This online course will guide you to complete a full-length play in your own unique voice. It will provide the theory and exercises to tone your writing muscles, whatever shape they’re currently in!
Each module will give an explanation of a specific piece of playwriting theory, provide examples from plays on the reading list, lead you through writing exercises, and set an assignment at the end of each module. The work you create during these assignments will form the skeleton for your play, providing a solid foundation for you to develop it further at your own pace.
Course tutor, Cressida Peever, will provide feedback on your assignments with tips on how to make your script stand out.
Playwriting is an oral art;
it’s not an art of a writer expecting to be read
but a writer expecting to be heard.
– Arthur Miller
This online course is broken down into 9 modules. There is no set time limit for completing it, but the recommended pace is one module per fortnight, to ensure that you write regularly, and at the same time give your ideas room to breathe.
When you have enrolled on the course, Cressida will email you a registration form, suggested reading list and the introductory module.
Over 9 modules the course will cover:
Each module includes a series of assignments to complete. Once finished they can then be submitted by email for private review. Cressida will then email you back (normally within 5 working days) with a detailed analysis of your work. This will include areas to focus on and additional exercises if needed before moving on to the next module. Within the time frame of the whole course you are encouraged to work at your own pace and if you have any queries, Cressida is on hand to offer additional support and guidance.
Email for additional information: playwriting@fishpublishing.com
Cressida Peever is a playwright and dramaturg originally from West Oxfordshire and now based in London.
Cressida is a frequent collaborator with Shotgun Carousel. She wrote immersive dining shows Divine Proportions (Broadway World) and Red Palace (chosen as one of The Stage’s Top 50 Shows of 2019). Each ran for 17 weeks at The Vaults in London.
Her drama has been performed at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe, Theatre503, Southwark Playhouse, and more.
Her most recent work, JOAN, an audiodrama, is available via Apple Podcasts.
She is a reader for a number of theatres and playwriting competitions, and has worked as a dramaturg on plays performed at VAULT Festival, the Edinburgh Festival Fringe, North Wall Arts Festival, Park Theatre and The Playground Theatre, amongst others.
Cressida holds a Masters with Distinction from Brasenose College, Oxford in Creative Writing.
The course costs £337, payable in advance to Fish Publishing through PayPal. To check how much that is in your currency – Currency Converter –
If you need more information prior to enrolling, please email playwriting@fishpublishing.com
Use the button below to make the payment.
Payment secures your place on the course.
Confirmation of payment from PayPal will be by email.
You will shortly receive an introductory email from your course tutor (normally within 3 working days).
We hope that you find the course useful, constructive and enjoyable. Please fill out the Feedback form after the last module.
Enrolment Conditions
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Testimonials: Playwriting Course
–Please send your experience on this playwriting course and any feedback you have on course tutor, Cressida Peever.
–This is a new course, testimonials will be published here as we receive them.
Once the Playwriting Course has commenced, there are no transfers or refunds in the event you are unable to continue. In exceptional circumstances, a time extension may be granted if the student is unable to complete the course in the allotted time limit. You understand the course materials are copyright and agree never to sell, rent or otherwise distribute your course materials in any way. Enrolment is taken as acceptance of conditions.
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In the landscape of emotion and folly, Flash writers are a fearless lot – these stories prove it. – Michelle Elvy (Flash Fiction)
… combining the personal and particular with the universal, each touching in surprising ways … experiences that burn deep, that need to be told. – Sean Lusk (Memoir)
Strong poems. First place is a poem I wish I’d written! – Billy Collins (Poetry)
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so many skilled pieces … gem-like, compressed and glinting, little worlds in entirety that refracted life and ideas … What a joy!
– Sarah Hall
… memoirs pinpointing precise
feelings of loss and longing and desire.
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What a pleasure to watch these poets’ minds at work, guiding us this way and that.
– Billy Collins
‘… delightful, lively send-up … A vivid imagination is at play here, and a fine frenzy is the result.’ – Billy Collins
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Brave stories of danger and heart and sincerity.
