Vicky Featherstone

Theatre and artistic director (born 1957)


title: "Vicky Featherstone" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["english-artistic-directors", "english-theatre-directors", "british-women-theatre-directors", "living-people", "1967-births", "people-from-redhill,-surrey", "people-educated-at-the-old-palace-school"] description: "Theatre and artistic director (born 1957)" topic_path: "arts" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vicky_Featherstone" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Theatre and artistic director (born 1957) ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox person"]

FieldValue
nameVicky Featherstone
birth_date
birth_placeRedhill, Surrey, England
occupationTheatre and artistic director
children2
years_active1990–present
spouseDanny Brown
::

| name = Vicky Featherstone | image = | image_size = | birth_date = | birth_place = Redhill, Surrey, England | occupation = Theatre and artistic director | children = 2 | years_active = 1990–present | spouse = Danny Brown

Vicky Featherstone (born 5 April 1967) is a theatre and artistic director. She was artistic director of the UK new writing touring theatre company Paines Plough from 1997, founding director of the National Theatre of Scotland in 2004, and the first female artistic director of London's Royal Court Theatre from 2013 until 2023. Featherstone's career has been characterised by significant involvement with new writing.

Early life and education

Vicky Featherstone was born in Redhill, Surrey on 5 April 1967, but moved to Scotland at 6 weeks old, where she lived in Clackmannanshire until the age of 7, when her father's work took her around the world. Her father is a chemical engineer and her mother a nurse. She is the eldest of three children. Featherstone was privately educated.

Featherstone studied drama at Manchester University, and soon discovered she favoured directing over acting.

Featherstone also did an MA in directing at the university, in association with Manchester's Contact Theatre.

Career

Early directorships and acting

Featherstone's worked as assistant director at the Royal Court Theatre in London in 1990 on Martin Crimp's No One Sees the Video. She gained a place on the Regional Theatre Young Director Scheme, under which she spent two years from 1992 to 1994, first as assistant director and then associate director, based at West Yorkshire Playhouse, then under the artistic directorship of Jude Kelly.

She then became resident director at the Octagon Theatre Bolton from 1994 to 1996 and worked at Northern Stage, then became Literary Associate for the Bush Theatre from 1996 to 1997.

Television script editor

In the mid-1990s, Featherstone returned to TV script editing and programme development, having worked for a time as a script editor for Central TV immediately after University. The programme debuted in 1997.

She was also involved in the development of the pathologist drama Silent Witness, first broadcast in 1996, for which she was credited as script editor for the first two episodes.

Management roles

Paines Plough (1997–2004)

Featherstone was artistic director of Paines Plough, a theatre company based in the UK that specialises in new plays and touring, from 1997 to 2004.

Immediately prior to her appointment, the company was not thriving. Featherstone appointed writers Mark Ravenhill as literary manager and Sarah Kane as writer-in-residence, and developed an atmosphere seen as welcoming to writers. and willingness to experiment and collaborate with other theatre companies such as Frantic Assembly and Graeae. Her hiring of John Tiffany as associate director was also considered a significant contribution to the company's success.

By the time of Featherstone's departure from Paines Plough in 2004, the company was being described as "a major force for new writing" staff had doubled from four to eight, and turnover had risen to £0.5m per year.

National Theatre of Scotland (2006–2013)

In September 2003, the Scottish Executive announced funding of £7.5m for the establishment of the National Theatre of Scotland, with £3.5m for the year April 2004 to March 2005 and £4m for the following year. Robert Findlay, once chief executive of Scottish Radio Holdings, was appointed as chairman, and once a board had also been appointed, the search for the first artistic director for the NTS began.

The job of director of the NTS, combining the roles of director, chief executive, and artistic director, was advertised in May 2004. From an initial 30 applications for the post, six were interviewed. Findlay announced Featherstone's appointment on 29 July 2004 at the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama, and Featherstone took up her post at the NTS – then housed in an empty temporary office in Hope Street, Glasgow, on 1 November 2004.

She began building a team. This included John Tiffany, who had worked with her at Paines Plough and prior to that was Literary Director of Edinburgh's Traverse Theatre, as associate director of New Work; playwright David Greig, as dramaturg; and Simon Sharkey, then artistic director of Cumbernauld Theatre, as associate director of NTS Learn. and began developing ideas and strategy.

