594:) who all, pretending to be on a walking holiday, booked an isolated country cottage for a week where they sat down and wrote a play together. They took what later came to be termed the "firing squad" approach to playwriting. In a firing squad one member of the party has a blank round; given that no member knows who this is, none of them need assume responsibility for the killing. Edgar and his friends tried to write in a style as similar to the others as possible so none of them need take responsibility for his contribution to the play. The result was
571:(1972), which toured with General Will and also appeared at the Edinburgh Festival and at the Royal Court Theatre Upstairs, all in 1972, was a one-act documentary with songs about industrial resistance to the Conservative government. General Will came to a halt when the only gay member of the company took exception to the heterosexual slant of the material and went on strike in mid-performance. They did, however, lead to Edgar's first foreign premiere.
371:, who was able to commission aspiring playwrights and produce their works with the Bradford University Theatre Group, the company consisting of university students. While writing for his newspaper to expose a minor scandal in local politics in northern England, Edgar wrote a play for Parr dealing with the anti-apartheid campaign directed against a tour of South African rugby players. Before the play was accepted, however, the tour was called off.
402:, produced by students of Manchester University at the Edinburgh Festival in August 1971. The play is set ostensibly in a university lecture theatre with a professor telling the story of Luxembourg's political journey, culminating with her violent death at the hand of the fascists in 1919. Edgar added the dramatic twist that events were being regularly interrupted by the students to question the professor's version of events.
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dividing his kingdom between his daughters, and the other was Edgar's lightly veiled suggestion that
Britain was exposed to a fascist takeover. The play was picketed by a group of neo-fascists waving Union Flags that echoed the patriotic bunting on the front of the theatre, and small scuffles broke out between these pickets and the emerging theatre audience.
672:(1973) was written for Leeds Playhouse Theatre where it premiered in March 1973 then transferred to the Soho Polytechnic Lunchtime Theatre. It was a one-act play in which Eileen, after the still birth of her illegitimate baby, steals a baby at random and is sentenced to nine months in prison, where Valium is found to be the answer. This was televised by the
625:(1972), at the Unity Theatre, London, was about housing conditions for the working classes (and this was also produced at a community centre in Battersea at the request of the Wandsworth Community Workshop led by the Tenants Union, as part of the campaign in 1971β72 against the Housing Finance Bill, eventually enacted as the Housing Finance Act 1972);
280:, a play calling for six female roles and, forgetting his mother's advice, cast himself in the lead role as the woman who hopes to profit from war by running a canteen for soldiers, but loses all three of her children to the war from which she had hoped to profit. After leaving school in 1966, Edgar taught for one term at a
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and an Indian who works in a local foundry. During the election campaign a strike breaks out at the foundry and the "cosy
English ritual" of a local by-election is transformed into a multi-cultural battleground which results in the fascists turning for protection and support to the forces they oppose.
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where it proved so popular they didn't bother putting on evening performances for a while, and at a gays-only lunchtime theatre club called
Ambience (from which developed London's Gay Sweatshop). The Soho Polytechnic was another lunchtime theatre venue where Edgar put on a number of necessarily short
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starts in India, on the day of independence, introducing four main characters whose lives intersect thirty years later in a small town in the
English West Midlands. A British Colonel is a dying Conservative MP; a Major who is hoping to succeed him; a Sergeant who is a candidate for a far-right party
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and many more of "the sort of plays one would never go to now." His father converted a garden shed into a twelve-seat theatre for him in their garden and the young Edgar began to write plays for "the theatre in the shed" from the age of five with the intention of giving himself the starring role. By
101:(born 26 February 1948) is a British playwright and writer who has had more than sixty of his plays published and performed on stage, radio and television around the world, making him one of the most prolific dramatists of the post-1960s generation in Great Britain. He was resident playwright at the
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from 2007 to 2013 and architect of the
Writers' Guild's New Play Commission Scheme. In January 2023 he received an Outstanding Contribution Award. The award honoured his outstanding contribution to British playwriting, four decades of service to playwrights, and the instrumental role played in the
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While working as a journalist in
Bradford, Edgar came across a group led by an ex-Conservative councillor that called itself the Yorkshire Campaign to Stop Immigration. This group apparently, "addressed many real needs and some real fears" by holding meetings at which they showed films upside down
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That summer, Britain was in the throes of the Queen's Silver
Jubilee and West End theatre audience figures suffered as a consequence, with only two shows managing to hold their own during Jubilee week, both of which were at the Aldwych. One of them was about a mad king provoking a civil war by
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called a "burgeoning fringe scene" which included theatre companies with names like the John Bull
Puncture Repair Kit and The Welfare State. Edgar was co-founder of such a group that took the name The General Will Theatre Company which specialised in a "crude and cartoonish" style of political
398:. Edgar later described it as a "highly melodramatic piece" that relied on a series of "fairly obvious effects culled from watching the wrong sorts of plays at an impressionable age". "It wasn't very good", Edgar admits. He re-used the character of Rosa Luxemburg in his first full-length work,
259:. "At this stage," Edgar recalled, "the idea of being a playwright who would write large parts for other people had not entered my consciousness." He really wanted to be an actor: "I wrote the 'Life and Times' for the sole purpose of playing Shakespeare's lead actor
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Being brought up in what he later recalled as a "more or less upper-middle-class family", with both parents, three grandparents, and "various other slightly more distant relatives" all involved in the theatre or broadcasting, Edgar remembers having seen most of the
120:; he was the company's literary consultant from 1984 to 1988, and became an honorary associate artist of the company in 1989. His plays have been directed by former artistic directors of both of the largest British subsidised companies,
1219:. The letter stated that "Labour's election manifesto under Jeremy Corbyn's leadership offers a transformative plan that prioritises the needs of people and the planet over private profit and the vested interests of a few."
