Nathan Queeley-Dennis’s first play, Bullring Techno Makeout Jamz, has been named the overall winner of the 2022 Bruntwood Prize for Playwriting.
The prize – which seeks scripts from established, emerging and debut writers to develop for the stage – is a partnership between leading commercial property developer Bruntwood, a major supporter of the arts, and world-class producing theatre, the Royal Exchange Theatre, in Manchester.
Born and raised in Erdington, Birmingham, Nathan Queeley-Dennis is an actor whose credits include Black Love (Kiln Theatre) written by Chinonyerem Odimba, Really Big and Really Loud (Paines Plough) written by 2019 Bruntwood Prize winner Phoebe Eclair-Powell and Bijan Sheibani’s production of A Taste of Honey (National Theatre).
Bullring Techno Makeout Jamz follows the fictional Nathaniel, a young man approaching what appears to be his quarter life crisis as his student dream of being a ‘hybrid, edgy, sexy kind of brum town Basquiat with a garnish of Banksy and national treasure potential of David Hockney’ start to evaporate in the grim reality of his mounting debts and post-university call centre job.
Described by the judges as ‘a joyful galloping hymn to Black friendship and love and tender masculinity’ (Julie Hesmondhalgh), a ‘vibrant, laugh-out-loud, and ultimately moving tribute to being young and on the rise in Birmingham’ (Kimber Lee) and for bringing ‘Black Joy in abundance’ (Amanda Parker), the play follows Nathaniel on a journey of self-discovery as he explores Black masculinity through Beyoncé lyrics, techno raves and the deeply intimate relationship a man has with his barber.
When he was shortlisted for the prize in October 2022, Queeley-Dennis said he wanted to share ‘a story to the country and world that I think is very rarely shown, but is so prominent in making me and the people I grew up with who we are.’
Bullring Techno Makeout Jamz was selected from a shortlist of nine plays from the UK in the running for two categories: overall winner of the Bruntwood Prize for Playwriting (£16,000) and the Judges Award (£8,000) for a ‘runner up’. The latter was won by Ipswich-based writer, producer and actor, Martha Loader, for Bindweed: a ‘skilfully crafted, gripping inquiry that attempts to go to the root of violence against women’ which explores domestic violence from within a community-led perpetrator group programme and its effect on individual lives.
In addition, Patrick Hughes – a playwright, dramaturg and script reader based in Liverpool – has been announced as the winner of the new North West Original New Voice Award and Residency, launched in recognition of the Prize’s Manchester home, for Leave the Morning to the Morning, a story exploring family dynamics, speaking the truth, and the right to live and die on your own terms which the judges praised for its ‘intimate exploration of the wrenching complexities of mental health.’
Also announced today was the winner of the International Award: The Red Lead 红铅 by Hong Kong-born, multidisciplinary artist Roshelle Fong, who is based in Naarm/Melbourne, Australia. Chosen from a shortlist of five plays submitted via partners in Australia, Canada and the US, The Red Lead 红铅 is a portrait of sisterhood, survival and an attempt to rise up in 1542 Ming Dynasty China, described by the judges as ‘bold and surprising in its visual imagery’ and its ‘sharp, contemporary voice [that] slices through layers of sexual politics and class, upending preconceived notions on a massive scale without ever losing sight of the young women at the centre, their humanity and bravery in the face of systemic oppression, and the hope that comes through collective action.’
The winning plays were judged and chosen from a 14-strong shortlist of established, emerging and debut playwrights. All four playwrights will now enter a development process with the Royal Exchange Theatre in an endeavour to bring their work to production, with the winner of the North West Original New Voice Award and Residency also having access to an additional £10,000 fund dedicated to their professional development at the Royal Exchange Theatre during a bespoke one-year residency in partnership with Bruntwood and the Oglesby Charitable Trust.
Amanda Parker, Chair of the 2022 Bruntwood Prize for Playwriting Judging Panel, said: “The Bruntwood Prize, yet again delivered plays that speak to the urgent issues of our times, in ways that are unexpected, fresh, thrilling and compelling. The judging panel would like to thank all who entered the competition and congratulate the shortlisted 14 whose creative energies gave us such a rich feast of imagining.
“Through tough debate – because all were excellent – and deep reflection, because we felt passionately about all of them – we landed on the winning entries. Our winners offered us challenge, a new lens on universal concerns, made us laugh at the dizzying truth of the worlds they created, and weep in sympathy with the horrors portrayed. Thank you to Bruntwood, to the entrants, to the winners. We can’t wait to see these words come to life on our stages!”
Launched in 2005, The Bruntwood Prize for Playwriting is recognised as a launch-pad for some of the country’s most respected and produced playwrights, many of whom are completely new to playwriting – one third of the entrants to the 2022 Prize had never written a play before. It has a proven record of finding new talent and helping established writers bring their stories to new audiences. Since its inception in 2005, over 15,000 scripts have been entered, £304,000 has been awarded to 34 prize-winning writers and 26 winning productions have been staged in 38 UK wide venues.