Author Archive

We’re on the search for a Chair and Trustees

Posted on: August 24th, 2022 by ppEditor

We’re on the search for a Chair and Trustees to join us on the next chapter of Paines Plough’s journey.

Our current Chair is reaching the end of their term in December 2022 and we are now seeking a new inspirational Chair of the board. We are specifically seeking an active Chair with strong strategic skills, knowledge of the theatre industry and income generation and whose values align with ours.

We are also searching for new Trustees to join the board specifically with experience of one/ more of the following; commercial theatre, environmentalism and sustainability, diversity and inclusion, those with experience of place making, local authorities, and/or the public sector, people from non-theatre backgrounds and those with experience of regional networks. We also welcome hearing from candidates who do not meet these specific criteria but believe they could actively contribute to our thinking and future success.

The expression of interest period closes on 30 September 2022.

Here’s your lineup for Roundabout @ Summerhall 2022…

Posted on: May 19th, 2022 by ppEditor

Here are your Roundabout 2022 Plays…

Posted on: May 5th, 2022 by ppEditor

We’re on the search for an Executive Director

Posted on: March 4th, 2022 by ppEditor

We’re on the search for an Executive Director!

Looking for a new challenge? Want to join our mission to champion new writing?

If you’re passionate about our values and think this could be your next step, we want to hear from you.

Click here for more information and to download the Application Pack

Cast announced for Sorry, You’re Not a Winner tour

Posted on: January 26th, 2022 by ppEditor

We’ve announced the cast for SORRY, YOU’RE NOT A WINNER by Samuel Bailey – a new play about male friendship, class and leaving home.

The cast will see Eddie-Joe Robinson (Coriolanus at Sheffield Crucible) as Liam and co-founder of JAM (Just Add Milk) Kyle Rowe (Beast Of Blue Yonder) as best friend Fletch, with West End star Alice Stokoe (American Idiot, Mamma Mia!) as Shannon and Peter O’Toole Prizewinner Katja Quist (C-O-N-T-A-C-T) as Georgia.

SORRY, YOU’RE NOT A WINNER debuts at Theatre Royal Plymouth from 24 February for a limited 2 week run before touring around the UK, including Bristol and Newcastle with further dates to be announced. More info and booking details here.

Samuel Bailey is a writer born in London and raised in the West Midlands. His play SHOOK won the Papatango Prize in 2019. After a sold-out run at the Southwark Playhouse, Papatango created a digital version of the play in collaboration with James Bobin. The film was a NY Times Critic’s Pick and won Samuel the Times Breakthrough Award at the South Bank Show Sky Arts Awards. Previously, Samuel has been part of Old Vic 12, the Orange Tree Writer’s Collective and a recipient of an MGCFutures bursary.

Jesse Jones is a Theatre Director from Bristol. He is a founding member of award-winning company The Wardrobe Ensemble who are associates of Complicité and Shoreditch Town Hall, they have toured nationally and internationally. Jesse was Resident Director at Royal and Derngate, Northampton having won the Regional Theatre Young Directors Scheme award. He is also an alumni of the Old Vic 12, NT directors program and Bristol Old Vic’s ‘Made in Bristol’ scheme. In 2011 Jesse founded the Wardrobe Theatre where he was Artistic Director until 2015, and before leaving he helped establish the theatre as the leading fringe theatre in the city. He is now also a trustee of Shoreditch Town Hall.

Photos by Justin Jones

Finalists announced for the 2021 Women’s Prize for Playwriting

Posted on: January 18th, 2022 by ppEditor

We are delighted to announce the 8 Finalist plays for The Women’s Prize for Playwriting 2021, selected from 850 submissions. 

The judges for this year’s Prize are Arifa Akbar, Mel Kenyon(Chair), Lucy Kirkwood, Jasmine Lee-Jones, Winsome Pinnock, Indhu Rubasingham, Jenny Sealey, Nina Steiger, Nicola Walker and Jodie Whittaker.

These 8 plays will be considered by the judges at their meeting on 27th January 2022:

MOUNTAIN WARFARE
By Abi Zakarian

When the horrors of the past are denied, who decides which histories are remembered?

