Precocious Writers
Raised on a Bradford council estate, Andrea Dunbar was just 15 when she wrote her first play, The Arbor.
07 Aug 2017
Raised on a Bradford council estate, Andrea Dunbar was just 15 when she wrote her first play, The Arbor.
07 Aug 2017
Consent, our new play by Nina Raine, revolves around a court case: two friends take opposing briefs in a rape trial.
14 Mar 2017
“Keep on writing, even if it’s crap. You can always throw it away later”. Maybe all writing advice boils down this bit of practical wisdom from Alistair Beaton.
27 Feb 2017
In May we opened a show called A View From Islington North*, comprising short political satires. Here we publish three of the scripts in full, with the kind permission of the writers.
27 Jul 2016
The dust had scarcely settled from David Cameron’s successful attempt to blow up Britain, when I started receiving puzzled enquiries from theatre-goers attending my short play THE ACCIDENTAL LEADER.
28 Jun 2016
Is laughing at politics a catalyst for change – or a substitute? With A View From Islington North about to open in the West End, we asked three brilliant satirists about the relationship between comedy and politics. JONATHAN LYNN co-wrote Yes, Minister and Yes, Prime Minister. He wrote and directed Clue and Nuns on the […]
11 May 2016
Meet the cast of A View from Islington North, our forthcoming West End show featuring imaginative, provocative and hilarious political plays from some of the country’s finest writers. The company includes Bruce Alexander A Touch of Frost, Love and Marriage, Out of Joint’s Ciphers Sarah Alexander Smack the Pony, Coupling, Armstrong and Miller Ann Mitchell […]
18 Apr 2016
You can’t see the steam train that comes to a halt, hissing and clanking, in the middle of the auditorium during All That Fall – theatre-goers are blindfolded throughout. But you’d swear it was there, thanks to Dyfan Jones’ nine-directional sound design. Beckett’s radio play tells the story of a woman’s arduous journey to a […]
11 Apr 2016
One of Samuel Beckett’s most acclaimed and accessible plays, All That Fall is also one of his least known. The writer’s friend and biographer Jim Knowlson explains why – and why it is “too good, too funny and too moving” to be left on the shelf. When Beckett’s first radio play was broadcast in 1957, […]
16 Feb 2016
Out of Joint is presenting a rare live production of Samuel Beckett’s radio play All That Fall, in which theatre-goers will be blindfolded, the actors moving about the auditorium. One of Beckett’s most naturalistic plays, it is inspired by his native Foxrock in Ireland. We asked cast members about their first experience of Beckett. BRÍD […]
09 Feb 2016