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Moira Buffini

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Name
  
Moira Buffini

Role
  
Dramatist


Plays
  
Siblings
  
Sophie Harrison

Moira Buffini moirabuffini20png

Movies
  
Byzantium, Jane Eyre, Tamara Drewe, Temp

Education
  
University of London, Goldsmiths, University of London

Books
  
Loveplay, Welcome to Thebes, Plays 1, Greenland, Moira Buffini: Plays 2

Similar People
  
Neil Jordan, Cary Fukunaga, Rufus Norris, Posy Simmonds, Paul Trijbits

Moira Buffini (born 29 May 1965) is an English dramatist, director, and actor.

Contents

Moira Buffini Moira Buffini 39I set out to be fair to Margaret Thatcher

Moira buffini screenwriters lecture


Early life

Moira Buffini Maddy Costa talks to Moira Buffini Stage The Guardian

Buffini was born in Cheshire to Irish parents, and attended Northwich County Grammar School for Girls (became The County High School, Leftwich). She studied English and Drama at Goldsmiths College, London University (1983–86). She subsequently trained as an actor at the Welsh College of Music and Drama.

Career

Moira Buffini Portrait of the artist Moira Buffini playwright

For Jordan, co-written with Anna Reynolds in 1992, she won a Time Out Award for her performance and Writers' Guild Award for Best Fringe play. Her 1997 play Gabriel was performed at Soho theatre, winning the LWT Plays on Stage award and the Meyer-Whitworth Award. Her 1999 play Silence earned Buffini the Susan Smith Blackburn Prize for best English-language play by a woman. Loveplay followed at the RSC in 2001, then Dinner at the National Theatre in 2003 which transferred to the West End and was nominated for an Olivier Award for Best Comedy.

Moira Buffini Summit Taps 39Jane Eyre39 Screenwriter to Adapt 39Night

Buffini wrote Dying For It, a free adaptation of Nikolai Erdman's classic, The Suicide, for the Almeida in 2007. She followed it with Marianne Dreams a dance play with choreographer Will Tuckett, based on Catherine Storr's book. Her play for young people, A Vampire Story was performed as part of NT Connections in 2008. She did a writers’ attachment at the Royal National Theatre Studio in 1996.

Buffini advocates big, imaginative plays rather than naturalistic soap opera dramas, and is a founder member of the Monsterists, a group of playwrights who promote new writing of large scale work in the British theatre. She has been described by David Greig as a metaphysical playwright. All her plays have been published by Faber.

Buffini is also a prolific screenwriter. In 2010 her film adaptation of Posy Simmon's "Tamara Drewe" was released, directed by Stephen Frears. In 2011 her adaptation of Jane Eyre for BBC Films and Ruby Films was released. The script appeared on the 2008 Brit List, a film-industry-compiled list of the best unproduced screenplays in British film. It received nine votes, putting it in second place. Buffini adapted her play A Vampire Story for the screenplay of Neil Jordan's film Byzantium released in 2013.

She took part in the Bush Theatre's 2011 project Sixty Six Books for which she wrote a piece based upon a book of the King James Bible.

On the 21 January 2015, it was announced that Manchester International Festival would premier wonder.land, a new musical with music by Damon Albarn, book and lyrics by Moira Buffini and direction from Rufus Norris. wonder.land is inspired by Alice In Wonderland by Lewis Carroll and is a co-production with The National Theatre.

Plays

  • Jordan (1992)
  • Gabriel (1997)
  • Blavatsky's Tower (1998)
  • Silence (1999)
  • The Games Room
  • Loveplay (2001)
  • Dinner (2002)
  • Dying For It (2007) a free adaptation of Nikolai Erdman's The Suicide
  • Welcome to Thebes (2010)
  • Greenland (2011) written with Penelope Skinner, Matt Charman and Jack Thorne
  • Handbagged (2013)
  • wonder.land (2015)
  • Filmography

  • Marianne Dreams (2007)
  • A Vampire Story (2008)
  • Handbagged (2010)
  • Tamara Drewe (2010)
  • Jane Eyre (2011)
  • Byzantium (2013)
  • Viceroy's House (2016)
  • References

    Moira Buffini Wikipedia