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Artist of the Month

Since 2023, we have been making it our mission to highlight a new artist from the Australian theatre scene each month.

This individual could be a performer, director, writer, reviewer, sound designer, musician, lighting designer, set designer, stage manager and so on.

If you feel like you’d know someone who would be perfect, contact us or hit us up on our socials @theatrethoughtsaus.

June - Ruby Blinkhorn

Writer, Dramaturg & Theatre-Maker

Ruby is an award-winning writer, dramaturg and theatre-maker working on Gadigal land.  A graduate of NIDA’s Master of Fine Arts (Dramatic Writing, 2025), her work uses comedy as a Trojan horse for hard-to-talk-about subjects, producing poignant social commentary on corruption, loss, and human connection. Her debut play, ‘Cadaver Synod’, a sexed up Vatican tragedy, premiered at KXT on Broadway in May, following a sold-out reading at the Old Fitz’s New Works Festival.

She’s been a Fresh Ink Writer (2025), National Studio Playwright (2024) and her play ‘Milk Bottle Challenge’ was commissioned by ATYP for their 2025 Intersection Festival and published by Currency Press. Ruby was a 2025 Barrett House Artist-in-Residence and, earlier this year, received support from Randwick Council to co-create and direct an interactive children’s theatre show, ‘100 Ways to Tame a Bedtime Monster’ (2026). Most recently, she won NIDA’s Ken Healey Award for Innovation in Writing (2026). 

My Story

What inspired you to make writing your career?

I’ve always loved the performing arts. I was a raging theatre kid (still am), so it was inevitable that I’d find my way into some kind of creative practice. I used to have this narrow idea of the ‘writer’ as an ultra-intellectual literary genius. It took me a while to dispel that and realise this is what I wanted to do. 

In 2017, I saw a production of Mr Burns: A Post-Electric Play by Anne Washburn that floored me. I kept thinking “Holy shit, someone wrote that!”. That play changed my understanding of what theatre could look like, what form it could take, how it could feel. I wanted to make something that evoked a similar response from an audience member.

I’ve always loved writing. As an act, it feels like asking to be understood. Taking a feeling or idea that’s specific to you and finding a story that makes that feel universal. A dramatic translation. It’s an incredible feeling to have your work resonate with someone or produce a genuine emotional response from an audience. This is a craft I want to spend my life working on.

What have been the highs of your career so far? What have been the lows?

Seeing my debut play, Cadaver Synod, come to life as a production has been a dream. Writing this play was a kind of “spiritual exorcism”, so to have a team of talented creatives deeply engage with and offer their creativity to the work has been such a privilege. It’s a strange experience watching people perform the words you wrote. Nuances and meanings that you weren’t aware of emerge from the text, and you learn so much as a writer. This process has been a definite highlight of my career. 

I’m also really proud of the first solo show I ever wrote, which had a song called “My Dog Dying Was Sadder Than Yours” dedicated to my childhood pet, Dodger. The show was nuts, and I had no idea what I was doing, but that song made a lot of people cry (which was awesome). 

The biggest low of my career was probably the two years I spent working in marketing, trying to convince myself I liked marketing. That sucked. In hindsight, I gained lots of practical tools that have proved useful in my practice as an independent artist. I also think a lot of being an artist is getting repeatedly rejected, which can be a bummer. But that’s theatre, baby!

What do you feel is “your voice” in the theatre industry?

As far as my specific “voice”, I’d say I’m still figuring that out. My work tends to exist on a spectrum from ‘dark comedy that grapples with moral corruption’ to ‘uplifting, heartfelt children’s content’, so it’s varied. 

I’d hope that all of my work is advocating for the inherent goodness of humanity despite our flaws and ugliness. I think theatre is about shared humanity, and my specific “voice” within the industry is finding interesting, funny lenses that reframe our understanding of confronting experiences.

It can be tricky to engage with big subjects head-on, so I like trying to find the “back door” in. I don’t know if this is a “voice” or a philosophy, but it’s what I’m trying to do.

What helps to keep you grounded in a changing industry?

I think storytelling is a universal pillar of humanity. It’s how we make sense of the world and grapple with things that scare us. The form that takes or the subjects discussed are always evolving, but the desire to tell stories is constant. I see this as an innate human trait. 

It’s easy to get doom and gloom about the state of the arts industry, or to be discouraged from engaging in an increasingly apathetic society, but this makes me more determined to keep searching for humanity in my work. Having a general optimism about people and life more broadly is the key to staying grounded. The ups and downs are all part of the process, and I lean on my community when I get overwhelmed (aka have a sooky la la to my bestie and buy a drinking coconut). This, and a strong sense of purpose, keep me feeling grounded when external aspects of life are turbulent.

Where do you see yourself going/want to go next?

Right now I really want to go on holiday. I’m coming off two shows back-to-back, and I’m pooped. In saying this, I’ve got my second play in the works, and after a short break, I’m keen to dive into a first draft. This is my favourite part of the creative process; I find beginnings wildly exciting. The possibilities are endless.

I want to branch out more into screenwriting, so I will be spending the rest of the year working on a TV pilot and hopefully making some short-form content. Keep your eyes peeled for that. I’m also presenting the children’s show I co-created, 100 Ways to Tame a Bedtime Monster, at a school in October. So I’m keen to redevelop the script and look at integrating puppetry, because puppets are cool and I refuse to hear any different.

Our Artists of the Month Gallery

Wondering who we’ve highlighted in the past? Scroll through our gallery of artists below!

Have a question?

If you have any questions or comments on our reviews or are interested in work opportunities, please let us know!