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Shortlist announced for the Women’s Prize for Playwriting 2023

Posted on: November 24th, 2023 by ppEditor

The Women’s Prize for Playwriting, produced by Ellie Keel and Paines Plough, today announces the 20 shortlisted scripts for The Women’s Prize for Playwriting 2023, selected from 1,002 entries. Launched in 2019, the Prize is designed to celebrate and support exceptional playwrights who identify as female or non-binary by providing them with a national platform.

In this third year of a prize celebrating the extraordinary talent of female and non-binary playwrights, the standard of work continues to inspire us. It was an enormous pleasure to read plays from such an impressive longlist making it extremely difficult to select just 20. This superb shortlist, a varied power house of wildly visual and epic story telling, is truly thrilling. We continue to feel so proud to have been able to read so many brilliant stories, and to celebrate the depth of writers in the UK. We are so excited to move forward in selecting this year’s finalists.

The shortlist in full is:

Find out more about the writers and their plays at this link.

The finalist plays will be announced in December. The winner(s) will be announced at a ceremony in London on Wednesday 24 January 2024.

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 in respect of an option for Ellie Keel Productions and Paines Plough to co-produce the winning play. The Prize is sponsored by Samuel French Ltd, a Concord Theatricals company, who are the official publishing partner of the prize, and by commercial theatre producers Fiery Angel. The Founding Sponsor is the leading recruitment agency, PER.

The judges for this year’s Prize, chaired by Artistic Director of Kiln Theatre Indhu Rubasingham, are journalist Samira Ahmed, playwrights April de Angelis and Chris Bush, actor Noma Dumezweni, literary agent Mel Kenyon, journalist and critic Anya Ryan, Head of Play Development at the National Theatre, Nina Steiger, and Guardian Editor-in-Chief Katharine Viner.

Announcing the recipient of our 2023 Playwright Fellowship, Somebody Jones

Posted on: November 16th, 2023 by ppEditor

We’re delighted to announce the recipient of our 2023 Playwright Fellowship, Somebody Jones.

We were blown away when we first read Somebody’s play How I Learned to Swim in 2021 for the Women’s Prize for Playwriting and have followed her other work closely since then, championing her development as a playwright.

We’re delighted to now be announcing Somebody as our Fellowship writer, where during her attachment with Paines Plough she will have some time and space to explore new ideas and use this time to write a new play. She will also receive a bursary, mentorship from our Artistic Directors, and will be part of our office and programming team.

Somebody Jones is a Los Angeles native playwright/dramaturg, currently living, working, and dreaming in London. Jones’s work celebrates and champions Black culture in all of its charms and complexities. She primarily works within the genres of horror, magical realism, verbatim, and recently, Black fantasy. The name Somebody Jones means the more you run from your past, the more you’ll run into it.

Find out more about Somebody on her website: https://www.somebodyjones.com/ 

Longlist announced for the Women’s Prize for Playwriting 2023

Posted on: October 26th, 2023 by ppEditor

www.womensprizeforplaywriting.co.uk

An interview with… Miriam Battye

Posted on: September 8th, 2023 by ppEditor

How would you describe Strategic Love Play?

It’s one scene, one first date, two strangers who met on their phones, now in a room with no guidance. And we’re off. It’s play with absolutely no stakes at all, because it’s a first date, so they can just piss off at any time. They don’t owe each other anything, they’re not allowed to ask anything of each other yet.

They don’t care about each other at all. In fact, this is just something that they have to go through, on the off chance it works out. It’s highly unlikely that it will work out. And there’s very little they can really do about it, other than being properly washed and normal enough.

But actually, if you stare at it, it’s very high stakes. You can break someone and get yourself broken. The experience can leave you completely bewildered and cored, and embarrassed that you allowed it to. It’s an uncomfortable tightrope walk, between something that you’re supposed be casual about, and something that can snap that last thread of dignity you have.

It’s about two people who have found themselves, for very different reasons, completely stuck in a dating loop. Always at another table, with another pint, and another stranger, no resulting love, no resulting calm, no way out. Maybe they need each other, to get out.

It’s maybe the most romantic thing I’ve ever written.

Can you discuss the development process, what inspired you to write this type of love story?

