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Clare McIntyre
Clare McIntyre
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Lindsay Clare McIntyre (21 July 1952 – 27 November 2009) was a British playwright and actress. She was among the feminist playwrights who contributed to the deconstruction of traditional forms of female representation. She debuted on the British feminist theatre scene as an actress in the 1970s, and emerged as a writer with allegiance to feminist issues a decade later.

Key Information

Biography and career

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McIntyre was born in Harrogate, then in the West Riding of Yorkshire, on 21 July 1952 and grew up in Woldingham, Surrey, to later move to Manchester to study drama at the University of Manchester.[1]

She started working in acting with the Nottingham Playhouse's theatre-in-education team, and later joined the feminist Women's Theatre Group as a performer and deviser.[1] Before devoting herself to full-time feminist playwriting, she also played minor roles in films such as The Pirates of Penzance (1983), Hotel du Lac (1986) and A Fish Called Wanda (1988).[1]

In the following years, she wrote not only for the stage, but also for television, as she contributed to the British soap operas EastEnders and Castles, and radio, with Walls of Silence (1993) and Noisy Bodies (1999). She taught on a postgraduate playwriting course at the University of Birmingham from 1991 to 1998.[1]

Death

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McIntyre died of multiple sclerosis on 27 November 2009, twenty-four years after she was first diagnosed with the disease. She was 57 years old.[1]

Major works

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Characterised by a humorous and imaginative style, poignant dialogue and complex characters, McIntyre's plays shrewdly expose feminist concerns such as women's anxieties over personal relationships, their bodies and pornography.[2]

Among the awards she received for her theatre pieces are the Beckett Award in 1989 and the Evening Standard and London Drama Critic's Most Promising Playwright Award in 1990.[1] She won the former for Low Level Panic (1988) and the latter for My Heart's a Suitcase (1990). Both stage plays were performed at the Royal Court Theatre and televised in 1994 and 1993 respectively.[1][2] They depict women dealing with the concerns engendered by an inhospitable world.[2] McIntyre's other theatre pieces include: I've Been Running (1986), No Warning For Life (1992), The Thickness of Skin (1996), Bob's Play (1999), The Changeling (2001) and The Maths Tutor (2003).[3]

Film appearances

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Published works

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Film and television

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  • Hi How Are You (1989)
  • Junk Mail (1991 screenplay)
  • Castles (1994, episode 23)
  • Hungry Hearts (1996 pilot and 1998 re-development)
  • EastEnders (1998, several episodes)

Radio

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  • I've Been Running (1990 adaptation of own stage play)
  • Walls of Silence (1993 original radio play)
  • The Art of Sitting (1995)
  • Shelf Life (1996, original series pilot)
  • Noisy Bodies (1999)
  • My Heart's a Suitcase (2011)

Television and theatre adaptation

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  • My Heart's a Suitcase (1993 TV adaptation of own stage play)
  • Low Level Panic (1994 TV adaptation of own stage play)
  • Beware Of Pity (1998 theatre adaptation of Stefan Zweig's eponymous novel)

Theatre

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  • I've Been Running (1986)
  • Low Level Panic (1988)
  • My Heart's a Suitcase (1990)
  • No Warning For Life (1992)
  • The Thickness of Skin (1996)
  • Bob's Play (1999)
  • The Changeling (2001)
  • The Maths Tutor (2003)

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Clare McIntyre was a British playwright and actress known for her incisive contributions to feminist theatre during the 1980s and 1990s. Her plays often explored women's experiences and societal pressures with wry insight, establishing her as a significant voice among the wave of female British dramatists who emerged in that era. Born on 21 July 1952 in Harrogate, Yorkshire, England, McIntyre initially pursued acting, performing in theatre, film, and television productions including small roles in Krull (1983) and A Fish Called Wanda (1988). She later transitioned to playwriting, achieving critical recognition with Low Level Panic (1988), which won the Samuel Beckett Award, and My Heart’s a Suitcase (1990), which earned the Evening Standard Award for Most Promising Playwright. Her other notable stage works include The Thickness of Skin (1996) and The Maths Tutor (2003), while she also wrote for television and radio. Diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in 1985, McIntyre continued to write and teach playwriting at the University of Birmingham until 1998, influencing emerging dramatists before her death from the illness on 27 November 2009 at age 57. Her work remains valued for its perceptive examination of human motivation and its place in the feminist theatrical canon.

Early life

Early life and education

Clare McIntyre was born Lindsay Clare McIntyre on 21 July 1952 in Harrogate, Yorkshire, England. She grew up in Woldingham, Surrey. McIntyre studied drama at the University of Manchester. Following her university studies, she became involved with theatre groups.