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wrote: "Self-aware and pin-sharp, Edgar delivers a personal and political play that's more radical than his 20-year-old firebrand self could ever imagine." The production went on to tour
England and Wales in autumn 2019.
716:(1976) was the result. Edgar had wanted it to be produced in a big repertory theatre in a multi-racial city but it was instead picked up by Ron Daniels at the Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC), who produced it at
664:(1973), written for the Soho Polytechnic was a one-act play in which two small-time crooks are cheated of their loot whilst trying to rob broken vending machines in a motorway cafeteria. This was televised as
1185:(Nick Hern Books, 2009; revised 2021) was a crystallisation of his play-teaching experience. Its eight chapters were headed: Audiences, Actions, Character, Genre, Structure, Scenes, Devices, Endings.
2368:"Review: Trying It On | David Edgar's formally inventive one-man show sees the 71-year-old playwright in conversation with his younger self to investigate what happened to the Sgt Pepper generation"
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in
Northamptonshire, Edgar became immersed in theatre and was the first pupil in over 300 years of school history to be permitted to direct a play. Undeterred by his actors all being male, he chose
1844:(1852), which read: "Hegel remarks somewhere that all great world-historic facts and personages appear, so to speak, twice. He forgot to add: the first time as tragedy, the second time as farce."
382:, a one-act play that received its Bradford premiere in July 1970, was revived at the Basement Theatre in London and led to more commissions from Parr for the Bradford Theatre Group.
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His works have been performed in Ireland, throughout western and eastern Europe, the U.S., and as far afield as Australia, New Zealand, Canada and Japan. He is also the author of
174:, 2010), an influential study of dramatic structure illustrated by examples of both classic and contemporary plays, grew out of the Playwriting course he taught at Birmingham.
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In addition to chairing the Socialist Society at Manchester University, Edgar edited the student newspaper, and found himself unable to heed his mother's advice. In 1967, the
544:(1971), a series of sketches showing how the mythical concept of 'The National Interest' can be used to justify sacrifices by the many on behalf of the self-interested few;
186:, England, into the fourth generation of a theatrical family. His maternal grandmother was the character actress Isabel Thornton, who had made films in the 1930s, including
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Edgar married the social activist Eve Brook in 1979; she died of lung cancer aged 53 in 1998. In 1999, he met fellow dramatist Stephanie Dale. In 2007, they wrote together
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They were first performed in Ashland, Oregon, as part of the Oregon Shakespeare Festival in March 2003 before transferring to Berkeley Repertory Theatre in November 2003.
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The play itself was an attempt to answer the question: how can a movement espousing the ideology that the UK had defied during the war gain purchase in postwar Britain?
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Lunchtime theatre is an avant-garde phenomenon that seems to exist on the fringe of the fringe and whose popularity waxes and wanes but never disappears. One series in
532:. Meanwhile, computer monitors permitted the audience to contribute to the action and the ending varied each evening according to the decisions made by the spectators.
