Atiha Sen Gupta
British playwright and screenwriter (born 1988)
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Atiha Sen-Gupta (born 1988) is a British playwright and screenwriter. She is writer-in-residence for 2016–2017 at Theatre Royal Stratford East in London, England, where her play Counting Stars was produced in 2016. The daughter of a journalist and activist Rahila Gupta,[1] Sen Gupta attended Hampstead School in London, where she became involved as a teenager with the Hampstead Theatre's youth company. She studied politics and sociology at Warwick University, graduating in 2012.
Atiha Sen Gupta | |
|---|---|
| Born | 1988 (age 37–38) |
| Education | Hampstead School |
| Alma mater | Warwick University |
| Occupations | Playwright and screenwriter |
| Notable work | What Fatima Did (2009) |
In 2009, when she was just 21, her debut play What Fatima Did premiered at the Hampstead Theatre to critical acclaim.[2][3] The play was produced in Germany at the Hanseatic State Theater in 2011, and received the Youth Theater Prize at the Heidelberger Stückemarkt festival in the following year.[4] In 2014, her play about police racism, State Red, was produced at the Hampstead Downstairs. She followed up with Counting Stars, about two Nigerian nightclub toilet attendants working in a club in "post-Lee Rigby post-Brexit Woolwich",[5] which played at the Edinburgh Fringe 2015 and on the main stage of the Theatre Royal Stratford East in August–September 2016.[6]
As well as theatre, Sen Gupta also writes for television, beginning in 2009 when she co-wrote "Noami", an episode in the third series of Skins. On 23 June 2016, an episode Sen Gupta co-wrote with Katie Douglas aired on BBC One's Holby City.[7]
Sen Gupta has worked for several disability advocacy organizations. Her brother Nihal, who had cerebral palsy, died at the age of 17.[8]