Plays
- Downstairs (1958)
- You've No Need to be Frightened (1959?)
- Having a Wonderful Time (1960)
- Easy Death (1960)
- The Ants, radio drama (1962)
- Lovesick, radio drama (1969)
- Identical Twins (1960)
- Abortive, radio drama (1971)
- Not Not Not Not Not Enough Oxygen, radio drama (1971)
- Owners (1972)
- Schreber's Nervous Illness, radio drama (1972) - based on Memoirs of My Nervous Illness
- The Hospital at the Time of the Revolution (written 1972)
- The Judge's Wife, radio drama (1972)
- Moving Clocks Go Slow (play), (1973)
- Turkish Delight, television drama (1973)
- Objections to Sex and Violence (1975)
- Light Shining in Buckinghamshire (1976)
- Vinegar Tom (1976)
- Traps (1976)
- The After-Dinner Joke, television drama (1978)
- Seagulls (written 1978)
- Cloud Nine (1979)
- Three More Sleepless Nights (1980)
- Top Girls (1982)
- Crimes, television drama (1982)
- Fen (1983)
- Softcops (1984)
- A Mouthful of Birds (1986)
- A Heart's Desire (1987)
- Serious Money (1987)
- Ice Cream (1989)
- Hot Fudge (1989)
- Mad Forest (1990)
- Lives of the Great Poisoners (1991)
- The Skriker (1994)
- Blue Heart (1997)
- Hotel (1997)
- This is a Chair (1999)
- Far Away (2000)
- Thyestes (2001) - translation of Seneca's tragedy
- A Number (2002)
- A Dream Play (2005) - translation of August Strindberg's play
- Drunk Enough to Say I Love You? (2006)
- Seven Jewish Children — a play for Gaza (2009)
- Love and Information (2012)
Read more about this topic: Caryl Churchill
Famous quotes containing the word plays:
“The form of act or thought mattered nothing. The hymns of David, the plays of Shakespeare, the metaphysics of Descartes, the crimes of Borgia, the virtues of Antonine, the atheism of yesterday and the materialism of to-day, were all emanation of divine thought, doing their appointed work. It was the duty of the church to deal with them all, not as though they existed through a power hostile to the deity, but as instruments of the deity to work out his unrevealed ends.”
—Henry Brooks Adams (18381918)
“We are all patchwork, and so shapeless and diverse in composition that each bit, each moment, plays its own game.”
—Michel de Montaigne (15331592)
“The plays of children are nonsense, but very educative nonsense. So it is with the largest and solemnest things, with commerce, government, church, marriage, and so with the history of every mans bread, and the ways by which he is to come by it.”
—Ralph Waldo Emerson (18031882)