On 2 November 2005, Featherstone unveiled the National Theatre of Scotland's inaugural programme to a packed audience at the Tramway in Glasgow, having announced it the previous day. The season included ten first night shows on the theme of Home, Black Watch scheduled for August 2006, and various other productions.

"We asked 10 of our best directors to create a piece of theatre around the word 'Home' – commonly thought of as one of the most evocative words in the English language....We want people to realise the NTS relates to the people of Scotland and for people to feel that they have ownership of it. We have an opportunity to define what theatre, or a national theatre, can and should be". The 10 experimental site-specific shows were staged simultaneously in non-theatre locations all across Scotland, with an official first night of 25 February 2006. Each production was allocated a budget of £60,000, and up to 10,000 free tickets were available.

Inspired by an article she read in the Glasgow Herald shortly after she took up her appointment with the NTS in November 2004, Featherstone asked writer Gregory Burke to follow the unfolding story of the Black Watch regiment – the oldest Highland regiment, which was being merged with other Scottish regiments. The production, about a group of young soldiers from the Fife-based regiment in Basra, was developed from interviews Burke did one Sunday afternoon in a pub in Dunfermline with six soldiers who had served in Iraq. This was developed into loosely connected scenes and ultimately the finished play. The production subsequently won multiple awards including Olivier Awards, has toured repeatedly since with productions on five continents, and has been adapted for television by the BBC.

Royal Court Theatre (2013–2023)

Featherstone's appointment as the first female artistic director of the Royal Court Theatre was announced in May 2012 and she took over in April 2013.

During this time, she was asked to do a production of Samuel Beckett's Krapp's Last Tape.

Recent work

From October 2024, Featherstone directed a production of Krapp's Last Tape for Landmark Productions, starring Stephen Rea as Krapp. The play premiered at the Gaiety Theatre in Dublin, Ireland, moving to Dublin's Project Arts Centre later that month. In February–March 2025 the production plays at the Dunstan Playhouse at the Adelaide Festival Centre in Adelaide, South Australia,

Personal life

Featherstone married Danny Brown, a TV scriptwriter and former stand-up comedian. They have two children.

Theatre productions

''Home'' at the NTS (2006)

::data[format=table title="''Home'' productions"]

TitleLocationCreatorsNotes
url=http://www.whatsonstage.com/west-end-theatre/news/11-2005/scottish-nt-kicks-off-first-season-in-2006-25-feb_23243.htmltitle=Scottish NT Kicks off First Season in 2006, 25 Febauthor=Terri Paddockpublisher=Whatsonstage.com
url=https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/theatre-dance/features/vicky-featherstone-london-calling-8441751.htmlarchive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220817/https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/theatre-dance/features/vicky-featherstone-london-calling-8441751.htmlarchive-date=17 August 2022url-access=subscription
Home DumfriesThe Loreburn drill hallDirector Graham EatoughBased on elderly people's ideas of home, and old people's memories of the past, performed as a soundscape.
Home DundeeThe McManus Galleries (a nineteenth century public museum and gallery)Director Kenny Miller1940s and 50s nostalgia and popular culture, with the glitter-ball pink and black of a wartime ballroom and a history film of humorous old Dundonians remembering their wartime youth.
Home East LothianA forest, with the audience transported there by busDirector Gill RobertsonA piece aimed specifically at children, using the story of Hansel and Gretel.
Home EdinburghThe Queen's Hall, a nineteenth century public buildingDirector Anthony NeilsonSeven primary-school children from West Lothian, after a fortnight's workshops with Neilson, scripted what they thought First Minister's Questions might be like in the Holyrood Parliament.
Home GlasgowA multi storey high-rise block of flats at Cranhill in EasterhouseDirector John TiffanyCombined live theatre of actors filmed inside the 18-storey tower block, with intimate screen drama, transmitted live from inside the flats via handheld surveillance cameras held to the windows by three men abseiling down the building and projected on to a huge screen, with up to 1,000 people watching from the natural amphitheatre of the ground below. The story focused on its central character's return from London to his old high-rise home, where his 17-year-old brother, under surveillance by the state, has a quest for a reunion with his dead father, a victim of Gulf War syndrome.
Home InvernessArts in Motion, a converted industrial warehouse in EvantonDirector Scott GrahamLocal family photos provided the stimulus for a physical theatre piece.
Home ShetlandPerformed on board the car deck of the Northlink Ferry while it paused in its round trip from Aberdeen in Lerwick harbourDirector Wils Wilson, poetic text by Jackie KayAn installation show, delivered through personal guided-tour handsets, leading the audience through a story of deeply buried female experience, and of the perennial island tension between leaving and staying, as ghostly actors dressed in 1940s or 50s costume drifted through the lounges and saloons of the ship.
Home StornowayA disused shop in the town centreDirector Stewart LaingA doll's house set, with about 20 people at a time given a guided tour of its various, detachable rooms.
::

