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The Royal Shakespeare Company Reveals Winners of 37 Plays Competition

The search for plays attracted over 2,000 submissions.

By: May. 23, 2023
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The Royal Shakespeare Company Reveals Winners of 37 Plays Competition  Image

The Royal Shakespeare Company has announced details of the final 37 Plays selected for its nationwide playwriting search: an ambitious new initiative open to anybody from anywhere in the UK.

The search for plays closed on 31 January 2023, attracting over 2,000 submissions. Over a six-week period, 24 readers read 31 plays per week to create an initial longlist of 350 plays. From the longlist, a total of 71 plays were shortlisted for commendation.

The final 37 plays come from writers all over the United Kingdom: from Craigavon to Dawlish, from Cardiff to Edinburgh and Skipton to Wolverhampton and from writers ranging from age 9 to 65. Nearly a third of the selected 37 plays are by writers who have identified as first-time writers.

Erica Whyman, RSC Acting Artistic Director commented on “the wonderful variety, originality and quality of the plays on the shortlist.

“Every one of the shortlisted plays deserves attention and a production, so the decision-making was really hard. We chose the 37 to represent the widest range of ideas, voices and stories, deliberately including plays by accomplished writers alongside plays that showed enormous promise by first-time playwrights. We prioritised distinctiveness, invention, and whether the play offered a particular insight into life in the UK now. We chose big-hearted comedies, unusual romances, dark and particular tragedies and fresh takes on our shared history”.

The judging panel was chaired by Erica and included theatre-maker and Associate Director of The Unicorn Theatre Rachel Bagshaw, actor and RSC Associate Artist Ray Fearon, Theatre Critic and Associate Editor of The Stage Lyn Gardner, RSC Youth Advisory Board members Harry and Ella, Best-selling author Sharna Jackson, 2018 Ian Charleson Award-winner Bally Gill, award-winning playwrights Mark Ravenhill and Juliet Gilkes Romero and actor/writer and RSC Associate Artist David Threlfall

Erica Whyman continued; “It was an honour to chair the distinguished judging panel. We were struck by a number of recurring themes, from climate crisis, to living life online, to questions of class, faith, race, war and consent. From our youngest writers to our most experienced a picture emerges of a country wrestling with big questions, sharing a sense of loss, exploring new identities, striving for happy healthy communities and finding new ways to laugh at ourselves. The collection moves wonderfully and wildly from the domestic to the supernatural, from conventional structures used to tell wholly new stories, to plays that take place inside a gamer's paradise.

“In a normal commissioning year, we do not have dedicated resources to read unsolicited scripts, so together with our partners nationwide we feel very privileged to have come to know so many writers new to us or plays by writers we already admired. But the collection is not only for us – it is designed to be a gift to anyone, from the most prominent stages in the country to community stages, schools, amateur companies and anyone who is looking for excellent and intriguing new work. It has always mattered to the RSC to celebrate and listen to the instincts and voices of living writers alongside our house playwright. To do so on such a scale and hand-in-hand with our brilliant partners has made for a truly inclusive project on a giant scale.

“We will publish the collection this autumn by creating staged readings of every play, rehearsed and performed at all of our associate Theatre Partners and in Stratford at The Other Place and sharing them online. Ahead of that each writer in the 37 will receive bespoke dramaturgical support to take their play to the next draft.”

 

Pippa Hill, Head of New Work at the RSC, added:

“From a field in Scotland where a fish falls from the sky; to a still, dappled woodland containing a sulky wood sprite; from a coral fringed island to the artificial sunlight on the deck of a spaceship via a futuristic hospital, to a horror filled box of muffins on a police station reception desk, this folio of 37 plays takes us absolutely everywhere.

“We have plays written from the perspective of mischievous fish; a woman covered in butterflies; an emotional support dog; a dancer in the early days of motherhood; a protesting farmer's wife tied to a solar panel; musicians in a mosque; a family in North Shields; a dreaming, drowning man; a teenager who becomes a whale; a lost Guyanese man; and a boy who suddenly finds himself at the battle of Hastings; to name just a selection of extraordinary characters that have been created by the writers of our 37 Plays.”

 

Play submissions were divided into three age categories of up to 11 years old, 11 to 17 years old and 18 years old and above. Multi-authored plays were invited to nominate a lead writer or average age of writers.

A full list of the 71 shortlisted play titles and writers, announced in early May, is available to view via www.37plays.co.uk. The chosen 37 Plays are:

 

Under 11 Category: 

 

Alfie and War

By Molly Sue Cartwright

Staffordshire

England. Now and 1066. Alfie meets King Harold at the Battle of Hastings.

 

Bruno

By Dylan Punch

Northamptonshire

A bedroom. Now. Greg and Wally's gaming afternoon is interrupted by an unexpected visitor who is on a quest to find their friend.

 

FISH

By Maximilian Kufuor

Northamptonshire

Out of the water. Now. A whimsical journey of two talking fish who come to land to have an incredible adventure.

 

Frenemies

By Edward Keppel

Northamptonshire

Northamptonshire. Now. A group of friends learning to be kind in retaliation to the dark forces of a new social media app.

