David Edgar has written ten plays for the RSC, with the most recent - The New Real - premiering at The Other Place in October 2024. We dive into David Edgar's works and legacy

Who is David Edgar?

The playwright was born in Birmingham on 26 February 1948. His actor parents met on the stage door steps of the Birmingham Repertory Theatre, and his aunt, Nancy Burman, was Rep director Barry Jackson’s production manager during his period as director of the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre in the late 1940s.

David was educated at Oundle School and studied drama at Manchester University. After a short career in journalism, he took up writing full-time in 1972.

He has had more than 60 plays performed and 37 published. His plays have been  performed around the world, in the UK, Ireland, throughout Europe, the US, Australia, New Zealand, Canada and Japan. He has written widely for radio and television, and wrote the 1986 film Lady Jane, directed by Trevor Nunn.

He has also written books on theatre, politics and playwriting. His book, How Plays Work has become a classic analysis of the playwright’s art.

David Edgar in rehearsal for Maydays at The Other Place in 2018

David Edgar and the RSC

David's first association with the RSC came in 1976 when his play Destiny premiered at The Other Place, Stratford-upon-Avon. The play had been commissioned – and turned down – by Nottingham Playhouse and the Birmingham Repertory Theatre and was also rejected by the RSC.

Ron Daniels, then a director at The Other Place, persuaded RSC Artistic Director Trevor Nunn to read the play, which Trevor programmed in The Other Place and – following its success there – transferred the play to the RSC’s then West End theatre, the Aldwych.

David was also our Literary Consultant from 1984 to 1988, and was made an Honorary Associate Artist in 1989.

Ten RSC premieres

The ten full-length plays that have premiered at the RSC are:

  1. Destiny – 1976, The Other Place then the Aldwych, winner of the John Whiting award
  2. The Jail Diary of Albie Sachs – 1979, Warehouse and then The Other Place
  3. The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby – 1980, premiered at the Aldwych Theatre and won the Society of West End Theatres Best Play Award (now the Oliviers), transferred to Broadway in 1981 and won Tony award for Best Play. The TV version, broadcast on Channel Four, won an Emmy for best series.
  4. Maydays – 1983, Barbican, winner of the Plays and Players, Best Play Award, revived in a new version at The Other Place in 2018
  5. The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1991) – 1991 adaptation of Robert Louis Stephenson’s novella performed at the Barbican
  6. Pentecost – 1994, The Other Place, transferring to the Young Vic, London, 1995, winner of the Evening Standard best play award
  7. The Prisoner’s Dilemma – 2001, The Other Place and the Pit, London
  8. Written on the Heart – 2011, Swan Theatre, transferred to the Duchess Theatre, London, 2012
  9. A Christmas Carol – 2017, 2018, 2022, Royal Shakespeare Theatre, adapted from Charles Dickens’s story
  10. The New Real – 2024, The Other Place

David’s Ball Boys was revived at The Other Place in 1977, and he performed his solo show Trying it On at there in 2018.