Bruntwood Prize for Playwriting
The Bruntwood Prize for Playwriting is a British competition for playwriting, the largest of its kind in Europe- in 2019 it received 2561 entries. Since its inception in 2005 over 15,000 scripts have been entered, £304,000 has been awarded to 34 prize winning writers and 24 winning productions have been staged in 38 UK wide venues. In 2015 it celebrated its 10th anniversary and is now recognised as a launch-pad for some of the country’s most respected and produced playwrights. The Prize is awarded to scripts that are original and unperformed. The award is a joint venture between the property company Bruntwood and the Royal Exchange Theatre in Manchester the Prize is an opportunity for writers of any background and experience to enter unperformed plays to be judged by a panel of industry experts for a chance to win part of a prize fund totalling £40,000.
Each winner enters into a development process with the Royal Exchange Theatre in an endeavour to bring their work to production. There have been co-productions with Lyric Hammersmith, Live Theatre, Soho Theatre, Bush Theatre, Orange Tree Theatre, Sherman Theatre, High Tide and the Royal Court Theatre. Work has also gone on to be produced internationally from Australia, USA, Germany, France, to Canada and Sweden. In addition to a high proportion of winning and shortlisted plays being produced professionally, each of the top 100 plays receives individual feedback from the Royal Exchange Theatre’s creative team.
Its alumni include some the UK’s most respected playwrights such as Duncan Macmillan and Alistair McDowall. Anna Jordan’s 2013 Bruntwood Prize-winning play, Yen, was produced off-Broadway with Oscar-nominated actor Lucas Hedges; Kendall Feaver’s 2015 Judges’ award-winning play The Almighty Sometimes is now a multi-award-winning play that has gone on to be produced by the Griffin Theatre Company, Sydney. She is now the Philip Parsons Fellowship for Emerging Playwrights at the Belvoir, Australia.
The Bruntwood Prize is biennial and will open to submissions in 2021.
Process
All plays are submitted anonymously to the competition and are read by an expert panel of readers appointed by the Royal Exchange Theatre. There is an extensive five stage process to the reading before creating the shortlist. The final panel of readers, including key artistic staff from the Royal Exchange Theatre, compile a shortlist of 15 plays to the Judges to consider. The Judges will received the shortlist of scripts and appoint winners. The judging panel has no knowledge about the writers of each script and the writers are only revealed when the Judging process is complete.The readers as a cohort have a broad range of experiences and specialisms to try and give each submitted script the best chance.
The submitted scripts therefore go through a rigorous process to make it to the longlist and shortlist;
- Phase One – reading the first 30 pages to identify approximately 900 scripts of potential interest.
- Phase Two – a new set of readers reading the full script to identify the Top 250
- Phase Three – a new set of readers reading the full script to identify the Top 40 for discussion in Phase Four and the longlist of Top 100 scripts eligible for feedback within 2019.
- Phase Four – Script Meeting to discuss the Top 40 scripts and to decide on the Shortlist of scripts to be issued to the judges. This meeting is with core artistic staff at the Royal Exchange Theatre and external freelance directors.
Of the 2019 readers, who chose to provided information;
- 15% Consider themselves disabled
- 41% are BAME
- 65% are female and 3% are non-binary
- 28% are LGBTA+
- They are aged from their early 20’s to over 70 years old
Award Categories
Since inception in 2015, multiple Awards have been given- including the overall Bruntwood Prize for Playwriting and the Judges Awards. As of 2019 the categories are;• The Bruntwood Prize for Playwriting-a first prize of £16,000
• A Judges’ Awards of £8,000
• An Original New Voice Award of £8,000- available to playwrights who have not had full-length play professionally produced for 12 performances or more in a professional venue. All scripts entered by these playwrights are also eligible for the Bruntwood Prize, and Judges Award.
• An International Award of £8,000- open to international playwrights invited to anonymously apply via named international partners: The BANFF Centre in Canada; Belvoir Theatre and Melbourne Theatre Company in Australia; Berkeley Rep and Playwrights Horizons in the USA.
As of 2017, the Judges can also choose to award Commendations of £4,000 and a funded reading at a London Theatre venue.
Judges
The shortlisted scripts are judged by a prestigious panel of figures from across the arts industry. Until his death in 2019, Michael Oglesby CBE DL, founder of the Bruntwood Group and chairman of The Oglesby Charitable Trust participated in every Judging panel. Acting Artistic Directors of the Royal Exchange Theatre also participate in every panel.2019
Alongside Joint Artistic Director of the Royal Exchange Theatre Bryony Shanahan, judges include: Kwame Kwei-Armah , Anna Jordan, Bruntwood Prize-winning playwright; Bridget Minamore, journalist, poet and critic; Jenny Sealey MBE, Artistic Director, Graeae Theatre Company; Kate Vokes, Director of Social Impact, Bruntwood and actor Shane Zaza.New to the panel this year is ‘The People’s Judge’, Faith Yianni, a member of the public selected following a search by the Prize and leading theatre critic Lyn Gardner, to bring an audience member’s perspective to the judging process.