Other productions

::data[format=table title="Productions directed by Vicky Featherstone"]

PlayAuthorTheatreOpening dateNotes
Jews. In Their Own WordsJonathan Freedland, from an idea by Tracy-Ann ObermanRoyal Court Theatre20 September 2022
The GlowAlistair McDowallRoyal Court Theatre24 January 2022
Shoe LadyE. V. CroweRoyal Court Theatre4 March 2020
Our Ladies of Perpetual Succouradapted by Lee Hall from the novel The Sopranos by Alan WarnerTraverse Theatre, Tron Theatre, The Lemon Tree, Eden Court, Adam Smith Theatre, The Brunton and Live TheatreA co-production between the National Theatre of Scotland and Live Theatre
The Mistress ContractAbi MorganRoyal Court Theatre
The Ritual Slaughter of Gorge MastromasDennis KellyRoyal Court Theatre
Untitled Matriarch Play (or Seven Sisters)Nikole BeckwithRoyal Court Theatre
The President Has Come To See YouLasha Bugadze, translated by Donald RayfieldRoyal Court Theatre
EnquirerThe Hub at Pacific Quay, Glasgow, then later Mother at The Trampery and Belfast FestivalA National Theatre of Scotland production presented in partnership with the London Review of Books. Edited and directed by Featherstone and John Tiffany. Co-edited by Andrew O'Hagan.
Appointment with the Wicker ManGreg Hemphill and Donald McLeary, based on the film The Wicker Man, the film screenplay by Anthony Shaffer and the novel Ritual by David PinnerAlhambra Theatre Dunfermline, His Majesty's Theatre Aberdeen, Theatre Royal, Glasgow, Eden Court Inverness and Assembly Rooms, EdinburghA National Theatre of Scotland production
27Abi MorganRoyal Lyceum Theatre Edinburgh, Citizens Theatre, Glasgow then Cambridge Arts Theatre in 2012A co-production between the National Theatre of Scotland and The Royal Lyceum Theatre, Edinburgh.
The WheelZinnie HarrisTraverseA National Theatre of Scotland production. Winner of an Amnesty International Freedom of Expression Award and a Fringe First at the 2011 Edinburgh Fringe Festival.
The Miracle ManDouglas MaxwellTron Theatre Glasgow, Brunton Theatre Musselburgh, Eden Court Inverness and Lemon Tree AberdeenA National Theatre of Scotland production.
EmptyCathy FordeTron Theatre Glasgow, Brunton Theatre Musselburgh, Eden Court Inverness and Lemon Tree AberdeenA National Theatre of Scotland production.
Wall of Death: A Way of LifeSECC, Glasgow, Aberdeen Exhibition and Conference Centre, Royal Highland Centre, EdinburghA National Theatre of Scotland production. Directed by Featherstone and Stephen Skrynka.
Long Gone LonesomeDuncan McLeanCromarty Hall, Orkney then tours of Scotland, plus Galway Arts Festival in 2010, and a US tour in 2012A National Theatre of Scotland production.
CockroachSam HolcoftTraverseA National Theatre of Scotland production.
365David HarrowerEden Court Inverness, then Edinburgh Playhouse, subsequently transferring to the Lyric HammersmithA National Theatre of Scotland co-production with the Edinburgh International Festival.
Mary StuartFriedrich Schiller, in a new version by David Harrower from a literal translation by Patricia BeneckeCitizens Theatre, Glasgow, then Royal Lyceum Theatre EdinburghA National Theatre of Scotland, Royal Lyceum Theatre, Edinburgh and Citizens’ Theatre, Glasgow co-production.
