In 1982 and 1983, he was Resident Writer with the Bubble Theatre for whom he wrote Glitterballs and The Rogue's Progress.[citation needed]
His other theatre work includes After Shave (Apollo Theatre, 1978), R.I.P Maria Callas (Edinburgh Festival Fringe / Hen and Chickens, 1992), A Working Woman - from Émile Zola’s L'Assommoir (West Yorkshire Playhouse, 1992), Pick Yourself Up (Queen's Theatre, Hornchurch, 2011), A Victorian Mikado (Krazy Kat Theatre, 2011), The Standard Bearer (Waterloo East Theatre, London / Stephanie Feury Studio Theatre, Los Angeles, 2014), The Devil in the Belfry - libretto after a scenario by Claude Debussy (Gottingen 2013), and Told Look Younger (Jermyn Street Theatre, London, 2015).[citation needed]
He also collaborated with Jeff Clarke on The Burglar's Opera for Opera della Luna (2004) "stolen from an idea by W. S. Gilbert with music nicked from Sir Arthur Sullivan" and with the Weaver Dance Company on The Loves of Mars and Venus and The Loves of Pygmalion.[citation needed]
His new comedy Two Cigarettes in the Dark starring Penelope Keith and directed by Alan Strachan opens at the Chichester Festival Theatre in February 2022.[2]
So You Want To Write Radio Drama? with Claire Grove (Nick Hern Books, 2013)[12]
The World and His Wife: A true story told by two unreliable narrators (Book Guild 2019)[13]
Hurst on Film with Caitlin Smith (Quartertoten 2021)
'The Secret Life of Caretaker Number 112 Stroke 9 Subsection 7' in Build High for Happiness (Obverse Books 2021)
The Wallscrawler and Other Stories (Obverse Books 2022)[14]
Awards
His play Memorials to the Missing (2007) won the Tinniswood Award for best original radio script of 2007 and Silver in the Best Drama category of the 2008 Sony Radio Academy Awards.
His radio drama Gerontius (2010) won the 2011 Tinniswood Award for Best Radio Drama Script.[15]
References
^Wyatt, Stephen (2010). "About Stephen". www.stephenwyatt.co.uk. Retrieved 1 September 2011.