful productions in London, New Zealand, and the U.S.

Mentor, editor, producer, & story consultant[]

Stoneking is a teacher of dramatic writing in Australia. He is in constant demand both in Australia and overseas. He has presented his legendary workshop, the Drama of Screenwriting, in every capital city in Australia and New Zealand. He was also a featured speaker at Tropfest's Roughcut in 2005, 2006, 2007 and 2008.

In addition to writing and producing, Stoneking is a much sought after script editor and story consultant. He has script edited a number of award-winning films including the AFI-nominated Australian feature, Chopper (2000); and he was script editor/consultant on Darlene Johnson's much acclaimed short feature, Crocodile Dreaming (2007), and Maya Newell's documentaries, RICHARD The Most Interestingest Person I've Ever Met and TWO

He has produced a number of critically acclaimed films, including Nosepeg's Movie (which he also wrote), Call It Poetry (50 mins, ABC-TV) and more recently, the groundbreaking 30-minute film drama, Jelly's Placenta, written, designed and directed by Christina Conrad, which he co- and executive produced. Two features, Waking the Martyrs and Seeing the Elephant are currently (as of October, 2010) in post-production.

Stoneking travels extensively, running workshops and seminars all over the world. When not on the road he advises and works as a mentor at the International Film School, Sydney.

His son, C.W. Stoneking, is a musician.

Publications[]

Poetry[]

Play[]

  • Sixteen Words for Water: A play in two acts (on Ezra Pound). North Ryde, NSW: Angus & Robertson, 1981.

Novel[]

  • Stringer. Crows Nest, NSW: ABC Enterprises for Australian Broadcasting Corp., 1988.

Non-fiction[]

  • Lasseter: The making of a legend. Sydney & Boston: Allen & Unwin, 1985;
  • Taking America out of the Boy. Rydalmere, NSW: Sceptre, 1993.

Edited[]

  • Obed Ragget, Stories of Obed Ragget. Sydney : Alternative Publishing Co-operative, 1980.


Except where noted, bibliographical information courtesy WorldCat.[2]

See also[]

References[]

  1. Marshall Stoneking, Billy Taking America Out of the Boy. Hodder Spectrum Books, 1994
  2. Search results = au:Billy Marshall Stoneking, WorldCat, OCLC Online Computer Library Center Inc. Web, Mar. 10, 2015.

External links[]

Poems
Audio / video
About
Etc.
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