Some risk everything outright, some are desperately quiet, but their intensity lies in what is unsaid and off the page.
These are brilliant pieces from bright, new voices.
A thrill to read.
~ Emily Ruskovich
I could see great stretches of imagination. I saw experimentation. I saw novelty with voice and style. I saw sentences that embraced both meaning and music. ~ Colum McCann
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Every page oozes with a sense of place and time. – Marti Leimbach
Energetic, dense with detail … engages us in the act of seeing, reminds us that attention is itself a form of praise. – Ellen Bass
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I was looking for terrific writing of course – something Fish attracts in spades, and I was richly rewarded right across the spectrum – Vanessa Gebbie
Really excellent – skilfully woven – Chris Stewart
Remarkable – Jo Shapcott
The practitioners of the art of brevity and super-brevity whose work is in this book have mastered the skills and distilled and double-distilled their work like the finest whiskey.
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– Carmen Bugan.
What a high standard all round – of craft, imagination and originality: and what a wide range of feeling and vision.
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I was struck by how funny many of the stories are, several of them joyously so – they are madcap and eccentric and great fun. Others – despite restrained and elegant prose – managed to be devastating. All of them are the work of writers with talent.
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The perfectly achieved story transcends the limitations of space with profundity and insight. What I look for in fiction, of whatever length, is authenticity and intensity of feeling. I demand to be moved, to be transported, to be introduced into other lives. The stories I have selected for this anthology have managed this. – Ronan Bennett, Short Story Judge.
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MoreThe entries into this year’s Fish Short Story Prize were universally strong. From these the judges have selected winners, we believe, of exceptional virtue. – Carlo Gebler
MoreI was amazed and delighted at the range and quality of these stories. Every one of them was interesting, well-written, beautifully crafted and, as a short-story must, every one of them focused my attention on that very curtailed tableau which a short-story necessarily sets before us. – Michael Collins
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MoreEach of the pieces here has been chosen for its excellence. They are a delightfully varied assortment. More than usual for an anthology, this is a compendium of all the different ways that fiction can succeed. I invite you to turn to ‘All the King’s Horses’. The past is here. Begin.
– Michel Faber
Literary anthologies, especially of new work, act as a kind of indicator to a society’s concerns. This Short Story collection, such a sharp and useful enterprise, goes beyond that. Its internationality demonstrates how our concerns are held in common across the globe. – Frank Delaney
MoreFrom the daily routine of a career in ‘Spoonface’, to the powerful, recurring image of a freezer in ‘Shadow Lives’. It was the remarkable focus on the ordinary that made these Fish short stories such a pleasure to read. – Hugo Hamilton
MoreIn a world where twenty screens of bullshit seem to be revolving without respite … there is nothing that can surpass the ‘explosion of art’ and its obstinate insistence on making sense of things. These dedicated scribes, as though some secret society, heroically, humbly, are espousing a noble cause.
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MoreI feel like issuing a health warning with this Fish Anthology these stories may seriously damage your outlook – Here the writers view the world in their unique way, and have the imagination, talent, and the courage to refine it into that most surprising of all art forms the short story. – Clem Cairns.
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MoreThis is the first volume of short stories from Ireland’s newest publishing house. We are proud that fish has enabled 15 budding new writers be published in this anthology, and I look forward to seeing many of them in print again.
More12 Miles Out was selected by David Mitchell as the winner of the Fish Unpublished Novel Award.
A love story, thriller and historical novel; funny and sad, uplifting and enlightening.
You only know who you can’t trust. You can’t trust the law, because there’s none in New Ireland. You can’t trust the Church, because they think they’re the law. And you can’t trust the State, because they think they’re the Church And most of all, you can’t trust your friends, because you can’t remember who they were anymore.
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MoreIan Wild’s stories mix Monty Python with Hammer Horror, and the Beatles with Shakespeare, but his anarchic style and sense of humour remain very much his own in this collection of tall tales from another planet. Where else would you find vengeful organs, the inside story of Eleanor Rigby, mobile moustaches, and Vikings looting a Cork City branch of Abracababra?
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