Stacey Gregg: restless writer whose scripts fizz with tricky questions
“I find it hard to switch off,” admits Stacey Gregg. “The great thing about writing is that you are free to write about anything, to grapple with what’s happening in the world.” For the Belfast-born playwright, that might be issues of science, law, ethics and much more. Her monologue Scorch, inspired by real-life cases of “gender fraud”, is out on tour. The 2013 play Override, in which she explored an alternative near future, has just been given a sharp new production at the Tiger Dublin fringe festival. And Gregg is one of seven playwrights responding to issues around conception and birth in an upcoming international festival at the Royal Exchange in Manchester.
At 33, Gregg has already written six plays, and is under commission from the Royal Court, Clean Break and the Abbey theatre. Our Skype conversation is interrupted by bursts of laughter as she talks at speed, emanating the restless energy that has enabled her to alternate between writing plays, film and TV scripts, with acting stints in between.
Scorch, which won a Fringe First award at the Edinburgh festival last month, was written in response to recent court cases in the UK. “These were cases taken by women who had been deceived into thinking they were having a sexual relationship with a man, but discovered that their partner was a woman or, in one case, a trans man. The accusations were of ‘gender fraud’, which for me is a contested term. I thought that the media coverage sensationalised these cases, and this drove me to try to communicate the questions they raised in a more complex way.”
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