Bush Theatre
The Bush Theatre is located in the Passmore Edwards Public Library, Shepherd's Bush, in the London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham. It was established in 1972 as a showcase for the work of new writers.
Artistic Directors
- Brian McDermott and Nicholas Newton
- Peter Wilson
- Jenny Topper, jointly with Nicky Pallot
- Dominic Dromgoole
- Mike Bradwell
- Josie Rourke
- Madani Younis
- Lynette Linton
- Taio Lawson
History
Throughout 1992, the Bush Theatre celebrated 20 years at the frontier of new writing. "What has held the Bush together for 20 years? Blind faith, youthful commitment and a tenacious belief in new writing: above all, perhaps, the conviction that new work deserves the highest standards in acting, direction and design", wrote The Guardian. The Bush won The Empty Space Award for the year's work, which included Billy Roche's Bush plays A Handful Of Stars, Poor Beast in the Rain and Belfry playing in repertory as The Wexford Trilogy, which toured to Wexford Opera House and the Abbey Theatre, Dublin.
In November 2010, the Bush Theatre announced it would be leaving its home of nearly forty years and moving to the former Passmore Edwards Public Library building, round the corner from its first home, on Uxbridge Road.
The relocation took place in 2011 and the new venue opened with the "Sixty-Six Books" project. This was a celebration of the anniversary of the publication of the King James Bible, which used 66 writers, many of whom were veterans of the Bush.
That same year, Artistic Director Josie Rourke announced her departure from the Bush to take up the position of Artistic Director of the Donmar Warehouse. The Board appointed Madani Younis as her successor from January 2012. In 2013, he programmed the theatre's most successful season to date, which saw the theatre play to 99% capacity.
In Spring 2016, the Bush Theatre relocated its plays to found spaces around Shepherd's Bush and Notting Hill, as the former library building closed for the largest capital project in the theatre's history. Borrowing new and iconic spaces with their own histories and tales of the local community, this season of work welcomed new audiences and residents by offering a number of free and subsidised theatre tickets to local people.
In March 2017, following a landmark year of taking plays into the communities of West London, the Bush Theatre returned home following a £4.3m revitalisation of the venue. The year-long redevelopment was driven by the aim of realising Younis’ vision for a theatre that reflected the diversity and vibrancy of London. Upon reopening, the building was to be more sustainable and entirely accessible, with a new entrance, front-of-house area and exterior garden terrace to the main street.
Lynette Linton became Artistic Directory in January 2019, following Younis' appointment as Creative Director at the Southbank Centre. That same year, the theatre was named London Theatre of the Year by The Stage.
In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Bush Theatre filmed several of its productions and offered them to online viewers.
File:Disgraced.jpg|thumb|The Bush Theatre's 2013 production of Pulitzer Prize for Drama winner Disgraced by Ayad Akhtar|alt=
Venue
Following the 2016/17 redevelopment, the Bush Theatre has two performance spaces:- The Theatre, a reserved seating venue with a maximum capacity of 180. It has remained in its original location and can be configured in a thrust, end on or in the round layout.
- The Studio, an unreserved seating venue with a maximum capacity of 70, is a home for emerging artists and producers. Similarly, this space can be configured in a thrust, end on or in the round layout.
The redevelopment of the venue was 'Cultural Project of the Year' finalist at the AJ Architecture Awards 2017, and 'Highly commended Cultural Building' at the AJ Retrofit Awards 2017, and selected by the Hammersmith Society as winner of their Conservation Award for 2017.
New writing
The Literary Department at the Bush Theatre is committed to discovering the best new plays from playwrights from the widest range of backgrounds and therefore seek unsolicited submissions throughout the year in dedicated script windows. The Bush is a proud champion of playwrights, with a keen interest in those voices not often heard, and reflecting the contemporary culture of London, the UK and beyond. The Department receives nearly 2000 scripts a year from new and established playwrights, all of which are read and considered for production or development at the Bush.Bush Writers Group
The Bush Writers’ Group is a development programme run by the Bush Theatre to support early-career writers, with participants selected through a competitive open application process.Several alumni have had work produced at the Bush and have gone on to receive wider professional recognition within the theatre industry.
