Michelle Law

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Michelle Law
Michelle Law as ambassador for the 2017 Emerging Writers' Festival
Michelle Law as ambassador for the 2017 Emerging Writers' Festival
Born1990 (age 30–31)
Sunshine Coast, Queensland, Australia
OccupationWriter
NationalityAustralian
Period2000s–present
RelativesBenjamin Law (brother)
Website
michelle-law.com

Michelle Law is an Australian writer and screenwriter. She completed a Bachelor of Creative Writing at the Queensland University of Technology.[1]

She was born on the Sunshine Coast, Queensland, as the fifth of five children to immigrant parents from Hong Kong and Malaysia.[2] She is based in Brisbane. She attended Sunshine Coast school Immanuel Lutheran College, Buderim throughout her school years.[3]

Career[]

Law presented a talk on alopecia and "A bald woman's guide to survival" at the Empowerment-themed TEDxSouthBankWomen event, in December 2012. She presented on the topic of co-authorship with her brother Benjamin Law, as part of the Literary Friendship series at the 2014 Sydney Writers' Festival.[4]

Law wrote the adolescent-themed short film Bloomers (2013), which was completed through successful crowdfunding and Screen Australia's Short Film Completion Fund.[5]

She has been portrayed by actress Vivian Wei in the comedy TV series The Family Law (2016-2017).

Her 2017 play, Single Asian Female, a comedy about a Chinese-Australian family,[6] was considered to be groundbreaking in Australian theatre, as it featured three Chinese-Australian women in leading roles.[7][8] It opened at Brisbane's Roundhouse Theatre for La Boite in February 2017, and at Sydney's Belvoir St Theatre in February 2018.[9]

In August 2017, Law was commissioned by SBS and Screen Australia to co-write a comedy drama series, Homecoming Queens.[10] Law co-wrote the semi-autobiographical series with Chloë Reeson, it focuses on two friends with chronic illness living in Queensland.[11] It premiered on SBS OnDemand in April 2018, with Law playing the part of "Michelle Low" and Liv Hewson playing the part of Chloë Reeson.[12][13]

Law is an ambassador for the Emerging Writers' Festival.[14]

Tweets in the media[]

She has previously worked at Brisbane's Avid Reader bookshop.[15] In June 2017, Men's Rights Activists targeted the bookshop with online downvoting, because it shared news about Clementine Ford's second book.[16] Michelle and her brother Ben advocated for the bookshop, which effectively combated the downvotes by garnering hundreds of positive five-star reviews from the bookshop's supporters.[17]

In October 2017, one of her tweets was featured in a Sydney Morning Herald article, decrying the online abuse from HSC students towards poet Ellen van Neerven.[18]

In November 2017, she tweeted[19] to the Guardian's "Australian Bird of the Year" poll with an Australian version of the “Nothing but respect for my president” meme.[20]

In February 2018, Law tweeted about the inappropriateness of "Wonton of Laughs", a show in the BrisAsia Festival. The show's promotional poster appeared to depict Asian comedians floating in a bowl of wonton soup.[21]

Awards and funding[]

In April 2012, Law was selected as part of Youth Arts Queensland's JUMP Mentoring Program.[22] She won an AWGIE in 2012 in the Interactive Media category,[23] for her screenwriting on SLiDE. She was a runner-up in the Written Word Category in the 2013 Spirit of Youth Awards (SOYA 365).[24]

In 2013, she received funding towards her writing career through the Australia Council's ArtStart program. In 2015, she was commissioned to write a Brisbane-themed poem for the Brisbane Poetry Map.[25] In 2016, she won one of the Queensland Premier's Young Publishers and Writers Awards at the Queensland Literary Awards.[26]

Bibliography[]

Articles[]

Journals[]

Law has written for Seizure,[27] Meanjin (2012),[28] Screen Education (June 2014),[29] Peril: An Asian-Australian Journal (December 2015),[30] Good Weekend and Frankie (2017).[31]

She has written for The Lifted Brow on travel and loneliness (January 2010),[32] teachability of MasterChef (October 2011),[33] the nuances of Game of Thrones (December 2011),[34] the continued appeal of The Golden Girls (October 2012),[35] longevity of reality television (December 2012),[36] the possibilities of musical theatre (February 2013),[37] bookish television characters (September 2013),[38] interviewed writer Margo Lanagan (September 2013),[39] the lack of onscreen depictions of unsexy sex (February 2014),[40] and expectations around being an adult (March 2015).[41]

Her 2015 guest review of Charlotte's Web[42] for Going Down Swinging's "The Rory Gilmore Reading Challenge" expanded on her earlier Gilmore Girls articles in The Lifted Brow.

