Scott McArdle | Class of 2010
Photo by Duncan Wright
Scott McArdle鈥檚 award-winning coming-of-age play Playthings will return to the stage for Black Swan State Theatre Company鈥檚 2021 season. The 2019 play was a success in its original run at The Blue Room Theatre, winning Members鈥 Choice the theatre鈥檚 annual awards and impressing local critics.
The story is inspired by real life events from his high school days.
鈥楢rnold and Lucy are a combination of everyone I grew up with and myself,鈥 he told Corpus Spirit. 鈥楾hey鈥檙e going through what we all went through as teenagers. They yell at their parents (and regret it), they say dumb things to seem cool, they fumble awkwardly around romance, and they freak out about homework. And that鈥檚 great! Being a teenager is great 鈥 it鈥檚 confusing and emotional at the time but it鈥檚 also when we grow up, when we become individuals and have our own ideas and thoughts outside our parents.鈥
Playthings also delves into mental illness, something Scott experienced during adolescence. 鈥榃hen I was a teenager, I struggled horribly with depression. Things happened in my life that everyone said 鈥渟hould never happen to a kid鈥. This play is my reassurance to every kid who鈥檚 struggling that it does get better, but only when we help each other.鈥
Scott鈥檚 passion for the Arts took hold while at Corpus Christi. Drama teacher Mrs Sally Floyd provided early encouragement and showed him that the performing arts was more than just acting, also involving writing and staging, amongst other facets. Scott remembers the sense of community in the College productions Mrs Floyd directed 鈥 Fiddler on the Roof and Oliver! 鈥 and has since striven to imbue this in his own productions. In Year 12, Scott won the Drama Award and the Arts Leadership Award.
He went on to attain a Bachelor of Arts (Theatre & Drama) with Honours in English and Creative Arts from Murdoch University, and attended NIDA briefly in 2015 before studying at WAAPA from 2016-2018. He has worked in the independent theatre sector as a writer and director for many years.
Asked by Corpus Spirit about the benefits of getting involved in Drama productions (either in high school or beyond), Scott advised the following: 鈥楨ven if you don鈥檛 want to be a professional artist, there are so many social and physical benefits to taking part in theatre.
Studies show that being in the performing arts (as a hobby or a profession) has massive benefits on your mental health, assists with public speaking and socialising, and increases your overall confidence.
鈥楾he Arts is filled with a huge range of people from all over the world. We gather together to share stories, learn from each other, and grow. It doesn鈥檛 get much better than that.鈥
For more on Playthings, visit