Women’s Writing in the British Isles from the Beginnings to the Present
Liz Lochhead
Standard Name: Lochhead, Liz
Birth Name: Eizabeth Anne Lochhead
Nickname: Liz
LL
, a contemporary Scottish poet and dramatist, has written a number of sketches, monologues, revues, and full-length plays (some of them adapted from canonical works of the past). She names the Glasgow poet Edwin Morgan
as a poetic inspiration.
Lochhead, Liz. Bagpipe Muzak. Penguin, 1991.
79, 83-4
She writes about the glitzy modern world of high commerce and humdrum poverty, the failure of emotional response, the selling of heritage. Her fictional characters, most of them women, are seldom lovable and often sharply funny. Although her individual works may seem slight, they resonate powerfully.
"Liz Lochhead" by Roberto Ricciuti,2016-08-14.Retrieved from https://www.gettyimages.co.uk/detail/news-photo/scottish-poet-playwright-translator-and-broadcaster-liz-news-photo/589478862.
TW
's ambitious, seven-hour translation and adaptation from Sophocles
, The Thebans, opened at Stratford.
This was a decade before Liz Lochhead
's, or rather Theatre Babel
's, Thebans.
Demastes, William W., editor. British Playwrights, 1956-1995. Greenwood Press, 1996.
407
Textual Production
Michelene Wandor
Methuen
's drama catalogue for 1981-2 had listed seventy-five playwrights, only two of them women (as was pointed out by Mary Remnant
, who succeeded to MW
as editor after the next three volumes in...
Textual Production
Winsome Pinnock
The National Theatre (Cottesloe)
put on an arresting play for young people by WP
entitled Can You Keep a Secret?, part of the New Connections season of plays for the young.