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Shaun Duggan

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Nationality
  
UK

Role
  
Writer

Name
  
Shaun Duggan

Notable work
  
Brookside Accused

Years active
  
1986+


Shaun Duggan httpsiytimgcomvipsHlEPERPshqdefaultjpg

Born
  
25 May 1970 (age 53) (
1970-05-25
)
Norris Green

Occupation
  
playwright; television writer

Nominations
  
British Academy Television Craft Award for Writer - Drama

Morrissey interviews playwright shaun duggan the tube 1987


Shaun Duggan (born 1970) is a BAFTA nominated writer based in the UK. He has repeatedly collaborated with Jimmy McGovern. He has written several plays and has worked extensively for television including Brookside (Channel 4) and EastEnders (BBC1).

Contents

Morrissey interviewing playwright shaun duggan 1987


Liverpool

Like McGovern, Duggan is associated with a realist tradition centring on documenting life in his home town of Liverpool. Born on the Norris Green council estate,Duggan's writing career began at the age of 16, when his play William, inspired by The Smiths song "William, It Was Really Nothing", was produced at London's Royal Court Theatre Upstairs as part of their Young Writers' Festival, 1986. Shaun was befriended by his hero, Morrissey, who also interviewed him about the play on Channel 4's The Tube. Shaun continued to write other stage plays for the Liverpool Everyman and the Playhouse, including It's Nearly June, A Brusque Affair, All Lips and Sex; and Boy, (winner of the Liverpool Echo and Daily Post Best Writing Award), which went on a UK tour before transferring to the Lyric Studio, London. His play Drama Queen was produced in Liverpool for the Homotopia lesbian and gay arts festival as part of the city's Capital of Culture celebrations in 2008.

TV work

Duggan spent eight years writing for the Liverpool-set soap opera, Brookside; he wrote the episode that featured the first pre-watershed lesbian kiss on British television when Beth Jordache (Anna Friel) began a relationship with the Farnhams' nanny Margaret Clemence (Nicola Stephenson) in January 1994. The kiss was seen by an estimated global audience of one billion when Danny Boyle included it in the Olympics opening ceremony of London 2012. As a result the kiss was shown in countries such as Saudi Arabia, where it is illegal to be gay. No other gay kiss has ever been shown on television in the Middle Eastern country.

Duggan received a BAFTA nomination in 2013 for the opening episode of the second series of Jimmy McGovern's Accused (starring Sean Bean in a BAFTA-nominated/RTS Award winning/International Emmy Award winning performance as cross-dressing teacher, 'Tracie' Tremarco). Caitlin Moran said in The Times "It was physically affecting — that brilliant, drug-like transcendence where you're floating inside a story… I can’t remember the last time I was so on the side of someone in a script."

Shaun has also written extensively for television. In addition to Brookside he spent four years on the script-team of EastEnders. Other television work includes Is Harry on the Boat (BSkyB), Maisie Raine, (BBC), Waterloo Road (BBC), Jiggery Pokery (BBC), High Rise, Low Life (Channel 4), Stepping Up (CBBC) and Justice (BBC1).

Having created the role of 'Tracie Tremarco' for Jimmy McGovern, Duggan has also written eight episodes of McGovern's Moving On (BBC1): Losing My Religion (2010), Donor (2011), Friends Like These (2013), Fledgling (2013), Madge (2014) A Picture of Innocence (2015) "Zero (2016) and Lost (to be screened in 2017/18)

He also co-wrote the fifth episode of McGovern's series Banished (2015).

Duggan wrote the pilot episode of Jamie Johnson (based on the books by Dan Freedman) for CBBC. The first three-part series premiered on the channel in June 2016. A second ten-part series was commissioned shortly afterwards and was screened in 2017. A third ten-part series is currently in production. Duggan remains the lead writer on the show.

Duggan has also recently worked with Jimmy McGovern on his new series Broken (BBC1), starring Sean Bean as a Catholic priest. The series aired in spring/summer 2017.

References

Shaun Duggan Wikipedia