Acting career

Acting credits

Clare McIntyre began her career as an actor, initially working with the Nottingham Playhouse's theatre-in-education team, where she helped deliver drama programmes in schools. She subsequently joined the pioneering feminist Women's Theatre Group as a performer and deviser, contributing to its collaborative and politically engaged productions. She also gained experience as a jobbing actor in repertory theatre. McIntyre appeared in a number of minor film and television roles during the 1980s and early 1990s. Her film credits include playing Merith in the fantasy adventure Krull (1983), the Daughter in the musical adaptation The Pirates of Penzance (1983), a Girl at Dinner Party in Plenty (1985), a Businesswoman in Empire State (1987), and an Airline Employee in the comedy A Fish Called Wanda (1988). She also had a small part in the television film Hotel du Lac (1986). In addition, she contributed to the soundtrack of The Pirates of Penzance (1983) by performing several songs, including "Climbing Over Rocky Mountain", "Poor Wandering One", and "Oh Sisters, Deaf To Pity's Name". Her television appearances were similarly episodic and supporting, encompassing a Barmaid in The Brief (1984), a Caterer in an episode of Screen Two (1986), Liz in an episode of Screen One (1990), and a Reporter in For the Greater Good (1991). These roles were generally small in scale, and by the mid-1980s McIntyre began to shift her primary focus toward playwriting.

Playwriting career

Clare McIntyre emerged as a key figure among the generation of British female playwrights who gained prominence in the 1980s, contributing incisive feminist perspectives to the stage. Her debut play, I've Been Running, was performed at the Old Red Lion theatre pub in Islington, north London. She achieved her breakthrough with Low Level Panic, which premiered at the Royal Court Theatre Upstairs in 1988, directed by Nancy Meckler. This all-female three-hander, set in a bathroom, deftly and humorously explored themes of pornography, sexual assault, sexual fantasies, bodies, and female relationships, earning the Samuel Beckett Award and establishing itself as a feminist theatre staple with frequent revivals and international productions. Her follow-up, My Heart's a Suitcase, premiered at the Royal Court Theatre in 1990, directed by Max Stafford-Clark. The play employed allegorical figures, including Pest and Luggage bursting through walls, to examine women's anxieties and efforts to navigate a threatening world, blending theatrical invention with unsentimental yet sympathetic insight. It received the Evening Standard Award for Most Promising Playwright. McIntyre's subsequent works included No Warning For Life (1992), The Thickness of Skin (1996, Royal Court Theatre Upstairs), a comedy dissecting middle-class liberal agonies around privilege and deprivation, Bob's Play (1999), The Changeling (2001), and The Maths Tutor (2003, Birmingham Rep and Hampstead Theatre co-production), which centred on a male tutor unjustly accused of sexual assault by a teenager taking revenge on his mother. Across her oeuvre, McIntyre displayed a wry, witty, and perceptive understanding of human motivation, often focusing on feminist themes, women's relationships, middle-class dilemmas, and bold theatrical forms. Her early Royal Court plays, in particular, have endured as notable contributions to feminist theatre.

Other writing

Television and radio writing

Clare McIntyre's contributions to television and radio were more limited than her prolific stage playwriting career, with credits concentrated in the 1990s. She wrote two episodes of the BBC soap opera EastEnders in 1998. She also contributed one episode to the anthology series Stages in 1994. These broadcast works represented occasional forays into media beyond theatre, though they remained secondary to her primary focus on stage drama.

Teaching career

Teaching career

Clare McIntyre served as a tutor on the postgraduate playwriting course at the University of Birmingham from 1991 to 1998. Her students included Sarah Kane, who wrote her first and most famous play Blasted during her time on the course, as well as Clare Bayley and Steve Waters. McIntyre's understanding, not just of the human heart but how to shape that understanding into coherent, dramatic form, stood her students in good stead. She withdrew from teaching in 1998 following the virulent reappearance of her multiple sclerosis symptoms in 1996.

Personal life

Personal life

Clare McIntyre was married to the actor Sean Baker, who survived her. She had a brother named Bruce and a sister named Lesley, both of whom also survived her.

Illness and death

Illness and death

Clare McIntyre was first diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in 1985. Her symptoms reappeared virulently in 1996, leading to significant progression of the disease. By the late 1990s she had become largely housebound and, in 1998, withdrew from her teaching position at the University of Birmingham as a result. By 2006, McIntyre required an elaborate, padded wheelchair for mobility. That year, her husband, the actor Sean Baker, made demanding arrangements to enable her to attend a rehearsed reading of her play Low Level Panic at the Royal Court Theatre as part of its 50th-anniversary celebrations, swinging her wheelchair around at the end so that she could share in the applause. Clare McIntyre died of multiple sclerosis on 27 November 2009, at the age of 57.

Awards and legacy

Clare McIntyre received notable recognition for her early work in playwriting. Her play Low Level Panic won the Samuel Beckett Award. My Heart's a Suitcase earned her the Evening Standard Award for Most Promising Playwright. McIntyre emerged as a key figure among the extraordinary generation of British female playwrights who came to prominence in the 1980s, a period that saw a dramatic increase in nationally recognized women writers contributing to feminist theatre. Her plays, often featuring mostly or entirely female casts, addressed issues central to second-wave feminism and have been regarded as part of the feminist theatre canon. She demonstrated a wry, witty, and perceptive understanding of human motivation, combined with an unsentimental yet sympathetic portrayal of women grappling with their place in a threatening world. Her works remain influential for their insightful and humorous exploration of women's experiences. Low Level Panic continues to be performed internationally, in English and in translation. From 1991 to 1998, McIntyre taught playwriting at the University of Birmingham, where she influenced emerging dramatists including Sarah Kane, who wrote Blasted during that period. Obituaries, including the tribute by David Edgar in The Guardian, underscored her lasting contributions to British feminist playwriting and her role in advancing representations of women's issues on stage.
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