 

Stargazer

By Grace Hemmings-Buckler

Northamptonshire

A quiet village. The past. Against the orders of the king, a young girl looks up at the night sky.

 

11 to 17 Category:

 

Abandoned

By Felicity Williamson

Yorkshire

An Island. Now. A young autistic girl meets an islander who teachers her to accept herself for who she is.

 

Land Wreck

By Mia Lloyd

West Midlands

A Geography School Trip. A group of year four students reject the rigid approach of their school to embark on a creative adventure.

 

Life Goes On

By Isabella James

Northamptonshire

A House. Now. Grief and new opportunities collide when a home is passed on.

 

Momentary Masters

By Jacob Thomas

Surrey

Planet earth. Now. Shawn's amateur astronomy club reaches for the stars and brings him closer to his son.

 

Stars

By Abigail White

London

Outside the School Counsellor's Office. Now. Two students acknowledge their fears and anxieties, attempting connection.

 

18+ Category:

 

And I Dreamt I was Drowning

Amanda Wilkin

London

An island at war. The future. Kiya and Danny are looking for a boat, but how far will they go to get out?

 

Beltane

By Billie Collins

Manchester

A Wood. Now. A sprite befriends a teenager as the future of the woods hangs in the balance.

 

Butterflies

By Rob Thorpe-Woods

London

Scrubland. Now. Charlie encounters a wood spirit who offers a dark but tempting exchange.

 

Dreaming and Drowning

By Kwame Owusu

London

Bristol University & under the ocean. Now. Malachi is desperately trying to keep his head above water.

 

Effort//less

By Hayley-Rose Jarman-Norris

Devon

England. The future. A dystopian vision of society, sofas, relationships and a jumping tree.

 

Evie of Windrush

By Joan Jackson-Callen

London

London. Now. One woman's odyssey through the absurdity of the hostile environment.

 

Friday at the masjid

By maatin

London

West Midlands. Now. Zaid's plan to save his local mosque proves provocative but surprisingly successful.

 

From Lewisham to Llandudno

By Samantha Robinson

Edinburgh

The UK. Now. Helen's journey across two countries through the eyes of the people she met on her way.

 

Go Back Home!

By Hannah Shury-Smith

Surrey

London. Now. A beautiful story about a lost Guyanese man searching for home.

 

Godmodders and Metagamers

By Hannah Kennedy

Buckinghamshire

The SS Medusa & Slough. Now. Dan escapes the noise to soar through space.

 

Growing Pains

By Hannah Eggleton

Buckinghamshire

Now. A deeply textured meditation on one woman's relationship with her school years.

 

Human Resources

By Chloe Banks

Devon

A hospital. The future. A horrifyingly tense look at healthcare by the highest bidder.

 

Jack in a Box

By Joanne Thomson

Lanarkshire

Kingsmead Police Station. Now. A surrealist comedy about the ultimate virtue signal.

 

LilyPower

By Amy Bethan Evans

London

Now. An exploration of the lives of three generations of neurodivergent women; Lil, Lilian and Lily.

 

North Star

By Tom Murray

Cambridgeshire

Scotland. 1941. A man falls from the sky with dark and terrifying consequences.

 

NOT

By Lisa Parry

Glamorgan

North Walian School. The 19th century and the present. An atmospheric play that asks how a country can find its future without a deep examination of its past.

 

Pram Talk

By Rosanna Jahangard

Berkshire

A Park. Now. A witty, enlightening and powerful play about Bronte navigating the new terrain of motherhood.

 

Radiant Boy  

By Nancy Netherwood         

London

North East England. January 1983. A priest and a haunted boy meet in his mother's house.

 

Re: Jane Doe

By Patty Kim Hamilton

London

A play about intimacy, consent, and our language around boundaries, assault, and healing.


Russell

By Eoin McAndrew

Northern Ireland

An isolated Farm. Now. After a divine intervention, Michal joins a new community; but rural paradise is not what it seems.

 

Still Life (with mangos)

By Ruby Kitching

Yorkshire

London. Now. A British Bangladeshi woman has an awakening and joins an art class.

 

Something to Take Off the Edge

By Errol McGlashan

London

Prison. 1980's. Terry and Ezra navigate prison politics with tragic consequences.

 

The Doris Effect

By Tim Wallers

Shropshire

Shropshire. Now. Doris crucifies herself on a solar panel to challenge local politics.

 

The Ever-Changing Sea

By Jordon Grant

London

Echo Beach. Then and now. A moving, shape-shifting story of friendship.

 

The Filleting App

By Alex Oates

Northumberland

North Shields. Now. A comic yet heart-breaking story of a family using all their ingenuity to stay afloat.

 

The Last Picture

By Catherine Dyson

Glamorgan

A Theatre. Now. Sam is a support dog and takes us on a journey through pictures to witness the past.

 

This Is A Gift

By Kolbrún Björt Sigfúsdóttir

Edinburgh

Edinburgh. Now. A silver-tongued stranger offers Zoe and her dad one wish after saving his life.



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