She has written for the Griffith Review on the nuances of romantic relationships (2013's Once Upon a Time in Oz),[43] on dual cultural identity (2015),[44] and sibling conversations (2017).[45]

News[]

She has written for The Sydney Morning Herald on misogynist "bro culture" perpetuated by Melbourne University Liberal Club members (August 2014),[46] selfie etiquette (September 2014),[47] the physicality of hands (October 2015),[48] and writers engaging in marketing (June 2017).[49]

Books[]

Co-authored[]

  • Sh*t Asian mothers say, Collingwood, Vic. : Black Inc. (2014, ISBN 9781863956635)

Contributed chapters[]

  • "A call to arms", pp. 242–245, in: Growing up Asian in Australia, Melbourne, Black Inc. (2008, ISBN 9781863951913)
  • "[Dear hair...]", pp. 237–240, in section, "To my most treasured possession", in: Women of letters: reviving the lost art of correspondence, curated by Marieke Hardy and Michaela McGuire, Camberwell, Viking, (2011, ISBN 9780670076093)
  • "A fairer country", pp. 25–34, in: Destroying the joint, edited by Jane Caro, Read How You Want (2015, ISBN 9781459687295). A portion of the chapter was also published as an excerpt in The Sun Herald (May 2013).[50]
  • "Joyride", pp. 259–273, in: Rebellious daughters: true stories from Australia's finest female writers, edited by Maria Katsonis and Lee Kofman, Edgecliff, Ventura Press (2016, ISBN 9781925183528)
  • "How is your sex life?", pp. 165–171, in: Doing it: women tell the truth about great sex, edited by Karen Pickering, University of Queensland Press, St. Lucia, Queensland (2016, ISBN 9780702254239)
  • "Pauline Hanson's eviction speech", pp. [243]-248, in: Best Australian comedy writing, edited by Luke Ryan, Affirm Press, South Melbourne, Victoria (2016, ISBN 9781925475265)

Screenwriting[]

  • Suicide and me, Sydney, NSW Australian Broadcasting Corporation, 2013[51]
  • Bloomers (short film), 2013
  • Deadlock (web series of 5 episodes), 2017[52]
  • Homecoming Queens (web series of 7 episodes), 2018

Plays[]

  • Single Asian Female
    • La Boite Theatre (Roundhouse), Brisbane, February–March 2017
    • Belvoir St. Theatre, Sydney, February–March 2018

Interviews[]

  • Author profile: Michelle Law. Writing Queensland. Mar/May 2017. No. 256, p. 17.
  • Dore, Madeleine. Extraordinary Routines: Michelle Law. Kill Your Darlings. 5 July 2018.[53]

Filmography[]

Web series[]

Year Title Role Notes
2018 Homecoming Queens Michelle Low Co-star and screenwriter

References[]

  1. ^ Pung, Alice, ed. (2008). Growing up Asian in Australia. Melbourne, Victoria, Australia: Black Inc., an imprint of Schwartz Media Pty Ltd. p. 346. ISBN 9781863951913.
  2. ^ "Jenny Phang". The Wheeler Centre. Retrieved 4 February 2019.
  3. ^ https://www.immanuel.qld.edu.au/community/old-scholars
  4. ^ Morris, Linda (14 May 2014). "Literary friendships thrive in solitary pursuit of writing". The Sydney Morning Herald. p. 14.
  5. ^ "Screen Australia Annual Report 2012/13" (PDF). Annual Report. Ultimo, N.S.W.: Screen Australia: 42. 2013. ISSN 1837-2740.
  6. ^ Garry, Maddox (5 September 2017). "Make 'em laugh". The Sydney Morning Herald. p. 24.
  7. ^ "Single Asian Female play 'shouldn't be revolutionary, but is'". ABC News. 8 February 2017. Retrieved 16 November 2017.
  8. ^ Convery, Stephanie (10 February 2017). "Single Asian Female shakes up monocultural Australian theatre". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 16 November 2017.
  9. ^ Rugendyke, Louise (27 January 2018). "Single Asian Female: How Michelle Law is changing the face of theatre". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 3 February 2018.
  10. ^ "Screen Australia invests in Homecoming Queens series for SBS On Demand - Mumbrella". Mumbrella. 11 August 2017. Retrieved 16 November 2017.
  11. ^ Cronin, Seanna (12 April 2018). "Binge-worthy series tackles illness with heart and humour". Queensland Times. Retrieved 1 February 2019.
  12. ^ "Michelle Law On Her New SBS Series Homecoming Queens". Junkee. 17 August 2017. Retrieved 16 November 2017.
  13. ^ "Sex, Drugs and… chronic illness? Meet the Homecoming Queens". Guide. 21 March 2018. Retrieved 1 February 2019.
  14. ^ "Michelle Law: writing is hard work | Emerging Writers' Festival". Emerging Writers' Festival. 7 April 2017. Retrieved 16 November 2017.
  15. ^ Wilkshire, T.J. (4 October 2016). "Taking five with Michelle Law". The Australian Writer's Marketplace. Retrieved 4 February 2018.
  16. ^ "MRAs Went After A Brisbane Bookstore And It Has Backfired Spectacularly". Junkee. 27 June 2017. Retrieved 4 February 2018.
  17. ^ "Brisbane bookshop Avid Reader fights back against hundreds of one-star Facebook reviews: Three lessons on fighting trolls - SmartCompany". SmartCompany. 28 June 2017. Retrieved 4 February 2018.
  18. ^ Taylor, Andrew (16 October 2017). "Indigenous poet Ellen van Neerven subject to online abuse by students after HSC English exam". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 17 November 2017.
  19. ^ WIKI