Authors

debbie tucker green

debbie tucker green is a playwright, screenwriter and director.

Her plays include: ear for eye (Royal Court Theatre, 2018); a profoundly affectionate, passionate devotion to someone (-noun) (Royal Court Theatre, 2017); hang (Royal Court, 2015); nut (National Theatre, 2013); truth and reconciliation (Royal Court, 2011); random (Royal Court, 2008); generations (Young Vic, 2007); stoning mary (Royal Court, 2005); trade (RSC, 2005); born bad (Hampstead Theatre, 2003; Olivier Award for Most Promising Newcomer); and dirty butterfly (Soho Theatre, 2003).

She wrote and directed the feature film, Second Coming (BFI/Film 4, 2014; International Film Festival Rotterdam Big Screen Award) and adapted her play random into a TV film for Channel 4, which won the 2012 BAFTA for Best Single Drama and the Black International Film/MVSA Award for Best UK Film.

Her work for radio includes: lament (Radio Academy Arias Gold Award), gone, random, handprint and freefall.

She was awarded the 2015 Windham Campbell Prize for Drama.

random
truth and reconciliation
born bad
dirty butterfly
stoning mary
trade & generations: two plays
trade
generations
nut
hang
a profoundly affectionate, passionate devotion to someone (-noun)
ear for eye

JJ Green

JJ Green is an actor, writer and disability-in-the-arts consultant. As a writer he led on the project An Adapter Plug Guide to Autism in the Arts, which launched through Equity UK in 2021. His play A-Typical Rainbow was premiered at Turbine Theatre, London, in 2022.

A-Typical Rainbow

Sadeysa Greenaway-Bailey

Sadeysa Greenaway-Bailey is a freelance performance designer with a background in scenic art and carnival arts.

She is an associate artist at Company Three, where her work includes When This Is Over (Yard Theatre) and #BlackIs… (Pleasance Theatre and New Diorama Theatre).

Other work as co-creator, co-designer and designer includes: The Odyssey Episode 5: The Underworld (National Theatre), The Unforgotten (Young Vic Theatre), Tambo & Bones (Theatre Royal Stratford East), Death of England (including Micheal, Delroy, Closing Time and Face to Face at the National Theatre), If I Were Older (National Theatre New Views), Anansi the Spider (Unicorn Theatre and Regent's Park Open Air Theatre).

Her awards include a Set Design Recognition from the Black British Theatre Awards. She become a Fellow at Rose Bruford College in 2021.

When This Is Over

Richard Greenberg

Richard Greenberg is an American playwright and television writer. His plays include The Assembled Parties, Take Me Out (Tony Award for Best Play), The Dazzle (Outer Critics Circle Award), Three Days of Rain (L.A. Drama Critics Award, Pulitzer Prize finalist), The American Plan and the book for a musical adaptation of Far from Heaven. He has received the Oppenheimer Award for a new playwright as well as the first PEN/Laura Pels Award for a playwright in midcareer.

The Assembled Parties

Declan Greene

Declan Greene is an Australian playwright and theatre-make. His plays include: Moth, Pompeii L.A., Eight Gigabytes of hardcore Pornography, I Am A Miracle, and The Homosexuals, or 'Faggots'. Awards include the Malcolm Robertson Prize, the Max Afford Playwright's Award, the AWGIE for Theatre for Young Audiences, and the Green Room Award for Best Original Writing.

Moth

Gillian Greer

Gillian Greer is a playwright and dramaturg from Dublin.

Her plays include: Boy Parts, adapted from the novel by Eliza Clark (Soho Theatre, 2023); Meat (Theatre503, London, 2020; a finalist in the 2018 International Playwriting Award); and Petals (nominated for the Irish Times Theatre Award for Best New Play in 2015).

As a dramaturg, she has worked at the National Theatre, VAULT Festival, Clean Break Theatre Company, The Mercury Theatre and many more. She was appointed Literary Manager of Soho Theatre, London, in 2019.

Meat
Boy Parts

Stacey Gregg

Stacey Gregg is from Belfast and is a writer and performer for stage and screen. Her plays include Scorch (Outburst Queer Arts Festival, Belfast, 2015; Edinburgh Fringe, 2016); Shibboleth (Abbey Theatre, Dublin, 2015); Override (Watford Palace Theatre, 2013); Lagan (Ovalhouse Theatre London, 2011); Perve (Abbey Theatre, Dublin, 2011; BBC Radio Drama Award 2012) and When Cows Go Boom (Abbey Theatre, Dublin 2008).

She co-created an interactive web installation for CRASSH (Centre for Research in the Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities).

Television work includes Raw (RTÉ), Spoof or Die (Channel Four) and The Frankenstein Chronicles (Rainmark).

Author photo by Nina Sologubenko
Stacey Gregg
Perve
Lagan
When Cows Go Boom
Override
Shibboleth
Scorch