Hugh and Liv Bryce have found their perfect (second) home: The Blue House sits on a remote hillside, isolated and beautiful. It’s a place to escape their busy lives and plan for their future family. But the house is haunted by secrets and Mariam and Davit Martirosian, the previous occupants, refuse to let go of their home without a fight. Exploring the denial of the Armenian Genocide, what drives the cycles of ethnic cleansing, and how blood can bind you to a place, Mountain Warfare asks what you’d be prepared to do to keep your home, your heritage, and your history alive.

Abi Zakarian is co-founder of Terrifying Women; a theatre company dedicated to women writing horror. Her work includes Found (45North), Perfect Myth Allegory (Jermyn Street Theatre), I am Karyan Ophidian (Shakespeare’s Globe), Fabric (Soho Theatre) and I Have a Mouth and I will Scream (VAULT Festival).

 

BIRDIE
By Alison Carr

In this dark drama, a family fractured by an unforgiveable crime are reunited and no one emerges unscathed. 

Karen and her partner Lynn arrive at a tatty hotel to meet Karen’s younger sister Suzanne. The sisters haven’t seen each other for over 30 years and the difficult reunion is made even worse when Suzanne unexpectedly turns up with her thirteen-year-old daughter Della in tow.

It’s Della who forced her Mam to arrange this get-together after stumbling upon their family secret – that when Karen was her age she was convicted of an unforgiveable crime and spent over a decade in prison before being released with a new identity. Della is desperate to find out what makes Karen tick, and Karen is terrified she’ll tell her.

Alison Carr is part of the BBC writersroom writers’ development group for North East Voices. Her work includes Tuesday (National Theatre Connections Festival), The Last Quiz Night on Earth (Box of Tricks Theatre Company), Caterpillar (Theatre503) Iris and The Soaking of Vera Shrimp (Live Theatre).

 

A BOUFFON PLAY ABOUT HONG KONG
By Isabella Leung

A darkly absurd parade through a silenced city. 

Set against the backdrop of Hong Kong’s skyscraper, the bouffons emerge from the swamp to tell the truth about their home.  They must be careful with their choice of words, they must conceal their fear and anger, they must put those who abandoned them in their rightful place, and their weapon is humour. Laughter helps the bouffons to find freedom in an absurd world where politicians are comedians, soldiers, and police are troubled poets, and at the centre of it all, a woman with all the power, living a glamorous life of empty daydreams.

Isabella Leung is an actor, theatre maker and writer. A Bouffon Play About Hong Kong is her first full-length play that was written in response to the political movement in her home city, Hong Kong. Her writing has been featured in Written on the Waves (45North), Freedom Hi, Tiananmen 30 (Papergang Theatre), Creating Apart (Exit Pursued by Panda), and Silence is Compliance (Young Blood Initiative).


FURIES
By Isley Lynn

Sick of tweets and vigils, two young women take retribution into their own hands.

Meg and Ally do bad things to bad people. They’re not professionals, but when justice is unserved, they decide to address the balance themselves: no more tweets or vigils, it’s time for an eye for an eye and everything else.

They recreate the acts of violence exactly – an unorthodox attempt to save their souls and set protective boundaries. And they fast find supporters: sources for their targets in Maggie, a therapist who has heard too much, and Tim, a doctor who has seen too much.

But as the work begins to endanger and brutalise them all, one by one the team abandon the project, leaving Meg to reconcile with the insane ambition of what she wants to achieve: to freeze the seemingly endless wave of violence by directing that violence back on itself. It’s impossible for her to continue alone. But it’s unthinkable to her to go back.

Isley Lynn is currently under commission with the Donmar Warehouse. Her work includes The War of the Worlds (New Diorama Theatre/International tour), Albatross (Paines Plough) and Canace: A Good Story (Jermyn Street Theatre) 

 

CONSUMED
By Karis Kelly

Four generations of Northern Irish Women: a house full of hungry ghosts, with more than one skeleton in the closet. 

