Helen EdmundsonFRSL (born 1964) is a British playwright, screenwriter and producer. She has won awards and critical acclaim both for her original writing and for her adaptations of various literary classics for the stage and screen.
Early life
Edmundson was born in Liverpool, in 1964.[1] Most of her childhood was spent on the Wirral and in Chester.[1] Edmundson studied drama at Manchester University.[1] After her studies, Edmundson acted with Red Stockings, a female agit-prop company, for whom she wrote the musical comedy Ladies in the Lift in 1988.[1] This was her first solo attempt at writing for the stage. After leaving Red Stockings, she acted throughout northwest England.[1]
Theatre
1990s
Edmundson's first play Flying was produced at the National Theatre Studio in 1990. In 1992, her adaptation of Anna Karenina, produced by Shared Experience, won a Time Out Award and a TMA Award; the production toured nationally and internationally.[2] In 1993, Edmundson's original play The Clearing, which won the John Whiting Award, was staged at the Bush Theatre.[3] In 1994, her adaptation of The Mill on the Floss was also produced by Shared Experience, again touring nationally and internationally; Edmundson won a Time Out Award for The Clearing and The Mill on the Floss.[4][2] In 1996, Shared Experience staged her adaptation of War and Peace at the National Theatre[5] in a production starring BAFTA Award-nominee Anne-Marie Duff; the play was nominated for a Writers' Guild Award for Best Play.
2000s
In 2002, Edmundson's play Mother Teresa is Dead was produced at the Royal Court Theatre. In 2004, her adaptation of Gone to Earth was produced by Shared Experience at the Lyric Hammersmith and on tour; it was nominated for a TMA Award.[6] Edmundson's adaptation of Coram Boy premiered at the National Theatre in November 2005, starring Olivier Award-winner Bertie Carvel and Tony Award-nominee Paul Ritter; Edmundson received a Time Out Award and was nominated for an Olivier Award. Coram Boy was named by the Evening Standard as one of the fifty best plays of the century,[7][8][9] and became used as a set text in A-Level Drama and Theatre Studies.[10] The play returned for a revival at the same venue a year later, again starring Carvel. Her adaptation of Orestes, toured in the UK and played at the Tricycle Theatre with Shared Experience in 2006.[11]
Coram Boy was revived at the Imperial Theatre on Broadway in 2007, starring Emmy Award-winner Uzo Aduba and Tony Award-nominee Jan Maxwell, receiving six Tony Award nominations. In 2008, Edmundson amended her adaptation of War and Peace, turning it into a two-part play; this production was staged by Shared Experience and Nottingham Playhouse before touring. In the same year, her musical adaptation of Zorro was produced at the Garrick Theatre, starring Olivier Award-winner Lesli Margherita and Olivier Award-nominee Emma Williams; Edmundson was nominated for an Olivier Award for Best New Musical.[12] In 2009, Edmundson's adaptation of Life Is a Dream was produced at the Donmar Warehouse, starring BAFTA Award-winner Dominic West.[13]
In February 2021, Edmundson's adaptation of Anna Karenina was revived at Sheffield Theatres' Crucible Theatre.
In March 2022, Edmundson's adaptation of Small Island was revived at the National Theatre.[28]
^"The Heresy of Love". Shakespeare's Globe. 2015. Archived from the original on 20 September 2018. Retrieved 20 September 2018.. Written by Helen Edmundson and directed by John Dove.