818:, he resumed writing original plays which deal more overtly with political subjects. After the abandonment of the left by a number of public figures during the 1970s,
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with different episodes shown from different perspectives. This received its world premiere in 1972 at the hands of the Shoot Theatre Company at the Mickery Theatre,
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During this period Edgar continued to work as a full-time journalist, and even found time to do some acting with Parr's group, in parts such as the title role in
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Initially, Edgar's career as a journalist developed alongside his attempts to write plays. In 1970, soon after moving to Bradford to take up his role with the
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was scheduled for a dozen plays, but proved so popular they eventually had over a hundred. In London in the 1970s it had something of a renaissance at the
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They were premiered in the United Kingdom at Birmingham Repertory Theatre in March 2004. They went on to play at the Barbican, London in the same month.
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commentary presented with generous dollops of music hall and burlesque for comedic effect. General Will took several of Edgar's works on tour including
431:(1971), produced by Parr's Bradford University Theatre Group, then again at the Edinburgh Festival in 1971, is a one-act play that has a copycat of the
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of 23 June 2016. Edgar appeared as himself on stage, in interrogation with his youthful self, at the Royal Court. "Idealism is not dead", the critic
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in Bradford, before becoming a full-time writer in 1972. He maintains his journalism with regular contributions to newspapers and journals such as
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629:(1972) produced on tour by Paradise Foundry Theatre Company, London, was a ten-minute play written with Howard, Wandor and Snoo Wilson about
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903:, and other historical biographies and documents, focuses on Speer's imprisonment, release, and personal struggle to overcome his denial of
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720:, Stratford-upon-Avon, which Edgar described as "a tin hut in rural Warwickshire". From there it transferred to the RSC's London home, the
166:'s MA in Playwriting Studies programme in 1989 and was its director until 1999. He was appointed Professor of Playwriting Studies in 1995.
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to attempt to buy back American POWs; In 1972, Edgar decided to put the journalism to one side and took to being a playwright full-time.
417:(1971), produced at the Pool Theatre, Edinburgh, and again at the Little Theatre, London in 1972 is a one-act re-working of the theme of
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621:(1975) by Second City Theatre Company was a debate on the motives for arson committed in protest at redundancies at a local factory;
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2007:. The History of Broadcasting in the United Kingdom. Vol. IV. Oxford: Oxford University Press (published 1995). p. 80.
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is set in a flat where the squabbles of the two main characters are inter cut with flashbacks to the lives of their respective
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Further material followed in quick succession and by the end of 1971 Edgar had seen eight of his plays performed, including
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508:, presented as a Cold War Game in the great hall at Bradford University in March 1972. On the stage, scenes in a nuclear
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plays written for office workers on their lunchbreak but which proved remarkably popular with television producers.
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strip club where they encounter a stripper/waitress whose story changes their perception of such entertainment;
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309:(1965). Peter Farago, director of the winning play, put together a cast from talent at the Festival to perform
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in London in 1973, is a one-act pantomime transposing political events in the life of British Prime Minister
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On the strength of this, Parr commissioned Edgar to write a play for two student actresses to perform at the
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were the inner workings of the Democratic and Republican parties at the time of a gubernatorial election.
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548:(1971), a one-act play set in a church during a service conducted by among others a vicar who also plays
504:. This was staged as part of a series of events produced by Parr for which Edgar's main contribution was
427:(1859), in which the hero remains in bed for 79 days unable to cope with the decimalisation of currency;
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By now, Edgar was receiving commissions from repertory theatres and small touring groups resulting in
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in 1974β75 and has been a board member there since 1985. Awarded a Fellowship in Creative Writing at
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In December 2019, along with 42 other leading cultural figures, Edgar signed a letter endorsing the
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and David Edgar played the Apothecary. On graduating in 1969, Edgar became a journalist with the
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143:(2000), a book by playwrights on the art of writing plays. He had his first operatic libretto,
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496:(1971), a mock "cabaret on ice" in which Scott is confronted by the Devil on a motorbike with
234:β the first BBC radio station to open outside London β and the first regional Director of the
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in 2008 was concerned with a diverse set of characters preparing to become British citizens.
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called the two plays "a compelling analysis of American political life past and present."
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Edgar's comparison of British fascists with German Nazis was condemned as "dishonest" by
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Apart from the plays in print, Edgar has written on theatre, politics and play-writing.
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210:(1919β2012), was an actor and stage manager at the Birmingham Rep, before joining the
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Edgar wrote a trilogy of plays on the theme of negotiation set in Eastern Europe:
226:. Barrie Edgar's father, and David Edgar's grandfather, was the early broadcaster
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review called it "a thoughtful, self-questioning play of ceaseless invention".