Bangor, Northern Ireland. It’s Eileen’s 90th birthday, and her neurotic daughter Gilly is fussing, trying to organise her impending party. Gilly hasn’t finished unpacking the shopping when her high-flying daughter Jenny arrives from London with her worryingly thin daughter Muireann in tow. That makes four generations of Gillespie women in one room, and you could cut the tension with a knife. As the women prepare for a party that no one seems to want, the atmosphere turns decidedly sinister as deep-rooted recriminations and accusations fly out of the women like weapons. Obsessions and compulsions have spread through the lineage like poison. This is a house full of hungry ghosts and there’s definitely a few skeletons in the closet…

Karis Kelly is a playwright, theatre maker and educator. She has previously been the Literary Assistant at the Bush Theatre and Literary Associate at Theatre503 and has been awarded the 2022 Peggy Ramsay Bursary to be the writer in residence at The Lyric, Belfast. Her short plays have been performed at Hampstead Theatre, Gate Theatre and Arcola Theatre, and presented by Hightide Theatre and Headlong.

 

UPRIGHT ENUF
By lydia luke

Micaela is hardworking, nurturing and can push thru severe pain, but what happens when it hurst too much and no one is listening?

Michaela is experiencing severe pain in her womb. Each time she visits the doctor, they dismiss her concerns. And in turn, she dismisses it herself. But the pain persists until she has to reckon with it. 

Lydia Luke is a poet, playwright and facilitator. She was in the Royal Court Theatre’s Introduction to Playwriting 2020/21 cohort and is co-facilitator of Prism Writers; a writer’s group for Black women and non-binary people.

 

4 DECADES
By Paula B Stanic

Four women, two wars, one referendum, four decisions and decades of the same questions – a play about love, betrayal and feeling anger for the country you were born in.

Leona is a patriot determined to prove her loyalty. Amy wants to keep what’s left of her family close. Esther’s just desperate to sing wherever she’ll get the change while teenager Amber’s anxious to follow her late mother and put the world right. Over decades, these black British women push to live the lives they choose as public events leave their mark and private relationships are shattered. Through two wars to the 2016 EU membership referendum, we experience the four most significant decades in the lives of the Cleary women.

Paula B Stanic is a previous winner of the Alfred Fagon Award and has been a writer in residence at Soho Theatre and writer on attachment at the NT Studio. She has written plays for Red Ladder, Theatre Centre, Soho Theatre, Tangle, Almeida Projects, and Mama Quilla. 

 

HOW I LEARNED TO SWIM
By Somebody Jones

A coming-of-adulthood play that explores Black people’s relationship to water, while finally answering the question: Are there really sharks in the deep end of the pool?

Jamie wants to learn to swim, which wouldn’t be so scary, except for the fact that she just turned 30. In an attempt to find closure after her brother’s disappearance, she decides to finally face her fear. 

Somebody Jones is a Los Angeles native playwright and dramaturg. Jones’ is currently a part of Soho Theatre’s Writers’ Lab and was previously Creative Associate at Jermyn Street Theatre and a part of Boston Court’s first Playwright’s Group.

 

Good things are on the horizon

Posted on: December 14th, 2021 by ppEditor

This year brought so much joy with the restarting of live performances, working with artists and meeting audiences in person and we hope that all continues in 2022. Here’s a quick rundown of all the fantastic plays and writers we have worked side by side with and celebrated this year:

We opened at the Kiln Theatre in May 2021 with Amy Trigg’s brilliantly funny and moving play REASONS YOU SHOULD(N’T) LOVE ME directed by Charlotte Bennett and playing to socially distanced and online audiences. Amy’s play was the smiling start we needed as theatres opened up after lockdown.

Amy was one of our winners of the inaugural Women’s Prize for Playwriting alongside Ahlam, whose play YOU BURY ME we took up to Edinburgh to present as a staged reading, directed by Katie Posner, as part of the International Festival. This presentation was also streamed online as part of their digital festival.

