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Churchill, Caryl

Caryl Churchill was born in London, England in 1938. When she was 10 years old, Churchill moved to Montreal, Canada, with her family. She spent her teenage years there before returning to England in 1957 to study English Language and Literature at Lady Margaret Hall, a women’s college at Oxford University. While studying, she began to write plays; her plays Downstairs (1958) and Easy Death (1961) were produced by student theatre groups.

Churchill married her husband, David Harter, in 1961, and over the next decade, the couple had three sons together. While bringing up her children in the 1960s, Churchill began to write radio plays for the BBC, including The Ants (1962) and Lovesick (1967). She was dissatisfied by her life as a stay-at-home mother of small children, questioning women’s social roles and becoming increasingly ‘politicised’. Her husband, a barrister, took six months’ leave from his work in order to share the bringing up of the family and give Churchill more time to write.

In 1972, Churchill’s first stage play, Owners, was produced, and her career as a dramatist took off; two years later, she became resident dramatist at the prestigious Royal Court Theatre in London. Her play Cloud Nine (1979) was one of the first to be widely applauded; set both in nineteenth-century colonial Africa and in the 1970s, it explored gender, power and sexual oppression among a group of characters. Socialist and feminist themes began to emerge as central to Churchill’s work, as well as experimentation with dramatic structure and form.

The first production of Top Girls was in 1982. Throughout the 1980s and 1990s, Churchill went on to write further plays including Lives of the Great Prisoners (1991) and The Skriker (1994). She continued to experiment with form, bringing music, dance and mime into her plays. In 2009, Churchill wrote a short play called Seven Jewish Children, a literary response to Israeli military strikes on Gaza. One of her recent plays Love and Information (2012) has parts for more than 100 characters, and 57 scenes; it explores the concept of ‘information overload’ provided by technology in our modern, fast-paced world.

Photo credits:
Lady Margaret College
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Lady-Margaret-Hall_Oxford_Coat_Of_Arms_(Motto).svg
Vector graphic coat of arms of the Oxford college with motto
ChevronTango, 20th April 2012
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1938

Born

Caryl Churchill was born in London on 3rd September. Her father was a political cartoonist and her mother an actress and fashion model.
c.1948

Moved to Canada

She returned to England to go to university.
1957–1960

Studied English at Oxford University

Churchill wrote her first play, Downstairs, while at university.
1961

Married David Harter

The couple have three boys: Joe, Paul and Rick.
1972

Owners premiered

Churchill’s first professional production was staged at the Royal Court Theatre in London.
Image: The Royal Court theatre, Sloane Square
Stacey Harris, 2011
CC 2.0
1974–1975

Resident dramatist at the Royal Court Theatre

She spent a year as the Royal Court’s resident dramatist, collaborating with Joint Stock Theatre Company and with feminist theatre group Monstrous Regiment.
1979

Cloud Nine written

The play was a success in the USA, and in 1982 it won an Obie Award.

Find out about the Obie Awards

1982

Top Girls first staged

It was performed at the Royal Court Theatre and won her a second Obie Award.
1987

Serious Money awarded the Laurence Olivier/BBC Award for Best New Play and the Evening Standard Award for Best Comedy of the Year

The play is a comedy about Thatcherism and the stock market, written in verse.
1997

Hotel created with composer Orlando Gough

This unusual work is an opera/ballet set in a hotel bedroom.
2008

70th birthday

It was celebrated with a retrospective of her work, held at the Royal Court Theatre.
2019

Glass. Kill. Bluebeard. Imp. written

Churchill’s latest work is a series of four short plays written to be performed together.
2021

The review Bad Nights and Odd Days staged in London

Four of Churchill’s short early plays from the compilation Shorts, including one with eerie echoes of the pandemic (‘Not Not Not Not Not Enough Oxygen’), were performed at the Greenwich Theatre. The playwright continues to live in the city of her birth.