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822:(1983) deals with people's drift rightwards as they age. The play returned to
617:, and later revived by OpenSpace Theatre, London, in 1973 and then revived as
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canon by the age of fifteen, either in his native Birmingham or in nearby
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2417:"Playwright David Edgar: 'It's a very rich time for political theatre'"
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in 1946, soon working as a television producer, whose credits included
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1077:) was published in 1988. The subjects of the fifteen essays included
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Provocative Acts: British Playwriting in the Post-war Era and Beyond
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shootings in 1972, Edgar collaborated with six friends (Tony Bicat,
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massacre take place after a 1970 pop festival on the Isle of Wight;
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439:(1971), produced at the Pool Theatre, Edinburgh, then again at the
2568:"Coogan and Klein lead cultural figures backing Corbyn and Labour"
2402:"Lifetime Award for Decades of Writing & Advocacy for Writers"
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It Felt Empty When the Heart Went at First but It Is Alright Now
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The Second Time as Farce: Reflections on the Drama of Mean Times
1047:(with the Royal Shakespeare Company in Stratford-upon-Avon) and
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The Second Time as Farce: Reflections on the Drama of Mean Times
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British Motorcycles Since 1950 (Vol. 5), Triumph: The Company
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for the Royal Shakespeare Company, on the translation of the
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was written and went on tour after debut at Birmingham Rep.
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Writers' Guild's crisis response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
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View a segment on David Edgar and "Continental Divide" at
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Edgar is also the author of two plays premiering in 2024:
598:(1972), an episodic look at the history of the British in
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the age of nine he had written his first full-scale work,
2342:"The haranguing of David Edgar β by his 20-year-old self"
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109:, he was made a Bicentennial Arts Fellow (US) (1978β79).
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He also participated in the Bush Theatre's 2011 project
409:(1970), a one-act play in which two businessmen visit a
2456:"Full casting announced for David Edgar's The New Real"
2438:"David Edgar: Political theatre is having a resurgence"
2387:"Dramatist Takes to the Stage to Tackle the Referendum"
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wrote: "It has simply changed its focus and tactics."
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won almost 120,000 votes in London's local elections.
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Events Following the Closure of a Motorcycle Factory
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Events Following The Closure of a Motorcycle Factory
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to read drama with a view to becoming a playwright.
1199:, a play for large cast, based on a story by Dale.
899:'s chief architect, munitions minister, and friend
317:at the next Edinburgh Festival. That cast included
112:Edgar has enjoyed a long-term association with the
763:for new dramatic writing and was televised by the
488:(1971). Edgar's acting also ran to playing God in
151:Festival in 1998. He is a former president of the
516:marchers and various political figures including
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994:with a piece he wrote based on a chapter of the
704:with no sound. This group later merged with the
3251:21st-century English dramatists and playwrights
3241:20th-century English dramatists and playwrights
512:were being played out while in the hall itself
190:(1938); his maternal aunt Nancy Burman ran the
3125:How to Disappear Completely and Never Be Found
2771:Freehold Company and Peter Hulton (joint) for
2541:"Letters | Vote for hope and a decent future"
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194:throughout the 1960s and '70s, and his mother
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2061:- 1 August 2007, Edgar at Edinburgh Festival.
1110:The State of Play: Playwrights on Playwriting
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1506:The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby
801:The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby
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1557:The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
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708:which, in 1973, won 16% of the vote at the
461:, won't let "Tedderella" (Heath) go to the
3276:Fellows of the Royal Society of Literature
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1841:The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte
1116:, 1999). He was author of a 31-page essay
535:During the early 1970s, Bradford had what
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1780:. Contemporarywriters.com. Archived from
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257:The Life and Times of William Shakespeare
157:Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature
16:British playwright and writer (born 1948)
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1838:and comes from the opening sentences of
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613:(1972) for the Belgrade Theatre Studio,
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2340:Billington, Michael (29 October 2018).
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1882:, Fellows, Royal Society of Literature.
883:(2005), both of which premiered at the
859:(2001), which premiered shortly before
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3286:Writers from Birmingham, West Midlands
3266:Alumni of the University of Manchester
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2137:-Interviews David Edgar, 21 June 2007.
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500:trying to stop his expedition to the
230:who had been the founding manager of
2436:Chambers, Katie (9 September 2024).
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1857:. The Writers' Guild. Archived from
295:was held in Bradford and was won by
116:since 1976, beginning with his play
2415:Hemming, Sally (7 September 2024).
2075:-Helen Chappell, 12 September 2005.
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684:as Eileen. In the wake of the 1973
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2400:Theatre-Wales (24 February 2023).
2224:Edgar, David (14 September 2005).
1925:, telegraph.co.uk, 6 January 2013.