The summer saw us brushing the cobwebs off our pop-up space Roundabout, opening in Coventry as part of the City of Culture. We then visited Newcastle, Brixton, Salford, Ramsgate, Doncaster, Lincoln and Poole with our plays HUNGRY by Chris Bush, MAY QUEEN by Frankie Meredith, REALLY BIG AND REALLY LOUD by Phoebe Eclair-Powell and musical BLACK LOVE book and lyrics by Chinonyerem Odimba and music by Ben and Max Ringham.

Roundabout also hosted a UV children’s rave, live comedy, scratch music gigs and capoeira classes. The sun shone, the rain rained (really hard at times) but our yellow dome welcomed communities in safely and we were so pleased to be back meeting artists and audiences again. You may have seen that BLACK LOVE will return in 2022 to Kiln Theatre for a limited run and Chinonyerem has been nominated for a Writers Guild Award.

Ifeyinwa Frederick’s play SESSIONS also made its way around the country on our small scale tour. The play, brilliantly directed by Philip Morris, saw performer Joseph Black giving an outstanding performance as Tunde, resonating with people of every age. Philip’s company Trybe House delivered workshops that explored creativity in young men to address their mental health. Joseph has been nominated for an Offie for his performance and do keep an eye out for some exciting news about SESSIONS coming in the new year.

If that wasn’t enough, in 2021 we launched our Open Submissions programme receiving an astonishing 724 plays – we have committed to meeting everyone who submitted. We’ve started a series of national focus groups to hear from writers in every corner of the country to find out how Paines Plough can best serve writers of today and the future. We delivered a writer’s programme in partnership with Belgrade Coventry in the summer with 11 writers creating their own piece of work inspired by Coventry. We finished working with our Re:Assemble dramaturgs and Re:Build companies Bonnie and the Bonnettes and Nouveau Riche and we are days away from announcing the shortlist for this year’s Women’s Prize for Playwriting, which this year received 816 entries.

So, that’s seven plays, two digital productions, 71 different events in Roundabout, 1,540 submitted plays read, over 50 artists engaged on our programmes and 100 creative artists employed across 2021.

Our team have worked their socks of this year and, along with industry friends, have overcome so many challenges to deliver this brilliant programme. We’re taking a well-earned rest and will be back in the New Year with some more new plays including SORRY, YOU’RE NOT A WINNER by Sam Bailey in Plymouth, Newcastle and Bristol and BLACK LOVE at the Kiln Theatre with more to be revealed and, of course, the announcement of this year’s winner of the Women’s Prize for Playwriting in February 2022.

From all of us to you, take care, have a wonderful time with the ones you love and we can’t wait to see you in 2022.

Sorry, You’re Not a Winner by Samuel Bailey – Touring the UK in 2022

Posted on: November 29th, 2021 by ppEditor

In 2022 we’re collaborating with Theatre Royal Plymouth to produce a UK tour of Samuel Bailey’s latest play Sorry, You’re Not a Winner. The play tells the story of Liam and Fletch, two friends who’ve reached a crossroad in their friendship as their lives take them in different directions. 

The show opens at Theatre Royal Plymouth on 24 February and will run until 12 March, it then tours to Bristol Old Vic (29 March – 2 April) and then to Northern Stage, Newcastle (5 – 9 April). Tickets for all venues are now on sale and more information for each venue can be found via the links below.

Sorry, You’re not a Winner is a Paines Plough and Theatre Royal Plymouth production in association with University of Plymouth, School of Society and Culture. Full cast and creative team details will follow in the upcoming months, so keep an eye out on our website and social media channels for updates.

About Sorry, You’re Not a Winner:
Liam and Fletch grew up together. Born on the same street. Best mates since primary. Inseparable. The only difference was while Fletch was getting suspended from school, Liam was studying. And now he’s going to Oxford. But with Liam gone, who’s going to keep Fletch out of trouble? 

A striking new play from Samuel Bailey, whose debut play Shook won him the 2019 Papatango Prize and Times Breakthrough Award in 2021, Sorry, you’re not a winner is a play about aspiration, social mobility and getting caught between class. It asks; if ‘making it’ means leaving everything you know and everyone you love behind – what’s the point?

