Stella Duffy

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Stella Duffy
Born 1963
Woolwich, London,
United Kingdom
Occupation Novelist, performer

stelladuffy.wordpress.com

Stella Duffy is a writer and performer born in London who spent her childhood in New Zealand before returning to the UK.[1]

Biography

Born to a New Zealander father and an English mother, Duffy is the youngest in a family of seven children. The family moved to New Zealand when Duffy was five, and Duffy later returned to London. She studied English Literature and Drama at Victoria University, Wellington.[2] Duffy is a practising Buddhist and lives in Lambeth with her partner, playwright Shelley Silas.[3][4]

Career

She has written thirteen novels – eight literary novels published by Virago and Sceptre and five crime novels in the Saz Martin series, published by Serpent's Tail. She has also written fifty short stories, ten plays,[5] and many feature articles and reviews. With Lauren Henderson she co-edited the fiction anthology Tart Noir (2002). Her own short story in that collection, Martha Grace, was awarded the 2002 Crime Writers' Association's Macallan Short Story Dagger.[6] Singling out the Couples was shortlisted for the 1999 James Tiptree Jr Memorial Award. State of Happiness was longlisted for the 2004 Orange Prize, as was The Room of Lost Things in 2008.[7][8] She adapted the film script of State of Happiness for Fiesta Productions. The first novel in her Saz Martin series, Calendar Girl, was voted fifth equal in the 2007 international poll The Big Gay Read.[9] She won Stonewall Writer of the Year 2008 for The Room of Lost Things and in 2010 for Theodora, Actress, Empress, Whore.

She has written ten plays, including The Book of Ruth (and Naomi) for the Bush Theatre's inaugural Sixty Six Books season, an adaptation of Medea (Steam Industry at The Scoop 2009, Assembly Rooms Edinburgh 2011), Prime Resident (NYT, Soho Theatre 2007), Immaculate Conceit (NYT, Lyric Hammesmith 2003) The Hand (Gay Sweatshop 1996), her solo shows Breaststrokes (BAC 2004) and The Tedious Predictability of Falling In Love (The Oval 1990)

As a stage performer, she is an associate artist with Improbable, has been a member of the comedy improvisation company Spontaneous Combustion since 1988 and has guested with The Comedy Store Players. She has performed her solo show Breaststrokes (Time Out and The Guardian Critic’s Choice) in London, Belfast, Cardiff, Dublin, York, and Amsterdam.

She directed Murder, Marple and Me for the Gilded Balloon (Edinburgh 2012 and tour 2013), Cell Sell for the National Youth Theatre at the Soho Theatre; Kikia te Poa (Matthew Saville), Precious Things (company devised) at the Pacific Playhouse, Skin Tight (Gary Henderson) at the Pleasance Islington and Riverside Studios, My Inner Orc at the Pleasance, TaniwhaThames at OvalHouse Theatre. Ordinary Darkness at Hen and Chickens – all for Shaky Isles; and The Seduction of Ms Sarah Hart (Caron Pascoe) at The Oval for Kindred Spirits.

On screen, she appeared in a 1997 episode of ITV police procedural series The Bill[10] the 2001 movie Absolution.[11]

She also wrote and presented a documentary in 2008 for the BBC's Time Shift strand called How to write a Mills and Boon.[12]

Novels

  • Calendar Girl (1994)
  • Wavewalker (1996)
  • Beneath the Blonde (1997)
  • Singling Out the Couples (1998)
  • Eating Cake (1999)
  • Fresh Flesh (1999)
  • Immaculate Conceit (2000)
  • State of Happiness (2004)
  • Parallel Lies (2005)
  • Mouths of Babes (2005)
  • The Room of Lost Things (2008)
  • Theodora, Actress, Empress, Whore (2010)
  • The Purple Shroud (2012)

Stage Plays

  • The Tedious Predictability of Falling in Love (1990)
  • The Hand, A Lesbian Horror Ballet (1995)
  • Close To You (1996)
  • Crocodiles and Bears (1999)
  • Immaculate Conceit (2003)
  • Breaststrokes (2004)
  • Prime Resident (2006)
  • Medea (new version for Steam Industry) 2009

Awards

CWA Short Story Dagger Award 2002 for "Martha Grace" (Tart Noir)

CWA Short Story Dagger Award 2013 for "Come Away With Me" (Mammoth Book of Best British Mysteries)[13]

Stonewall Writer of the Year 2008 for "The Room of Lost Things"

Stonewall Writer of the Year 2010 for "Theodora, Actress, Empress, Whore"

References

External links

Newspaper interviews

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