| Year | Artistic Director | Cohort | Sources |
| 2025 | Taio Lawson | Wisdom Charis; Sara Dawood; Josh Dhillon; Ashlee Elizabeth-Lolo; Kathryn Golding; Roberta Livingston; Angela O’Callaghan; Razak Osman | |
| 2023 | Lynette Linton | Kaleya Baxe; Yasmine Dankwah; Aaron Kilercioglu; Lare Ofeyusi; Mwansa Phiri; Tanya Shamil | |
| 2022 | Lynette Linton | Valerie Isaiah Sadoh; Temi Majekodunmi; Jasmin Mandi-Ghomi; Ted Marriott; Coral Wylie; Zak Ismail | |
| 2021 | Lynette Linton | Nicole Acquah; Georgia Green; Dilan Raithatha; Lydia Sabatini; Jilly Sumsion; Diyan Zora | |
| 2020/21 | Lynette Linton | Sophia Griffin; Holly Rose Hawgood; Kwame Owusu; Nikhil Parmar; Beru Tessema; Kit Withington | |
| 2019/20 | Lynette Linton | Ava Wong Davies; Casey Bailey; Tife Kusoro; Will Jackson; Benedict Lombe; Natasha Simone | |
| 2017/18 | Madani Younis | Kelly Marie Jones; Tom Wentworth; Robyn Addison; Afsaneh Gray | |
| 2016 | Madani Younis | Tristan Bernays; Tristan Fynn-Aiduenu; Kamal Kaan; Jessica Sian; A. C. Smith; Camilla Whitehill | |
| 2015 | Madani Younis | Josh Azouz; Lily Bevan; Sevan Greene; Nabihah Islam; Gemma Rogers; Sophie Wu |
Productions
A list of selected productions of the Bush Theatre.Productions in the 2020s
Productions in the 2010s
- 2019 Chiaroscuro by Jackie Kay
- 2019 Baby Reindeer by Richard Gadd
- 2019 I Wanna Be Yours by Zia Ahmed
- 2019 The Arrival by Bijan Sheibani
- 2019 Strange Fruit by Caryl Phillips
- 2018 Misty by Arinzé Kene
- 2018 Leave Taking by Winsome Pinnock
- 2018 Dismantle Festival by Project 2036
- 2017 The Hijabi Monologues by Amal Abdi, Hanan Issa, Sahar Ullah and Nimmo Ismail
- 2016 The Royale by Marco Ramirez
- 2016 Boys Will Be Boys by Melissa Bubnic
- 2016 Right Now by Catherine-Anne Toupin
- 2016 Pink Mist by Owen Sheers
- 2015 Forget Me Not by Tom Holloway
- 2015 RADAR 2015
- 2015 F*ck the Polar Bears by Tanya Ronder
- 2015 The Invisible by Rebecca Lenkiewicz
- 2015 The Angry Brigade by James Graham
- 2015 The Royale by Marco Ramirez
- 2015 Islands by Caroline Horton
- 2014 Visitors by Barney Norris
- 2014 Albion by Chris Thompson
- 2014 RADAR 2014
- 2014 Perseverance Drive by Robin Soans
- 2014 Incognito by Nick Payne
- 2014 We Are Proud to Present a Presentation by the Herero of Namibia, formerly known as South West Africa, from the German Sud-Ouest Afrika Between the Years 1895 – 1915 by Jackie Sibblies-Drury
- 2014 Ciphers by Dawn King
- 2013 Jumpers for Goalposts by Tom Wells
- 2013 RADAR 2013
- 2013 The Herd by Rory Kinnear
- 2013 Josephine and I by Cush Jumbo
- 2013 Disgraced by Ayad Akhtar
- 2013 Three Birds by Janice Okoh
- 2013 Money the game show by Clare Duffy
- 2012 Straight by D. C. Moore
- 2012 Snookered by Ishy Din
- 2012 Chalet Lines by Lee Mattinson
- 2012 The Beloved by Amir Nizar Zuabi
- 2012 Mad About the Boy by Gbolahan Obisesan
- 2012 Fear by Dominic Savage
- 2012 Our New Girl by Nancy Harris
- 2011 The Kitchen Sink by Tom Wells
- 2011 Sixty-Six Books by Sixty-Six Writers
- 2011 This is where we got to when you came in by non zero one
- 2011 Where's My Seat? by Dierdre Kinahan, Tom Wells and Jack Thorne
- 2011 In The Beginning by Nick Payne
- 2011 Moment by Deirdre Kinahan
- 2011 Little Platoons by Steve Waters
- 2011 The Knowledge by John Donnelly
- 2010 My Romantic History by D C Jackson
- 2010 The Aliens by Annie Baker
- 2010 The Great British Country Fete by Russell Kane and Michael Bruce
- 2010 Like A Fishbone by Anthony Weigh
- 2010 A Little Gem by Elaine Murphy
- 2010 Eigengrau by Penelope Skinner
- 2010 The Whisky Taster by James Graham