British playwright, director and photographer
James Phillips (born 29 April 1977) is a British playwright, director and photographer.
Educated at St Catherine's College, Oxford, Phillips' first play, The Rubenstein Kiss, won both the John Whiting Award (2006)[1] and the TMA Award for Best Play. As a director he has worked extensively and was a recipient of the National Arts Endowment Award for his first professional production, Frank McGuinness's Observe the Sons of Ulster Marching Towards the Somme at the Pleasance, London.[2]
Plays
- The Little Fir Tree (2004) premiered at Sheffield Theatres, directed by James Phillips[3]
- The Rubenstein Kiss (2005) premiered at the Hampstead Theatre, directed by James Phillips[1]
- Wind in the Willows (2010) adapted for Latitude Festival, directed by Alan Lane[4]
- Time and the City (2011) premiered in Hull for Slung Low Theatre Company, directed by Alan Lane[5]
- Hidden in the Sand (2013) premiered at Trafalgar Studios, directed by James Phillips[6]
- City Stories (2013-ongoing) resident at St James Theatre, London, transferred to 59E59 Theaters, New York in May 2016,[7] directed by James Phillips[8]
- The White Whale (2014) premiered in Leeds for Slung Low Theatre Company, directed by Alan Lane[9]
- Camelot: The Shining City (2015) premiering at Sheffield Theatres, directed by Alan Lane[10]
- McQueen (2015) premiering at St James Theatre, London, transferred to Theatre Royal, Haymarket, London in August 2015, directed by John Caird[11]
- Flood (2017) premiering as part of Hull UK City of Culture 2017, directed by Alan Lane[12][13]
Other work
- If We Dead Awaken (2012), TV drama for Coming Up, Channel 4, directed by Luke McManus[14]
- Nicosia: The Last Dividing Line (2013), book of documentary photography, published by En Tipis (Nicosia, Cyprus)[15]
References
External links
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2010–9999 | |
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