The Wolves in the WallsNeil Gaiman, based on the book by Neil Gaiman and Dave McKeanTramway Glasgow, Lyric Hammersmith, then UK tours and New Victory Theater, New Yorkurl=http://www.nationaltheatrescotland.com/content/default.asp?page=s150
PyreneesDavid GreigMenier Chocolate Factory, then Watford Palace
The Small ThingsEnda WalshMenier Chocolate Factory
Wild Lunch 7variousYoung VicPerformances of 8 different plays. Featherstone directed 270° by Jennifer Farmer and possibly other plays.
On BlindnessGlyn CannonSoho Theatre, then West Yorkshire Playhouse and Birmingham Repurl=http://www.britishtheatreguide.info/news/onblindness.htm
A NumberCaryl ChurchillSNT Drama Ljubljanaurl=http://www.scottisharts.org.uk/1/latestnews/1000713.aspx
The Drowned WorldGary OwenBirmingham Rep, then Traverse in August 2002, followed by UK tour in 2003.Winner of a Fringe First at the 2002 Edinburgh Fringe Festival.
Tiny DynamiteAbi MorganTraverse then UK tour
Wild Lunch 5variousBridewell TheatreScript-in-hand performances of 6 different plays. It is unclear which plays Featherstone directed.
Crazy Gary's Mobile DiscoGary OwenChapter Arts Centre, then UK tour
SplendourAbi MorganTraverse, then UK tourFeatherstone won 2001 Barclays Theatre Awards Best Director, and the 2001 TMA Best Director award, for the production.
Wild Lunch 4: Jubilee – Plays from UndergroundvariousBridewell TheatreScript-in-hand performances of 9 new plays inspired by the Jubilee Line Extension. It is unclear which plays Featherstone directed.
Wild Lunch 3variousBridewell TheatreScript-in-hand performances of 7 different plays. It is unclear which plays Featherstone directed.
The Cosmonaut's Last Message to the Woman He Once Loved in the Former Soviet UnionDavid GreigUstinov Studio Bath, then UK tour
Ticket To WritevariousOctagon Theatre Bolton, Bristol Old Vic, West Yorkshire Playhouse and Live Theatre, Newcastle10 short premiers by 10 writers.
CraveSarah KaneTraverse, then Royal Court, then Berlin and Dublin festivals
RiddanceLinda McLeanTraverse then UK tourWinner of a Fringe First at the 1999 Edinburgh Fringe Festival.
Sleeping AroundStephen Greenhorn, Hilary Fannin, Abi Morgan and Mark RavenhillSalisbury Playhouse, then UK tour
CrazyhorseParv BancilNew Vic Studio, Bristol, then UK tour
Anna WeissMike CullenTraverseWinner of a Fringe First at the 1997 Edinburgh Fringe Festival and an Independent on Sunday Award.
Wild Lunch 1variousBridewell TheatreScript-in-hand performances of 5 different plays. It is unclear which plays Featherstone directed.
Two Lips Indifferent RedTamsin OglesbyBush Theatre
The Glass MenagerieTennessee WilliamsOctagon Theatre Bolton
A Christmas CarolCharles DickensOctagon Theatre Bolton
Brighton RockGraham Greene, adapted by David HurlockWest Yorkshire Playhouse1993/94url=http://www.wyp.org.uk/media/2388796/overview22.pdf
9½ MinutesKathleen McCreeryGulbenkian Studio (Northern Stage)Short play as part of the Women Prefer series.
KvetchSteven BerkoffWest Yorkshire Playhouse1991/92
::

