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‘I feel like I’m on an ice floe’

The playwright Ryan Craig has written a book which argues that the 'woke agenda' can lead to self-censorship, he tells John Nathan

March 26, 2021 13:45
The cast in Filthy Business, Hampstead Theatre.
2 min read

The notion that Woke-ism may have got out of hand is well illustrated by the answer to a question put to Ryan Craig. The question is which of his plays does he think would not be staged today because of a fear they might fall foul of woke sensitivities. There are a fair few works to choose from.

Craig has written for some of the country’s most potent playhouses, including the National Theatre, The Hampstead and The Menier Chocolate Factory. His themes are often Jewish. The Glass Room was about Holocaust denial; The Holy Rosenbergs focused on an Edgware-based family of kosher caterers whose son is killed while serving in the IDF.

This complicated relationship to Israel was also explored in his earlier play What We Did To Weinstein. And although there are many more works Craig has written for stage and television, any list would not be complete without Filthy Business in which Craig confounded the tropes and assumptions that go with the dramatic archetype of the Jewish mother.

However his latest work is a book. Called Writing in Coffee Shops: Confessions of a Playwright, the work was intended as a kind of “how to” writing guide drawn from his time teaching playwriting at the National Theatre. But while he was working on it during the summer before the first lockdown, something happened.