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696:that lasted until 1976, the play,
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3256:21st-century English male writers
3246:20th-century English male writers
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2566:Proctor, Kate (3 December 2019).
2514:Edgar, David (23 February 1999).
1940:"What are we telling the nation?"
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950:. The subjects of the two plays,
3281:People educated at Oundle School
3070:The Cosmonaut's Last Message ...
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2385:Theatre-Wales (4 October 2019).
1982:O'Mahony, John (20 March 2004).
1904:Edgar, David (17 January 2013).
1754:Dictionary of Literary Biography
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1007:referendum on the European Union
728:celebrations and just after the
668:by Scottish Television in 1973.
514:Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament
447:into a pantomime reminiscent of
325:, both of Edinburgh University,
198:(nΓ©e Burman) was an actress and
3088:Further than the Furthest Thing
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1649:Something Wrong About the Mouth
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915:, a play about the politics of
293:National Student Drama Festival
153:Writers' Guild of Great Britain
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1834:The title is a quotation from
1361:The Case of the Workers' Plane
1124:and twenty-three playwrights.
680:series in November 1974, with
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2742:Narrow Road to the Deep North
2720:A Day in the Death of Joe Egg
2499:Theatre-Wales (31 May 2019).
2366:Dunn, Jamie (6 August 2019).
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1487:The Jail Diary of Albie Sachs
1325:Not with a Bang But A Whimper
567:, which the title mocks; and
177:
2181:, Patrick Stephens Limited,
2118:-at the Playwrights Database
1938:Edgar, David (7 July 2005).
1035:Edgar was president of the
956:Daughters of the Revolution,
866:
771:series in January 1978 with
192:Birmingham Repertory Theatre
103:Birmingham Repertory Theatre
7:
3118:Scenes from the Big Picture
3039:Get Up and Tie Your Fingers
2047:β Sheila Connor interviews.
1906:"Other Lives: Barrie Edgar"
1894:-Edgar's Grandmother's film
1629:Daughters of the Revolution
1307:Excuses, Excuses aka. Fired
928:Oregon Shakespeare Festival
147:, performed as part of the
10:
3302:
2917:Shamrocks & Crocodiles
2200:"David Edgar - playwright"
1825:β the playwrights database
1005:explored the roots of the
936:Berkeley Repertory Theatre
348:The London Review of Books
3184:
3058:
2953:
2855:
2764:
2687:
2226:"My fight with the Front"
1756:, excerpt at Bookrags.com
1313:Rent or Caught in the Act
1021:Edinburgh Fringe Festival
828:Royal Shakespeare Company
806:Royal Shakespeare Company
710:West Bromwich by-election
623:Rent or Caught in the Act
367:, a Fellow in Theatre at
114:Royal Shakespeare Company
82:
68:
60:
35:
23:
2888:Our Friends in the North
2290:"Revolution and revenge"
2114:5 September 2008 at the
2095:24 December 2017 at the
1923:"Obituary: Barrie Edgar"
1892:Isabel Thonrnton at IMDb
1821:24 December 2017 at the
1277:Conversation in Paradise
1127:The dramatists included
1062:
946:, a two-play epic about
839:(1990), written shortly
787:as Gurjeet Singh Khera.
164:University of Birmingham
2133:7 February 2009 at the
1750:"David Edgar Biography"
871:Edgar's plays included
853:in a small church; and
755:, but the play won the
202:radio announcer during
2177:Wilson, Steve (1991),
2147:British Theatre Record
2109:Scott of the Antarctic
1946:. London: LRB (London)
1944:London Review of Books
1616:The Prisoner's Dilemma
1550:The Shape of the Table
1519:Entertaining Strangers
1451:The Perils of Bardfrod
1247:Still Life: Man in Bed
1075:Lawrence & Wishart
885:Royal National Theatre
856:The Prisoner's Dilemma
836:The Shape of the Table
726:Queen's Silver Jubilee
692:motorcycle factory at
494:Scott of the Antarctic
486:Tom Brown's Schooldays
415:Still Life: Man in Bed
3141:Breakfast with Mugabe
3139:and Fraser Grace for
2982:Your Home in the West
2623:British Theatre Guide
2480:. Orange Tree Theatre
2038:British Theatre Guide
1778:"The British Council"
1265:The National Interest
1235:A Truer Shade of Blue
1223:Selected bibliography
1217:2019 general election
1215:'s leadership in the
977:In 2011, he produced
783:as the Sergeant, and
542:The National Interest
467:1970 general election
407:A Truer Shade of Blue
336:Telegraph & Argus
315:Mandrake, The Musical
286:Manchester University
139:(1988) and editor of
3098:Jumping on my Shadow
2899:The Rat in the Skull
2773:Freehold on Antigone
2458:(Press release). RSC
2256:"Maydays at the RSC"
2210:on 13 December 2006.