References

References

  1. "Vicky Featherstone". British Film Institute.
  2. (11 May 2012). "Royal Court names Vicky Featherstone as Cooke successor". BBC News.
  3. (11 July 2011). "Shereen [Nanjiani], Extended Interview with Vicky Featherstone". BBC Radio Scotland.
  4. Phil Miller. (17 December 2012). "Interview: Vicky Featherstone, National Theatre of Scotland". Herald Scotland.
  5. "Scotland: Creative Nation, Cultural Summit". Scottish Arts Council.
  6. Angelaki, Vicky. (2012). "The Plays of Martin Crimp: Making Theatre Strange". Palgrave Macmillan.
  7. (11 May 2012). "Royal Court Theatre Announces Vicky Featherstone as Next Artistic Director at The Royal Court Theatre". Royal Court Theatre.
  8. Robinson, Rebecca Charlotte. (2009). "From theory to practice : The National Theatre of Scotland, 1999–2009". University of Glasgow.
  9. "Past Trainees from 1960 – 2007". Regional Theatre Young Director Scheme.
  10. (6 July 2002). "Who's who in British theatre". The Guardian.
  11. ""Silent Witness" Buried Lies: Part 1 (1996) – Full cast and crew".
  12. "About Us". Paines Plough.
  13. Lyn Gardner. (12 May 1999). "Vicky's odyssey". The Guardian.
  14. Lyn Gardner. (30 July 2004). "Well-liked director with an eye for the new". The Guardian.
  15. (3 August 2004). "Stepping into the spotlight". Scotsman.com.
  16. (30 July 2004). "Dark horse lands top theatre job". Scotsman.com.
  17. (11 March 2004). "National Theatre of Scotland Board welcomed". Scottish Arts Council.
  18. (11 September 2003). "National theatre vision realised". BBC News.
  19. Kenny Mathieson. (1 May 2004). "Listening to the People". Northings.
  20. (6 April 2004). "National Theatre seeking a genius". Scotsman.com.
  21. (1 August 2004). "Fearless director hits the stage running". Scotsman.com.
  22. Joyce McMillan. (18 December 2012). "Interview: Vicky Featherstone on theatre in Scotland". Scotsman.com.
  23. (27 January 2005). "More big names join star cast at National Theatre". Scotsman.com.
  24. (27 January 2005). "The joy of worrying over this crucible of creativity". Scotsman.com.
  25. (30 October 2005). "National not nebulous plays for today". Scotsman.com.
  26. Joyce McMillan. (25 June 2005). "Why we can't afford to lose the plot". Scotsman.com.
  27. Vicky Featherstone. (1 November 2005). "'We have no theatrical tradition – just lots of good playwrights'". The Guardian.
  28. Vicky Featherstone. (19 February 2006). "Dream theatre becomes reality". Scotsman.com.
  29. Joyce McMillan. (25 February 2011). "NTS artistic director Vicky Featherstone is in optimistic mood on its fifth anniversary". The Scotsman.
  30. Mary Brennan. (2006). "There's No Place Like Home (On Tour #27)". British Council.
  31. (18 February 2006). "Stars come home for theatre's launch play". Scotsman.com.
  32. Roger Cox. (27 February 2006). "For one weekend, all the world's a stage – or all the country, at least". Scotsman.com.
  33. Brian Ferguson. (16 November 2012). "Outgoing National Theatre of Scotland director warns of ignoring Scottish artists". Scotsman.com.
  34. Dickson, Andrew. (11 May 2012). "Royal Court hires Vicky Featherstone as first female artistic director".
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  40. "Krapp's Last Tape - Landmark Productions".
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  42. Fiona Reid. (10 September 2012). "Vicky Featherstone's family home in Glasgow reveals creative mix of old and new – Homes and Gardens". Scotsman.com.
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  45. Mark Fisher. (28 December 2012). "Vicky Featherstone's final interview as artistic director of the National Theatre of Scotland". theatreSCOTLAND.
  46. "Our Ladies of Perpetual Succour". National Theatre of Scotland.
  47. "The Mistress Contract at The Royal Court Theatre". The Royal Court Theatre.
  48. "The Ritual Slaughter of Gorge Mastromas at The Royal Court Theatre". The Royal Court Theatre.
  49. "Untitled Matriarch Play (or Seven Sisters) at The Royal Court Theatre". Royal Court Theatre.
  50. "The President Has Come To See You at The Royal Court Theatre". Royal Court Theatre.
  51. "Enquirer".
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  53. "Appointment with the Wicker Man". National Theatre of Scotland.
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  58. (December 2025). "The Miracle Man". National Theatre of Scotland.
  59. "Empty". National Theatre of Scotland.
  60. "Wall of Death: A Way of Life". National Theatre of Scotland.
  61. "Long Gone Lonesome". National Theatre of Scotland.
  62. "Long Gone Lonesome 2012". National Theatre of Scotland.
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  66. "Mary Stuart". National Theatre of Scotland.
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  71. "The Small Things by Enda Walsh". Paines Plough.
  72. "Clare Lizzimore". Casarotto Ramsay.
  73. "Wild Lunch 7". Paines Plough.
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english-artistic-directorsenglish-theatre-directorsbritish-women-theatre-directorsliving-people1967-birthspeople-from-redhill,-surreypeople-educated-at-the-old-palace-school