2017
Chaired by broadcaster Kirsty Lang the 2017 judges were: Associated Artistic Director of the Royal Exchange Theatre, Matthew Xia; playwright and former Bruntwood winner, Phil Porter; screenwriter and producer, Russell T Davies; playwright Lucy Prebble; director Lyndsey Turner; and actor, Alfred Enoch.2016
Chaired by Nicholas Hytner, former Artistic Director, National Theatre; the 2015 Prize Judges were: Artistic Director of the Royal Exchange Theatre, Sarah Frankcom; playwright and former Bruntwood winner, Vivienne Franzmann; Artistic Director, Actors Touring Company, Ramin Gray; playwright Bryony Lavery; writer and broadcaster, Miranda Sawyer; and actor and writer, Meera Syal CBE.2013
Chaired by Broadcaster Dame Jenni Murray the 2013 Prize Judges are: award-winning playwrights David Eldridge and Tanika Gupta MBE; Associate Director of the National Theatre, Marianne Elliott; actress, Suranne Jones; Artistic Director of the Royal Exchange Theatre, Greg Hersov; and theatre critic, Benedict Nightingale.2011
The Judging panel was chaired by playwright Simon Stephens and included, Royal Exchange Artistic Director Sarah Frankcom, writer Jackie Kay, and actors Sue Johnston and Maxine Peake.2008
The judging panel was chaired by actor and director Richard Wilson and included actress Brenda Blethyn OBE, actor Michael Sheen, film director Roger Michell, playwright Roy Williams, and Royal Exchange Artistic Director Greg Hersov.2005
Judges were Chaired by Chris Smith MP and consisted of Brenda Blythyn OBE, the much loved actress, Director of the National Theatre Nicholas Hynter, actor, playwright and singer Kwame Kwei Armah, and The Founding Artistic Director of the Royal Exchange Theatre Company Braham MurrayWinners and nominees
pre- 2005
A pilot version of the Prize, running in the North West area of the UK only, was won by Playwright Nicola Schofield in 2003.2005
- Monster by Duncan Macmillan
- The Cracks in My Skin by Phil Porter
- Pretend You Have Big Buildings by Ben Musgrave
2008
- Mogadishu by Vivienne Franzmann
- Winterlong by Andrew Sheridan
- The Butcher Boys by Naylah Ahmed
- Salt by Fiona Peek
2011
- Three Birds by Janice Okoh
- Brilliant Adventures by Alistair McDowall
- Britannia Waves The Rules by Gareth Farr
- Shadow Play by Louise Monaghan
- A Map of the Region by Tim Luscombe
- Climbing Snakes by Curtis Cole
- I and the Village by Silva Semerciyan
- I Started a Fire by Miriam Battye
- One Look by Cornell S John
- White by Kenneth Emson
2013
- Yen by Anna Jordan
- So Here We Are by Luke Norris
- The Rolling Stone by Chris Urch
- Bird by Katherine Chandler
- December by Alice Birch
- Dorm by Lynda Radley
- Imam by Toby Clarke
- P’YongYang by In-Sook Chappell
- Russian Dolls by Kate Lock
- Waste by David Kantounas
2015
- Wish List by Katherine Soper
- The Almighty Sometimes by Kendall Feaver
- Sound of Silence by Chloe Todd Fordham
- Parliament Square by James Fritz
- How My Light Is Spent by Alan Harris
- Rails by Simon Longman
- Tabs by Ellie Kendrick
- Wild is De Wind by Chino Odimba
- Madra by Frances Poet
- Jonestown by Kellie Smith
2017
- Heartworm by Timothy X Atack
- King Brown by Laurie Nunn
- Plow by Sharon Clark
- Electric Rosary by Tim Foley
- Oh Graveyard, You Can’t Hold Me Always by Alan McKendrick
- A Place For We by Archie Maddocks
- Pumpjack by Daniel Foxsmith
- This Is Not America by Joshua Val Martin
- when after all it was you and me by Kevin Doyle
- A Bit Of Light by Rebecca Callard
2019
- Shed: Exploded View by Phoebe Eclair-Powell
- Akedah by Michael John O’Neill
- Glee & Me by Stuart Slade
- Ballybaile by Jody O’Neill
- black bird by babirye bukilwa
- Neptune by Sam Grabiner
- The European Hare by Sami Ibrahim
- Glass by Jacob Kay
- Salty Irina by Eve Leigh
- Hares by Lee Mattison
International Shortlist
- untitled f*ck m*ss s**gon play by Kimber Lee
- Tambo & Bone by Dave Harris
- Pavlov’s Dogs by Emme Hoy
- This Land Was Made by Tori Sampson
- Periods of Collapse OR Mother Russia by Lauren Yee
Online resources