2090:Playwrights Database
2001:Briggs, Asa (1978).
1682:Written on the Heart
1427:The National Theatre
1343:The Eagle Has Landed
1108:Edgar was editor of
980:Written on the Heart
940:Berkeley, California
641:Gaining a reputation
453:. The ugly sisters,
355:Early theatre pieces
297:Edinburgh University
250:, plus the complete
200:BBC Overseas Service
3169:Alexi Kaye Campbell
3152:Taking Care of Baby
3136:The Rubenstein Kiss
2848:Stephen Bill (1979)
2422:The Financial Times
2152:4 July 2008 at the
2043:4 July 2008 at the
1984:"Enter, stage left"
1861:on 29 December 2008
1569:A Movie Starring Me
1403:I Know What I Meant
1153:Christopher Hampton
1053:Orange Tree Theatre
843:; the second part,
830:in September 2018.
808:, an adaptation of
759:, presented by the
651:Orange Tree Theatre
560:, the judge in the
369:Bradford University
248:Stratford-upon-Avon
159:, elected in 1985.
2944:A Handful of Stars
2927:The Art of Success
2825:The Winter Dancers
2789:Heathcote Williams
2681:John Whiting Award
2501:"Width and Wisdom"
2156:-Lunchtime Theatre
1623:Continental Divide
1563:Buying a Landslide
1397:The Dunkirk Spirit
1295:State of Emergency
1229:Two Kinds of Angel
1091:the National Front
1011:Michael Billington
944:Continental Divide
757:John Whiting Award
574:Shortly after the
569:State of Emergency
384:Two Kinds of Angel
380:Two Kinds of Angel
376:Edinburgh Festival
331:Bristol University
282:preparatory school
236:BBC Midland Region
182:Edgar was born in
3218:
3217:
2934:American Bagpipes
2547:. 3 December 2019
2288:(14 March 2004).
2128:The Writers Guild
1784:on 1 October 2007
1696:A Christmas Carol
1675:Arthur and George
1642:Playing with Fire
1349:A Fart For Europe
1301:Englandβs Ireland
1099:Nicholas Nickleby
1087:drama-documentary
948:American politics
912:Playing with Fire
880:Playing with Fire
815:Nicholas Nickleby
676:as part of their
655:Croydon Warehouse
633:'s 1971 visit to
596:England's Ireland
586:, Francis Fuchs,
484:'s adaptation of
474:Toad of Toad Hall
378:. The result was
299:'s production of
284:and then went to
141:The State of Play
107:Leeds Polytechnic
93:
92:
75:(nΓ©e Burman) and
3293:
3188:
3123:Fin Kennedy for
3078:The Waiting Room
2975:Imagine Drowning
2965:Keeping Tom Nice
2932:Iain Heggie for
2754:Christie in Love
2732:The Ruling Class
2709:The Interpreters
2674:
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2269:Testing the Echo
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1655:Testing the Echo
1609:The Secret Parts
1531:Midas Connection
1421:O Fair Jerusalem
1129:April de Angelis
996:King James Bible
985:King James Bible
972:Testing the Echo
921:multiculturalism
895:'s biography of
775:as the Colonel,
773:Frederick Treves
600:Northern Ireland
526:Bertrand Russell
327:Tim Pigott-Smith
130:National Theatre
124:for the RSC and
49:
46:26 February 1948
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3211:(shared) (2010)
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3143:(shared) (2006)
3114:Owen McCafferty
3080:(shared) (2000)
3054:
3037:Ann Coburn for
3011:Beautiful Thing
3006:Jonathan Harvey
3002:(shared) (1993)
2996:Helen Edmundson
2980:Rod Wooden for
2949:
2919:(shared) (1985)
2851:
2831:David Halliwell
2783:As Time Goes By
2779:Mustapha Matura
2760:
2745:(shared) (1968)
2711:(shared) (1967)
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1635:Mothers Against
1589:Talking to Mars
1373:Operation Iskra
1271:The Rupert Show
1225:
1205:
1203:Political views
1191:
1165:Winsome Pinnock
1161:Conor McPherson
1133:Sebastian Barry
1079:political drama
1065:
1049:Here in America
952:Mothers Against
932:Ashland, Oregon
869:
824:The Other Place
810:Charles Dickens
796:
777:Nigel Hawthorne
767:as part of the
722:Aldwych Theatre
718:The Other Place
643:
611:Excuses Excuses
565:obscenity trial
546:The Rupert Show
518:John F. Kennedy
357:
261:Richard Burbage
252:Agatha Christie
223:Songs of Praise
180:
172:Nick Hern Books
162:He founded the
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2321:on 4 July 2011
2315:"Bush Theatre"
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2099:-Complete list
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1173:Mark Ravenhill
1137:David Eldridge
1085:of the 1980s,
1064:
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966:Neal Ascherson
868:
865:
795:
789:
779:as the Major,
769:Play for Today
730:National Front
706:National Front
678:Play for Today
642:
639:
584:Howard Brenton
522:Hugh Gaitskell
490:Howard Brenton
465:Ball when the
433:Charles Manson
419:Ivan Goncharov
396:Marilyn Monroe
392:Rosa Luxemburg
