DAVID EDGAR

David Edgar was born into a theatre family and took up writing full time in 1972. In 1989, he founded Britain’s first graduate playwriting course, at the University of Birmingham, of which he was director for ten years. His stage adaptations include Albie Sachs’s Jail Diary, Charles Dickens’s Nicholas Nickleby (both for the Royal Shakespeare Company), Gitta Sereny’s biography of Albert Speer (National Theatre) and Julian Barnes’s Arthur & George (Birmingham Repertory Theatre), as well as a version of Henrik Ibsen’s The Master Builder (Chichester Festival Theatre). He has written two community plays for Dorchester: Entertaining Strangers and A Time to Keep (with Stephanie Dale). His original plays for the RSC include Destiny, Maydays, Pentecost, The Prisoner’s Dilemma and Written on the Heart. Other recent plays include Daughtersof the Revolution and Mothers Against (Oregon Shakespeare Festival and Berkeley Repertory Theatre), Playing with Fire (National Theatre) and Testing the Echo (Out of Joint). He is the author of How Plays Work.