Jules Horne

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Jules_Horne an entity of type: Thing

Jules Horne (born 1963) is a Scottish playwright, radio dramatist and fiction writer. Jules Horne was born in Hawick, Scotland, and lived in Bonn, Bern and Reading before returning to the Scottish Borders. Following a German degree at Oxford, she worked in Germany and Switzerland as a translator, editor and BBC radio journalist. She returned to the UK in 2000 to write full-time. Jules was awarded a Scottish Arts Council Bursary in 2001 and the National Library of Scotland Robert Louis Stevenson Memorial Award in 2002. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Jules Horne
rdf:langString Jules Horne
rdf:langString Jules Horne
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xsd:integer 1963
rdf:langString playwright, radio dramatist and fiction writer
rdf:langString Jules Horne (born 1963) is a Scottish playwright, radio dramatist and fiction writer. Jules Horne was born in Hawick, Scotland, and lived in Bonn, Bern and Reading before returning to the Scottish Borders. Following a German degree at Oxford, she worked in Germany and Switzerland as a translator, editor and BBC radio journalist. She returned to the UK in 2000 to write full-time. Jules was awarded a Scottish Arts Council Bursary in 2001 and the National Library of Scotland Robert Louis Stevenson Memorial Award in 2002. Her first full-length play, , was performed by the Traverse Theatre, Edinburgh in 2006, and in Japanese at AI Hall, Itami, Osaka in 2007, and by Heidelberg University's Schauspielgruppe Anglistik in 2008. Plays for radio include (BBC Radio Scotland), (BBC 7), (BBC Radio 4), (BBC Radio Scotland), (BBC Radio 4), (BBC Radio Scotland) and (BBC Radio 4). She was the Scottish Arts Council's Virtual Writing Fellow for Dumfries and Galloway from 2005–2008, and has taught playwriting in schools as part of the Traverse's Class Act project. She teaches creative writing as an Associate Lecturer at Open University. Her play for Nutshell Theatre won a Scotsman Fringe First at the 2011 Edinburgh Festival Fringe, and the 2011 Fringe Award by the Centre for Sustainable Practice in the Arts.
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