It is pretty unoriginal to write about love. However I have that tragic arrogant feeling that it has been uniquely more atrocious for me than for anyone else. I think a lot of people feel like that. I think that might be what dating feels like. I think that’s why I wanted to write about it, to work out why it is that I have felt so hard done by, and where on earth I got the wild idea it was supposed to be gorgeous and easy. Why should it be?

I think when I was young, I understood that lovers were fought for. I assumed I would be fought for, and I would fight for someone. But life arrived, and I found, to my surprise, dating lacks quite a lot of fight. I think this play started cos I wanted to see what happened if someone actually fought for something in this particular context.

As a writer, I am always interested in language games. I’m interested in the ways we lie to each other, the ways we fail to articulate ourselves, the ways we falsely present ourselves, the ways we bullshit without even really thinking about it. The realm of dating and quote unquote love is a fascinating place to look at this. We are trying to package a gorgeous version of ourselves, we are also trying to not try, to present ambivalence.

How do you feel dating has changed since the introduction of dating apps?

I think I wrote the play, to try and work this out.

I wonder if it’s overextended us a bit. I think apps provided an incredibly effective solution to something that is genuinely painfully difficult. So they made that initial painful part easier. No question there. But I wonder if, maybe, it isn’t supposed to be painless.

I think there are maybe some benefits to it being harder to get someone to take note of you, to try you out, to date you. And some benefits to being rejected, to properly bear yourself a bit, arse out a bit, know you tried, and deal with it. Perhaps if we front loaded the effort, everyone would try a little harder, and feel a little tried for. But of course, I have no idea.

The only thing I do know is that we’re all a bit more mortified than we used to be. There’s absolutely no way to be cool and beguiling if you’ve put your face in everyone’s phone and asked them to want you. And given them the brief idea that it’s totally their choice. You are totally available for their choosing.

And, of course, they are totally available for yours. It’s an illusion, but it’s a fucking powerful one. Maybe.

What is your number one tip for anyone heading out on a first date?

Invest.

How is the cast getting on with rehearsals/the production?

The team are top tier people. I have the most gorgeous cast. I worked with Letty (Thomas) on Scenes with girls which was my last major play, and I love what she does on stage. She is genuinely original, hilarious and stunningly powerful. And Archie (Backhouse) was new to me but is completely undeniable, he’s a proper revelation. I am delighted that they are playing these parts. And I love Katie (Posner), her work and her passion and she, along with the excellent Dramaturg and writer Gill Greer have pulled this play out of me with their enthusiasm for it, and their very deep kindness to me.

There is no substitute for having great people telling you your work is something they want to work on, your weird, ungainly little thoughts are legitimate. This play, like everything I write, is personal to me. I have sometimes found talking about this subject matter is met with platitudes, sometimes hideous pity, pointless advice, and not much interrogation. But I made a play out of it. So that’s cool. I feel like I’ve thrown the thoughts in the air, and found what I hope to be true, and not bullshit.

What are you most looking forward to bringing this show to the Fringe and on tour around the UK?

I love the Fringe, I go every year as a punter. I haven’t had a show on there in a decade. I am a completely different person, and I’m so much braver than I was, and I’ve done big tv shows, and I’ve had my work ripped apart and got over it, but nothing is really more intimidating than the Fringe to me. It’s just, a lot of people, who care a lot about theatre, sitting in your show, and then moving onto the next. I want to astound people, reach out and grab their attention before they go on to the next thing.

Also I’ve wanted to have my play on at the Soho for genuinely years. That’s terrifying too. Also, as a Northerner, so any chance to take my stuff out of the capital is delightful to me.

ANNOUNCING… Strategic Love Play and Roundabout at the Fringe

Posted on: May 12th, 2023 by ppEditor

Callout for writers and storytellers!

Posted on: February 2nd, 2023 by ppEditor

We’re launching a new nationwide writer development programme in 2023 and we want to connect with storytellers and creatives with an interest in writing for stage and performance.

Alternative formats of the call-out are available below or you can scroll down for the full written version. If you require a different mode of communication or have access needs not met here, please email access@painesplough.com.

 

 

The Women’s Prize for Playwriting 2023: submissions now open!

Posted on: January 16th, 2023 by ppEditor

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