356:
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306:The Homecoming
277:Mother Courage
272:Bertolt Brecht
206:. His father,
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2727:Peter Barnes
2718:
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2705:Wole Soyinka
2698:
2695:Tom Stoppard
2609:KQED's Spark
2604:: Literature
2577:. Retrieved
2573:The Guardian
2571:
2561:
2549:. Retrieved
2545:The Guardian
2544:
2535:
2523:. Retrieved
2520:The Guardian
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2349:. Retrieved
2346:The Guardian
2345:
2335:
2323:. Retrieved
2319:the original
2309:
2297:. Retrieved
2294:The Observer
2293:
2280:
2273:Out of Joint
2264:
2250:
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2230:The Guardian
2229:
2208:the original
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2066:
2058:Sunday Times
2057:
2052:
2018:. Retrieved
2003:
1996:
1988:The Guardian
1987:
1948:. Retrieved
1943:
1918:
1910:The Guardian
1909:
1899:
1887:
1875:
1863:. Retrieved
1859:the original
1849:
1840:
1830:
1786:. Retrieved
1782:the original
1753:
1703:Trying It On
1702:
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1669:Black Tulips
1668:
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1602:Albert Speer
1600:
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1537:Heartlanders
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1481:Ecclesiastes
1480:
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1457:Ten Years On
1456:
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1415:Blood Sports
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1209:Labour Party
1206:
1194:
1192:
1182:
1181:
1177:Peter Whelan
1157:Phyllis Nagy
1141:Dusty Hughes
1126:
1117:
1109:
1107:
1098:
1095:John Osborne
1083:conservatism
1070:
1069:
1066:
1048:
1045:The New Real
1044:
1042:
1034:
1028:
1024:
1017:Trying It On
1016:
1015:
1003:Trying It On
1002:
1000:
991:
989:
978:
976:
971:
970:
963:
960:
955:
951:
943:
925:
910:
909:
901:Albert Speer
897:Adolf Hitler
893:Gitta Sereny
889:Albert Speer
888:
878:
874:Albert Speer
872:
870:
861:11 September
854:
844:
834:
832:
819:
813:
799:
797:
791:
768:
761:Arts Council
753:The Guardian
752:
746:
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734:
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626:
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568:
562:
558:Judge Argyle
545:
541:
537:The Guardian
536:
534:
505:
498:Hells Angels
493:
485:
473:
471:
469:intervenes.
448:
445:Edward Heath
441:Bush Theatre
436:
428:
422:
414:
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387:
383:
379:
373:
360:
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346:
342:The Guardian
340:
334:
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311:Mike Alfreds
304:
290:
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265:
256:
240:
221:
217:Come Dancing
215:
208:Barrie Edgar
204:World War II
187:
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167:
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144:
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136:
134:
117:
111:
95:
94:
77:Barrie Edgar
18:
3231:1948 births
3066:David Greig
3022:Some Voices
3018:Joe Penhall
2961:Lucy Gannon
2940:Billy Roche
2909:On the Edge
2905:Guy Hibbert
2839:Snoo Wilson
2811:David Edgar
2737:Edward Bond
2614:David Edgar
2598:David Edgar
2484:9 September
2462:9 September
2351:23 February
2299:21 February
2204:doollee.com
1855:"Who's who"
1816:doollee.com
1525:That Summer
1493:Mary Barnes
1445:Saigon Rose
1289:Death Story
1241:Bloody Rosa
1149:David Greig
1145:Kevin Elyot
1097:, adapting
1019:was at the
942:, to write
891:, based on
877:(2000) and
592:Snoo Wilson
580:Brian Clark
530:Aldermaston
459:Roy Jenkins
400:Bloody Rosa
244:Shakespeare
228:Percy Edgar
122:Trevor Nunn
96:David Edgar
87:Percy Edgar
25:David Edgar
3225:Categories
3200:The Author
3195:Tim Crouch
3104:Rona Munro
3049:Starstruck
2877:Migrations
2799:John Arden
2579:4 December
2551:4 December
1710:References
1499:Teendreams
1259:Tedderella
1025:The Skinny
934:, and the
917:New Labour
682:Patti Love
588:David Hare
502:South Pole
450:Cinderella
437:Tedderella
388:alter egos
365:Chris Parr
184:Birmingham
178:Early life
145:The Bridge
126:Peter Hall
64:Playwright
61:Occupation
53:Birmingham
42:1948-02-26
3174:The Pride
3163:Stockholm
3059:2000β2009
2954:1990β1999
2923:Nick Dear
2856:1980β1989
2835:Prejudice
2821:David Lan
2765:1970β1979
2688:1967β1969
2442:The Stage
1836:Karl Marx
1576:Pentecost
1409:Ball Boys
1355:Gangsters
1337:Baby Love
1023:in 2019.
