GRAE CLEUGH
| Nationality: | Scottish |
| Literary Agent: *: | |
| Email: | |
| Website: | n/a |
* If shown, click on the literary agent's name for full contact details and links to all the Playwrights they represent.
Plays by Grae Cleugh
Eight, Nine, Ten, Out |
| 1st Produced: | Man In The Moon Theatre, London | 1998 | ||||
| Company: | - | |||||
| 1st Published: | - | ISBN | - | |||
| To Buy This Play: | I don't think the play has been published but you could try abebooks.com or the playwright direct where their email is shown at the top of the page | |||||
| Genre: | - | - | Parts: | Male | - | Female | - |
| Parts Other: | - | |||||
| Notes: | - | |||||
| Synopsis: | - | |||||
Fucking Games |
| 1st Produced: | 2001 | |||||
| Company: | - | |||||
| 1st Published: | Methuen Drama, London >>> , 2001 | ISBN | - | |||
| To Buy This Play: | If Publisher (above) is underlined then the play may be purchased by direct click, otherwise (below) are AbeBooks for secondhand & 1st eds and other Booksellers for new copies | |||||
| Genre: | - | Play/Drama | Parts: | Male | 4 | Female | - |
| Parts Other: | - | |||||
| Notes: | won the 2002 Laurence Olivier Award for Most Promising Playwright, was directed by Dominic Cooke | |||||
| Synopsis: | Terence and Jonah have been together for ten years. Jude is young, good-looking and always chooses boyfriends badly. So, when he brings round his latest, Danny, the games begin. Fucking Games is a sharp, powerful and ironic portrait of contemporary gay relationships in the post-AIDS era. | |||||
Patriot, The |
| 1st Produced: | 2007 | |||||
| Company: | - | |||||
| 1st Published: | - | ISBN | - | |||
| To Buy This Play: | I don't think the play has been published but you could try abebooks.com or the playwright direct where their email is shown at the top of the page | |||||
| Genre: | - | Play/Drama | Parts: | Male | 2 | Female | 2 |
| Parts Other: | - | |||||
| Notes: | - | |||||
| Synopsis: | Set in the Edinburgh New Town home of a Scottish Executive minister called Tom Gordon, it imagines a confrontation between this pillar of the post-devolurtion establishment, and a young SNP activist, Paul. who is enraged by the betrayals and brutalities of recent New Labour policy, and in particular by the death in Iraq of his younger brother, a soldier in the British army: the subject, in other words, could hardly be more timely. - Joyce McMillan, Scotsman | |||||