Acts: 2, Scenes: 5, Roles: Total (8), Female (1), Male (7), Unassigned (0)
...Stephen Jeffreys’s play A Going Concern is a drama about an ailing family business in 1960s London that specialises in making billiard tables as the trade is overtaken by the times. It was first staged at Hampstead Theatre, London, on 2...
Roles: Total (1), Female (0), Male (1), Unassigned (0)
...Stephen Jeffreys’s play Finsbury Park is a short autobiographical monologue. It was first performed by Stephen Jeffreys as part of Paines Plough’s Come to Where I’m From at Park Theatre, London, on 6 July 2016.
The play...
Acts: 2, Scenes: 4, Roles: Total (3), Female (1), Male (2), Unassigned (0)
...Stephen Jeffreys’s play I Just Stopped By To See The Man is a drama about the myth surrounding an old blues singer. It was first performed at the Royal Court Theatre, London, on 30 November 2000.
The play is set in a bare...
Acts: 2, Scenes: 7, Roles: Total (93), Female (44), Male (49), Unassigned (0)
...Stephen Jeffreys’s play Interruptions is a drama exploring ideas about democracy, politics and leadership. It was written while he was resident at the University of California, Davis, and first performed at UC Davis Main Theatre on 26 April...
Scenes: 20, Roles: Total (19), Female (4), Male (15), Unassigned (0)
...Stephen Jeffreys’s play The Clink is a satirical farce set in Elizabethan England, about a comedian who becomes unwillingly involved in the political skullduggery surrounding the dying queen. It was first staged by Paines Plough at Theatre...
Scenes: 13, Roles: Total (13), Female (5), Male (8), Unassigned (0)
...Stephen Jeffreys' play The Libertine is a historical drama and comedy of manners about John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester, a Restoration poet, playwright and renowned libertine. It was first performed, in a production by Out of Joint...
Acts: 2, Scenes: 7, Roles: Total (6), Female (2), Male (4), Unassigned (0)
...Stephen Jeffreys’s play Valued Friends is a comedy of manners about the property market. It was first staged at Hampstead Theatre, London, on 9 February 1989, winning Jeffreys the Most Promising Playwright Award at both the Evening Standard...