1001:In 2018,
992:Sixty Six
867:The 2000s
846:Pentecost
812:'s novel
794:and after
670:Baby Love
666:Sanctuary
653:, at the
604:Amsterdam
510:submarine
421:'s novel
363:, he met
83:Relatives
69:Parent(s)
55:, England
3051:(1998/9)
2525:18 April
2245:-at IMDb
2168:-at IMDb
2150:Archived
2131:Archived
2112:Archived
2093:Archived
2041:Archived
1819:Archived
1469:Wreckers
1385:The Show
1331:Backshot
1103:Live Aid
1057:Richmond
1051:(at the
804:for the
792:Nickleby
662:Backshot
631:Bob Hope
615:Coventry
550:Superman
478:Flashman
155:, and a
128:for the
2815:Destiny
2644:Theatre
2372:Festmag
2325:19 June
2020:28 June
1950:28 June
1865:3 March
1788:3 March
1705:(2018)
1689:If Only
1651:(2007)
1611:(2000)
1591:(1996)
1585:(1994)
1571:(1991)
1545:(1989)
1513:Maydays
1483:(1977)
1463:Destiny
1405:(1974)
1283:The End
1029:Festmag
826:at the
820:Maydays
741:Destiny
714:Destiny
694:Meriden
690:Triumph
688:at the
647:Glasgow
506:The End
424:Oblomov
118:Destiny
3177:(2009)
3165:(2008)
3155:(2007)
3127:(2005)
3120:(2004)
3110:(2003)
3100:(2002)
3090:(2001)
3041:(1997)
3034:(1996)
3024:(1995)
3014:(1994)
2984:(1992)
2977:(1991)
2967:(1990)
2946:(1989)
2936:(1988)
2929:(1986)
2901:(1984)
2891:(1983)
2879:(1982)
2869:(1981)
2845:(1978)
2827:(1976)
2817:(1975)
2807:(1974)
2801:(1973)
2795:(1972)
2785:(1971)
2775:(1970)
2757:(1969)
2723:(1967)
2630:Portal
2275:2008).
2185:
2011:
1699:(2017)
1691:(2013)
1685:(2011)
1677:(2010)
1671:(2009)
1665:(2009)
1657:(2008)
1645:(2005)
1637:(2003)
1631:(2003)
1625:(2003)
1619:(2001)
1605:(2000)
1597:(1998)
1579:(1994)
1565:(1992)
1559:(1991)
1553:(1990)
1539:(1989)
1533:(1989)
1527:(1987)
1521:(1985)
1515:(1983)
1509:(1980)
1501:(1979)
1495:(1979)
1489:(1978)
1477:(1977)
1471:(1977)
1465:(1976)
1459:(1976)
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1267:(1971)
1261:(1971)
1255:(1971)
1249:(1971)
1243:(1971)
1237:(1970)
1231:(1970)
1211:under
686:sit-in
3185:2010β
2793:AC/DC
1114:Faber
1063:Books
938:, in
930:, in
851:mural
635:Hanoi
619:Fired
361:Argus
329:from
3207:for
3203:and
3197:for
3187:9999
3171:for
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2618:IMDb
2581:2019
2553:2019
2527:2009
2486:2024
2464:2024
2353:2023
2327:2012
2301:2023
2183:ISBN
2022:2009
2009:ISBN
1952:2009
1867:2009
1790:2009
1253:Acid
1175:and
954:and
590:and
556:and
524:and
476:and
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429:Acid
411:Soho
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