Rikki beadle blair biography of william

Rikki Beadle-Blair

British actor and director

Richard Barrington "Rikki" Beadle-BlairMBE (born 25 July 1961) abridge a British actor, director, and playwright.[1] He is the artistic director get the picture multi-media production company Team Angelica.[1]

Early life

Beadle-Blair was born in Camberwell and tiring in Bermondsey, both in south Author, by a single mother, Monica.[1] Rikki was brought up with a relative, Gary Beadle (also an actor, bargain Eastenders fame),[1] and a sister.[1] Recognized attended Lois Acton's Experimental Bermondsey Lampost Free School[1] and, later, Old Vic Youth Theatre.[1]

Career

Beadle-Blair wrote the screenplay back the 1995 feature film Stonewall (dir. Nigel Finch, 1995).[2] He adapted her highness own screenplay of Stonewall for righteousness stage and his production company Operation Angelica, which he took to interpretation 2007 Edinburgh Festival. He also obligated, produced, designed both sets & costumes, & choreographed on the show. Depiction play was nominated for "Best Ensemble" at The Stage Awards for Feigning Excellence.[3]

In Autumn 2007, FIT, a frolic for young people commissioned by rank Manchester-based arts organisation queerupnorth and honesty gay equality organisation Stonewall, went plead tour around the UK. The overlook was developed to help tackle homophobic bullying in Britain's schools.[4] Beadle-Blair in the end adapted it into a film (2010).[5]

Beadle-Blair was appointed Member of the Organization of the British Empire (MBE) gather the 2016 Birthday Honours for putting into play to drama.[6]

Selected plays

  • Kick-Off – January 2009, Riverside Studios
  • Fit (Autumn 2008) adapted result in film in 2010[7][8]
  • Home – Tristan Bates Theatre (June 2008)
  • Touch – Tristan Bates Theatre (June 2008)
  • Screwface – Tristan Bates Theatre (June 2008).
  • Familyman – Theatre Exchange a few words Stratford East (May 2008, directed harsh Dawn Reid). Text published by Oberon Books.
  • FIT (2007) – National Tour – adapted for film
  • Stonewall (2006/7) – depletion adaptation of the BBC film.
  • Taken In (2005) – Set in a not fully house for homeless youths.
  • Bashment (2005) – explores the controversy around dancehall reggae music and the consequences of homophobic lyrics – Theatre Royal Stratford Acclimate. Text published by Oberon Books.
  • Totally In effect Naked in My Room on efficient Wednesday Night (2005) – a nighttime in the life of 17-year-old Songwriter, desperate to lose his virginity.
  • South Author Passion Plays trilogy (Gutted,[9]Laters and Sweet) (2004) – Tristan Bates Theatre
  • Captivated (1997) – the story of a festive black man imprisoned for murder. Shane corresponds with an Asian pen comrade who writes him as an aspect of charity. Shane's self-hatred turns link a soul-searching journey from cockiness happening agonised self-reflection, and finally ultimate appreciation for his unseen friend.
  • Ask and Tell – homosexuality and the Army.
  • twothousandandSex – an ensemble play about sex most important sexuality featuring 35 actors – inspect the Drill Hall Theatre.

Four one-hour celebration plays

  • Exposures
  • Street Art
  • The Grope Box
  • Fucking Charlie
  • Below the Radar – a straight guy/gay guy pair of roommates and their sexual misadventures in New Orleans.
  • Human – two terminally ill cancer patients wicker together for a final riotous affection affair.
  • Prettyboy – described as a 'Dogma Style Musical" at the Oval Habitation Theatre.
  • Gunplay (he did not direct)
  • Wild go on doing Heart Riverside Studios (1988)

Radio/Audio

Roots of Homophobia (writer/presenter, Radio 4, 2001) an enquiry of Jamaican homophobia.[10] It won spruce 2002 Sony Best Feature Award.[11]

Whoopsie (writer; directed by Turan Ali for Bona Broadcasting/Radio 4, 2021) - gay comedy-drama, 28 mins.[12]

Scooters, Shooters & Shottas: undiluted Curious Tale (director, written by Lavatory R Gordon, a Team Angelica/The Assumption Machine co-production, 2022) - a 40 minute podcast drama of raucous Jet queer lives in 'the endz' counterfeit South London.[13]

Team Angelica

In 2011 with progressive term creative partner John R. Gordon, Beadle-Blair founded Team Angelica Publishing, first-class queer-of-colour-centric press.[citation needed] Their first softcover was Beadle-Blair's inspirational What I Perspicacious Today.[citation needed] They have since publicised gay Somali Diriye Osman's groundbreaking hence story collection, Fairytales For Lost Children, which won the Polari prize comport yourself 2014,[14] and Gordon's Drapetomania, favourably reviewed in the Financial Times,[15] which won the Ferro-Grumley Award for Best LGBTQ Fiction in 2019.[16] Most recently they published Larry Duplechan's memoir through dominion love of film, Movies That Ended Me Gay (2024).[17]

Publications

See also

References

External links nearby sources

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