About Samuel Bailey:
Samuel Bailey is a writer born in London and raised in the West Midlands. His play Shook won the Papatango Prize in 2019. After a sold-out run at the Southwark Playhouse, Papatango created a digital version of the play in collaboration with James Bobin. The film was a NY Times Critic’s Pick and won Samuel the Times Breakthrough Award at the South Bank Show Sky Arts Awards. Previously, Samuel has been part of Old Vic 12, the Orange Tree Writer’s Collective and a recipient of an MGCFutures bursary. 

UK tour dates:
Theatre Royal Plymouth
24 Feb – 12 Mar 2022

Bristol Old Vic
29 Mar – 2 Apr 2022

Northern Stage, Newcastle-Upon-Tyne
5 – 9 Apr 2022

Shortlist announced for the 2021 Women’s Prize for Playwriting

Posted on: November 25th, 2021 by ppEditor

The Women’s Prize for Playwriting, produced by Ellie Keel and Paines Plough, with Principal Partner 45North and in association with Sonia Friedman Productions today announce the 30 shortlisted scripts for The Women’s Prize for Playwriting 2021, selected from 850 entries. The Prize is designed to celebrate and support exceptional playwrights who identify as female by providing them with a national platform. The Prize is for a full-length play (defined as over 60 minutes in length), written in English, and the winning playwright wins £12,000. The Prize is sponsored by Samuel French Ltd, a Concord Theatricals company, who are the official publishing partner of the prize. The founding sponsor of the Prize was PER People

In its inaugural year two First Prizes of £12,000 were awarded. Reasons You Should(n’t) Love Me by Amy Trigg premiered at Kiln Theatre to critical acclaim in May 2021, directed by Charlotte Bennett. An audio version was produced by Audible the following month. You Bury Me by Ahlam, directed by Katie Posner, had a staged reading at the Lyceum Theatre in August as part of the Edinburgh International Festival.

Ellie Keel, Founder Director of The Women’s Prize for Playwriting, today said, “The process of whittling down this year’s longlist to the shortlist was incredibly hard because of the exceptional quality of the work submitted to the prize this year. We feel extremely privileged to have read ambitious and accomplished plays on an extraordinarily vast range of subjects and themes, and we hope that the content of our longlist and shortlist will act as a powerful beacon of proof that theatre programming should strive to be more bold and brave – both in terms of the writers it puts faith in, and the subject matter it elevates. I’m thrilled for the shortlisted writers and look forward to championing their plays.”

Katie Posner and Charlotte Bennett, joint Artistic Directors of Paines Plough, added, “This shortlist of writers is bursting with wit, joy and massive talent and we are continually honoured that we get the opportunity to sit with these writers’ words. They are wildly epic, clever, visual, poetic and explore big knotty ideas. There are so many plays about subjects we never see on stage and we have kept asking ourselves ‘why not?!’ It’s surreal to even comprehend how women have been prevented from storming our national main stages and these plays prove time and time again that this needs to change!”

The judges for this year’s Prize are Arifa Akbar, Mel Kenyon (Chair), Lucy Kirkwood, Jasmine Lee-Jones, Winsome Pinnock, Indhu Rubasingham, Jenny Sealey, Nina Steiger, Nicola Walker and Jodie Whittaker.

 

The 2021 Women’s Prize for Playwriting shortlist is:

