Playwright, director and actor, Noel Greig was born in Skegness, where his father was an end-of-the pier entertainer. He went to the local grammar school and then to King’s College, London, going on to form The Combination, an alternative space and theatre company in Brighton, with Ruth Marks and Jenny Harris, from where it later moved to Deptford. He went on to work with Inter-Action and then to join the socialist company The General Will in Bradford, where he was also instrumental in creating gay and lesbian community theatre movement which transformed the direction of The General Will. He then joined Gay Sweatshop, writing many of their major plays including As Time Goes By (with Drew Griffiths), The Dear Love of Comrades and Poppies. He went to work as playwright-in-residence with Theatre Centre young people’s company and has written plays for young people with numerous companies. In recent years, in conjunction with Kully Thiarai, he has worked on Contacting the World, developing intercultural methods of playwriting, working with groups. He died in September 2009 after a long illness.
Extracts from the interview:
The Brighton Combination
'There were two friends of mine at university, two women friends of mine, one called Ruth Marks and a woman called Jenny Harris. And they’d been up to
Touring with Gay Sweatshop
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Remembering Gerald Chapman, co-founder of Gay Sweatshop
Video Transcript
Detailed Topics List of those covered in the interview
See Viewing Interviews for details of where to view the whole interview
Bibliography
Published plays include:
As Time Goes By, with Drew Griffiths (1977) and The Dear Love of Comrades (Gay Men’s Press, 1981)
The Dear Love of Comrades (1979) in Gay Sweatshop Four Plays and a Company ed. Philip Osment (Methuen, 1989)
Poppies (Gay Men’s Press, 1983)
Rainbow's Ending (French, 1984)
Do We Ever See Grace?, 1985 (Cambridge University Press, 1998)
Plague of Innocence (1989), in Gay Plays 5 (Methuen, 1994)
Final Cargo ( Dramascripts Extra, 1994)
At Break of Day (French’s 2003)
Trashed (Aurora Metro, 2004)
Unpublished plays include:
Bring Back The Cat (The Combination, 1975)
Men (with Don Milligan, The General Will 1976)
Heroes (with John Turner, The Combination, 1977)
Blood Green, 1980 (with Angela Stewart-Park)
Angels Descend on Paris (1980)
Hard Times For Our Times (an adaptation from Charles Dickens, 1982)
The Death of Christopher Marlow (1983)
Spinning a Yarn (Double Exposure,1984)
Working Hearts (1986)
Laughter on the Other Side (1986)
Whispers on the Dark (1987)
Familiar Feelings (1989)
Paradise Now and Then (1989)
The Good Sisters (a translation from Dario Fo, 1991)
Alice (1998)
Writings on playwriting:
Playwriting: A Practical Guide by Noel Greig (Routledge, 2005)
Young People New Theatre: A Practical Guide to an Intercultural Procees by Noel Greig (Routledge, 2008)
Links:
www.writewords.org.uk/interviews/noel_greig.asp
www.guardian.co.uk/stage/2009/sep/23/noel-greig-obituary
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