Gagarin Way
Gagarin Way is a play by Scottish playwright Gregory Burke, named after a street in the West Fife village of Lumphinnans, on the edge of Cowdenbeath. The play documents the disappearance of socialism from an area where political radicalism was once a defining characteristic of the population. Gagarin Way debuted at the Traverse Theatre,[1] Edinburgh, in July 2001, before transferring to the National Theatre[2] and the West End in London. It was translated into 20 languages and toured the world.
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Meyer-Whitworth Award
- Roy MacGregor for Our Own Kind (1992)
- Philip Ridley for The Fastest Clock in the Universe (1993)
- Diane Samuels for Kindertransport (1994)
- Terry Johnson for Hysteria and Billy Roche for The Cavalcaders (shared) (1995)
- Michael Wynne for The Knocky (1996)
- Conor McPherson for This Lime Tree Bower (1997)
- Moira Buffini for Gabriel and Daragh Carville for Language Roulette (shared) (1998)
- David Harrower for Kill the Old Torture their Young (1999)
- Kate Dean for Down Red Lane (2000)
- Ray Grewal for My Dad’s Corner Shop (2001)
- Gregory Burke for Gagarin Way and Henry Adam for Among Broken Hearts (shared) (2002)
- Gary Owen for Shadow of a Boy (2003)
- Owen McCafferty for Scenes from the Big Picture (2004)
- Stephen Thompson for Damages (2005)
- Dennis Kelly for Osama the Hero (2006)
- Morna Pearson for Distracted (2007)
- Hassan Abdulrazzak for Baghdad Wedding (2008)
- Ali Taylor for Cotton Wool (2009)
- Natasha Langridge for Shraddha (2010)
- David Ireland for Everything Between Us (2011)
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