Clare writer Nell Hensey, from Barefield, has won a Zebbie Award for Best Short Film Script at the 17th Writers’ Guild of Ireland (WGI) Zebbie Awards as co-writer of Good Chips with Brigid Leahy.
The awards ceremony was hosted by writer and actor Tara Flynn at The Sugar Club in Dublin with writers from all over Ireland in attendance to celebrate the best of Irish writing for stage, screen and radio.
Kris Kelly for Wind and the Shadow and Alan O’Gorman and Allyn Quigley for Yellow Belt were the other finalists in the category.
Hensey was also a finalist in the Best TV Drama Script category for Falling For The Life Of Alex Whelan, which she wrote and directed. However, the award went to Mayo writer Ray Lawlor for the opening episode of his RTÉ series Obituary.
Actor Patrick Bergin presented Christine Molloy and Joe Lawlor with the Best Feature Film Script Zebbie for Baltimore, their film of the true story of English Heiress Rose Dugdale who became an IRA member and carried out an art heist and a failed bomb attack on an RUC barracks, and Janet Moran won a Zebbie for Best Theatre Script for Quake.
Hugh O’Conor won Best Animation Script for Worry World; Best Radio/Audio Drama Script went to Dorothy Cotter and Cillian O’Donnachadha for Carthanacht Chlíodhna [Eagrán 2]; and Caitriona Daly won Best Continuing Drama Script for Doctors [Series 24, Episode 91].
Former Senator David Norris, who hosted the Zebbie Awards for many years, was presented with the WGI’s Special Services to Writers Award in honour of his support for the WGI and Irish writers.
The awards are named in honour of O.Z. ‘Zebby’ Whitehead, a Broadway and Hollywood actor who was a great supporter of theatre and writing in Ireland after he moved to Dublin in 1963.
Only WGI members could vote for the winners from the nominated scripts.
The WGI, which campaigns for rights, remuneration, more control of work and better recognition for its members, represents over 400 Irish writers for film, television, theatre, radio, animation and games. The Guild is celebrating its Emerald Anniversary this year – 55 years since it was originally established as the Society of Playwrights in Ireland.
In October, the WGI will be hosting the World Conference of Screenwriters 2024 in Galway with over two hundred screenwriters from across the world expected to attend to discuss their craft and their industry.
The WGI gratefully acknowledges the support of Zebbie Awards sponsors Comisiún na Meán and the Irish Copyright Licensing Agency (ICLA).
Jennifer Davidson, Chair of the Writers’ Guild of Ireland, said:“As always it is a privilege to get to celebrate the phenomenal talents of Irish writers, and our WGI members, through our Zebbie Awards. In a year when there’s so much talk of cutbacks and global contraction, it’s a really important reminder of how bright the future actually is, and how irreplaceable the craft of human writers remains, despite all the posited advancements of Generative AI.
My warmest congratulations, not just to the winners of the 2024 Zebbie Awards, but to all the nominees who can be rightly proud of the work that they have achieved. As we celebrate our Emerald Anniversary and 55 years since the Society of Irish Playwrights was founded, it’s a very special year for us in the Writers’ Guild. Those 55 years are 55 years of Irish writers being truly excellent at their craft, and of standing together in power and in solidarity. The landscape in which we all write may be changing, but the talent, and passion of Irish writers remains unchanged.”