The Stage

News

TV and theatre are an ‘old boys’ network’, says playwright Gupta

Published Tuesday 23 June 2009 at 16:15 by Matthew Hemley

Equal roles: Award-winning playwright Tanika Gupta has criticised the “old boys’ network” that controls the UK’s theatre industry and has called on more women to be employed as artistic directors around the country.

Gupta, whose credits include White Boy for the Soho Theatre and Sugar Mummies for the Royal Court, was speaking at a conference held last week to address the employment and representation of women in theatre and television, in both performance and behind the scenes roles.

Called Vamps, Vixens and Feminists: The Elephant in the Room, the event was organised by Sphinx Theatre Company, with Gupta sitting on a panel addressing roles for women in television and theatre and how the portrayal of women on stage is often not representative of real life.

She said: “Generally, in terms of the world of theatre, I would say that until there are more artistic directors who are women - or at least women-loving male artistic directors - it is not going to change and unfortunately remain an old boys’ network. That is what it is throughout television and theatre.”

Her views were shared by playwright Colin Teevan, whose adaptation of Ibsen’s Peer Gynt for the National Theatre of Scotland recently ran at the Barbican Centre in London.

He said he noticed a particular difference working outside the capital, where he said there were more female artistic directors. He claimed that the only female artistic director of a major London venue at the moment is Lisa Goldman, at the Soho Theatre.

On the writing panel, Gupta also expressed her frustrations at being asked to change the ages of older female characters she had created for television.

She revealed that Channel 4 had asked her to alter the age ranges of female characters for a TV adaptation of her play Sugar Mummies, which opened at the Royal Court in 2006.

The stage version starred Lynda Bellingham, but Gupta said: “The first thing they [Channel 4] said to me was, ‘Can you make the women characters younger? Can you make them 29 or 30? I said no, because that would have defeated the whole object of the play.”

Tracy Brabin, whose credits include Shameless and Hollyoaks, and who is also on the television committee of the Writers’ Guild of Great Britain, agreed with Gupta.

“It is really hard to get the commissioners - the gatekeepers - to accept that there are stories and plots that we have that are really sexy and exciting about women over 30 and their lives. I have certainly been in that situation where people have said to me, ‘Can you make these characters younger and sexier?’.”

To contact the Stage news team email newsdesk@thestage.co.uk or call 020 7403 1818, selecting option 2 (editorial) followed by option 1 (newsdesk).
If you are writing a comment for publication, please mark clearly "for publication".

Follow The Stage on Twitter and Facebook to get the latest entertainment industry news to your desktop or mobile.

The Stage Events
Loading

Latest news

Child licensing changes ‘could put kids in danger’
Leading industry figures have warned that a proposal in the government’s review of licensing laws for children…
Proud Cabaret backs down over bid to stop acts working for rivals
Cabaret operator Proud has been forced to back down on attempts to prevent artists working in its clubs from…
Devoted and Disgruntled hits the road
Devoted and Disgruntled, the ‘open space’ industry event discussing the future of theatre, is to embark on its first…
ITC agrees 2.5% minimum-rate rise and new overtime deal
Equity has negotiated an increase in rates for performers, stage managers and members of creative teams with the…
New Talawa season announced
Michael Buffong has announced his first season as artistic director of Talawa, which will feature the premiere of a…
Fears for discarded ‘Primark’-style plays
Fears that a “Primark culture” is developing in theatres, in which new plays are not shown again after their…

Content is copyright © 2012 The Stage Media Company Limited unless otherwise stated.

All RSS feeds are published for personal, non-commercial use. (What’s RSS?)