MOUNTAIN WARFARE by Abi Zakarian

Little Sister Alice Flynn

Birdie by Alison Carr

Like.Share.Kill by Bella Enahoro

Awareness by Beth Westbrook

Foreign by Carmen Harris

YELLOW TEETH by Dina Nayeri

Of Silent Words by Diya Sengupta and Amy Brian

Time, Like the Sea by Georgia Bruce

A Bouffon Play About Hong Kong by Isabella Leung

FURIES by Isley Lynn

Consumed by Karis Kelly

Void by Laura Waldren

upright enuf by lydia luke

The Middle by Mandi Chivasa

And Tomorrow I’ll Dance With You by Méábh de Brún

Kissing by Miriam Battye

Dollars and Sense by Naomi Sumner

Sankofa by Nicole Acquah

Blessed Spirits by Nicole Joseph

Some of Us Exist in the Future by Nkenna Akunna

Decades by Paula B Stanic

SAMUEL TAKES A BREAK IN MALE DUNGEON NO. 5 AFTER A LONG BUT GENERALLY SUCCESSFUL DAY OF TOURS by Rhianna Kemi Ilube

A Woman Walks into a Bank by Roxy Cook

Rojava by Sharon Farrell

HOW I LEARNED TO SWIM by Somebody Jones

The Kilburn Muhammad Ali by Tam J Miller

Imposter Syndrome by Tolu Fagbayi

Ripe by Trudie Shutler

The Light Trail by Lydia Sabatini

The finalist plays will be announced in December. The winner(s) will be announced at a ceremony in London on Friday 4 February 2022.

Discover more about the Women’s Prize for Playwriting at: http://womensprizeforplaywriting.co.uk

 

Longlist announced for the Women’s Prize for Playwriting 2021

Posted on: November 15th, 2021 by ppEditor

The Women’s Prize for Playwriting, produced by Ellie Keel and Paines Plough, with Principal Partner 45North and in association with Sonia Friedman Productions today announce the 62 longlisted scripts for The Women’s Prize for Playwriting 2021, selected from 850 entries. The Prize is designed to celebrate and support exceptional playwrights who identify as female by providing them with a national platform. The Prize is for a full-length play (defined as over 60 minutes in length), written in English, and the winning playwright wins £12,000. The Prize is sponsored by Samuel French Ltd, a Concord Theatricals company, who are the official publishing partner of the prize. The founding sponsor of the Prize was PER People.

In its inaugural year two First Prizes of £12,000 were awarded. Reasons You Should(n’t) Love Me by Amy Trigg premiered at Kiln Theatre to critical acclaim in May 2021, directed by Charlotte Bennett. An audio version was produced by Audible the following month, ahead of a national tour in Autumn 2022. You Bury Me by Ahlam, directed by Katie Posner, had its première at the Lyceum Theatre in August as part of the Edinburgh International Festival.

Ellie Keel, Founder Director of The Women’s Prize for Playwriting, today said, “After an amazing first year of The Women’s Prize for Playwriting in which we were delighted to mount a full production of Amy Trigg’s Reasons You Should(n’t) Love Me at Kiln Theatre, as well as the premiere of You Bury Me by Ahlam at the Edinburgh International Festival, I’m thrilled to have a second longlist bursting with quality, ambition and imagination. It’s going to be a difficult job to whittle down these 60 plays to a shortlist – they have in common the fact that they are rich in theatrical possibility and aren’t afraid to take on complex, confronting and important subject matter. I’m proud of every writer who submitted a play to The Women’s Prize for Playwriting in what has been an extraordinarily challenging year for the creative industries.”

Katie Posner and Charlotte Bennett, joint Artistic Directors of Paines Plough, added, “The last 18 months have been an overwhelming challenge for the theatre industry and for freelancers in particular and so we were astounded by the incredible quality of all the plays submitted to this year’s Women’s Prize for Playwriting. The creativity that has shone through despite a pandemic is nothing short of inspirational. We appreciate how hard it is to press ‘send’ on a play and share your words with strangers and it has been a true privilege to have read so many people’s work, which has once again shown that there is an abundance of amazing talent amongst female-identifying playwrights. We can’t wait to continue reading into the next stages of the prize.”

The judges for this year’s Prize are Arifa Akbar, Mel Kenyon (Chair), Lucy Kirkwood, Jasmine Lee-Jones, Winsome Pinnock, Indhu Rubasingham, Jenny Sealey, Nina Steiger, Nicola Walker and Jodie Whittaker.

The longlist in full is:

The shortlist will be announced on Thursday 25 November, followed by the finalist plays in December. The winner(s) will be announced at a ceremony in London on Friday 4 February 2022.

www.womensprizeforplaywriting.co.uk