Marcia Layne | |
---|---|
Born | Coventry, UK |
Nationality | British |
Occupation | Playwright |
Awards | Alfred Fagon Award, 2003 |
Marcia Layne is a British playwright whose play Off Camera won the 2003 Alfred Fagon Award. [1] The award honours the best new play by a playwright of Caribbean or African descent living in the United Kingdom. [2] She is a writer and producer with Hidden Gem Productions in Yorkshire. [3]
Layne's play The Yellow Doctress is a biographical play about Mary Seacole, a black Jamaican nurse struggling for acceptance during her service in the Crimean War. A touring production was performed for schoolchildren in Yorkshire by the West Yorkshire Playhouse in 2007. [4] The title refers to the sobriquet Seacole earned for her work fighting a cholera outbreak during the war. [5]
Layne wrote The Bag Lady, a one-woman play about Eve, a homeless woman who is a survivor of domestic violence. The play explores mental health, racial discrimination, and cultural identity. The play had its world premiere, starring Flo Wilson as Eve, at the Cellar Theatre in Huddersfield, [6] and toured from 2013-2015. [7]
In addition to stage plays, Layne has written radio dramas. Her 2010 radio play The Barber and the Ark was shortlisted for the Imison Award for Best Radio Drama Script by a new writer. [8] The play tells the story of a man who goes to a barbershop to get his dreadlocks cut, and a barber to tells of his dream of finding the Ark of the Covenant in Ethiopia. [9] She also wrote "A Cut Above", an episode of the radio drama Stone in which a detective investigates a suspected case of female genital mutilation and finds that no one is willing to talk with them. [10]
In addition to her playwriting career, Layne has served as the Multicultural Officer at Sheffield Hallam University, and has worked as an Arts Officer in local government. [11]
Huddersfield is a market town in the Kirklees district in West Yorkshire, England. It is the administrative centre and largest settlement in the Kirklees district. The town is in the foothills of the Pennines. The River Holme's confluence into the similar-sized Colne to the south of the town centre which then flows into the Calder in the north eastern outskirts of the town.
Huddersfield Town Association Football Club is a professional football club based in Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, England, which compete in the EFL Championship. The team have played home games at the Kirklees Stadium since moving from Leeds Road in 1994. The club colours of blue and white stripes were adopted in 1916. Their nickname, "The Terriers", was taken in 1969. Huddersfield's current emblem is based on the town's coat of arms. The team have long-standing West Yorkshire derby rivalries with Bradford City and Leeds United, as well as a Roses derby with Oldham Athletic.
Sean Bean is an English actor. After graduating from the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, Bean made his professional debut in a theatre production of Romeo and Juliet in 1983. Retaining his Yorkshire accent, he first found mainstream success for his portrayal of Richard Sharpe in the ITV series Sharpe, which originally ran from 1993 to 1997. In 2020, Bean is also narrator of the BBC Radio 4 series Legacy of War, exploring the impact of the Second World War on subsequent generations through interviews and oral history.
Mary Jane Seacole was a British-Jamaican nurse and businesswoman who set up the "British Hotel" behind the lines during the Crimean War. She described the hotel as "a mess-table and comfortable quarters for sick and convalescent officers", and provided succour for wounded service men on the battlefield, nursing many of them back to health. Coming from a tradition of Jamaican and West African "doctresses", Seacole displayed "compassion, skills and bravery while nursing soldiers during the Crimean War", through the use of herbal remedies. She was posthumously awarded the Jamaican Order of Merit in 1991. In 2004, she was voted the greatest black Briton in a survey conducted in 2003 by the black heritage website Every Generation.
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The Alfred Fagon Award is granted annually for the best new play by a Black British playwright of Caribbean or African descent, resident in the United Kingdom. It was instituted in 1996 and first awarded in 1997, to recognise the work of Black British playwrights from the Caribbean, and named in honour of the poet and playwright, Alfred Fagon. Its scope was broadened in 2006, to include those of African descent. The award is given with the support of the Peggy Ramsay Foundation.
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The statue of Mary Seacole stands in the grounds of St Thomas' Hospital, Lambeth, London. Sculpted by Martin Jennings, the statue was executed in 2016. It honours Mary Seacole, a British-Jamaican who established a "British Hotel" during the Crimean War and who was posthumously voted first in a poll of "100 Great Black Britons".