Owen McCafferty
Owen McCafferty (born 1961) is a playwright from Northern Ireland.
Early life
[edit]This section of a biography of a living person does not include any references or sources. (November 2014) |
Born in Belfast, Northern Ireland, McCafferty in 1961 he was brought up in London from the age of 1 until aged 10 when his parents returned to Belfast. He was educated at St Augustine's Secondary School, the College of Business Studies and then the University of Ulster where he studied Philosophy and History.
Career
[edit]His play Scenes from the Big Picture, originally produced in 2003 at the National Theatre in London, earned him the John Whiting Award, the Evening Standard's Charles Wintour Award for New Playwriting and the Meyer-Whitworth Award. It was the first time any playwright had won all three awards in one year.[1][2]
McCafferty has also adapted J P Miller's Days of Wine and Roses but only used the skeleton of the original.
McCafferty's writing features the language and complexities, both comic and tragic, of Belfast life. Like John Millington Synge, McCafferty's dialogue is highly stylized.
McCafferty is a member of Aosdána.[3]
Plays
[edit]- I won't dance don't ask me
- Mojo Mickybo
- Cold Comfort
- Freefalling
- Shoot the Crow
- Closing Time
- Scenes from the Big Picture
- The Absence of Women
- Titanic (Scenes from The British Wreck Commissioner's Inquiry 1912)
- Quietly
- Unfaithful
- Fire Below
- Death of a Comedian
- Agreement
Screenplays
[edit]- Ordinary Love (2019)
Films based on his plays
[edit]See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "irish playography". Archived from the original on 9 October 2007.
- ^ "Solas Nua". Archived from the original on 28 August 2008. Retrieved 28 August 2008.
- ^ Mike McCormack elected to Aosdána, tramppress.com, Retrieved June 14, 2018.