Having been published regularly since the age of 20, I guess an obvious question is where do you find your inspiration?
As
a young man I was told I was good at writing plays and as there wasn’t
much else I was good at, I thought “I’ll do that”. I have never had an
intellectual or a political agenda. I gather my inspiration from people
around me.
Do you always write about things you know then?
What
I see and hear inspires me to start writing, but my plays will always
be a mix of memory and imagination. There is my own truth and then
there is story.
Your
themes mostly revolve around family, class, generational conflicts and
the tension between good and bad. How much do you think your childhood
in
I definitely think that being brought up in
Do you conform to any religion yourself?
I don’t. The pacifism is much more a lifestyle than a religion.
How do you find that age and maturity has affected your writing? Have your characters developed with you?
I
tend to write a play in the moment without thinking too much about it.
But I guess when I was young I wrote “old men” in a certain way. Now I
am that old man myself and see things differently, so I guess
characters do change over the years. However, basically I am still
trying to do the same as I did 40 years ago, which is to do my best.
Which media do you feel most expressive in? Did you find it easier to get your message across writing a novel than scripts?
Writing
a novel is an entirely different process to writing plays. First of all
it takes a lot longer. It took me three years to write my novel and I
found that I had to change my writing pattern completely during this
period. Also the story in novels is different to plays. Plays exist in
the moment, real and tangible, whereas novels have a much longer burn.
Lastly, have you got any advice for our playwright students who are about to graduate?
First
of all, action is as important as dialogue. Sit down in a theatre and
write down everything you see. Write what happens to the characters,
what they say and what they do. That’s all you need, the rest you can
learn, particularly if you are lucky enough to get your play staged at
a theatre. The most important thing is that you do your best and don’t
try to be clever. Just keep it simple, it really isn’t that
complicated.