
Playing it back: Stef Smith reimagines QMU鈥檚 history
When audiences took their seats at the Traverse Theatre earlier this year, they were taken on a journey through 果冻传媒鈥檚 history, reframed through the lens of award-winning playwright and QMU graduate Stef Smith.
A play commissioned as part of our 150th anniversary programme, 鈥楬ead. Heart. Hand.鈥 delivered a heart-warming and often surprising look at the institution鈥檚 evolution 鈥 from its origins as a cookery school for women to the modern university it is today.
Stef spent months researching QMU鈥檚 archives, uncovering stories and moments that shaped the script. The result was a tightly structured piece that blended factual detail with contemporary commentary. Scenes shifted from early domestic science classes to student activism, public health innovations, and the more recent challenges of the pandemic.
Students at the centre
The play was performed by our very own final year Acting and Performance students, who were given the incredible opportunity to work with a living playwright on a new piece of theatre.
Other students, staff and alumni from across our Media, Communication and Performing Arts Division also helped bring the play to life 鈥 from costume design to stage dressing. Bruce Strachan, Lecturer in Drama and Performance at QMU and Director of Head. Heart. Hand. said: 鈥淚t鈥檚 a powerful example of how we prepare our students and engage consistently with today鈥檚 creative industries.鈥
A significant homecoming
Stef, who graduated from QMU in 2009 with a BA (Hons) in Drama and Theatre Arts, has gone on to build a remarkable career as a writer for both stage and screen, being described by the Scotsman as 鈥渙ne of Scotland鈥檚 most gifted playwrights.鈥 Her acclaimed plays include 鈥楴ora: A Doll鈥檚 House, Swallow and Enough鈥, while her screen work includes the BBC Scotland drama 鈥楩loat鈥. She has received numerous awards, including an Olivier Award for 鈥楻oadkill鈥 and Best Writer at the 2022 Royal Television Society Awards.
Stef described her return to QMU, as a 鈥渓ittle surreal鈥. She said: 鈥淚 can hardly believe how much time has passed since I graduated, yet in many ways it feels like no time at all! Much of Scotland鈥檚 theatre scene is built on new writing, so it鈥檚 vital that students gain experience working directly with a living playwright. I hope this opportunity gives them a real sense of the professional world they鈥檙e about to enter 鈥 it has been brilliant to see the next generation of students bringing such energy and creativity to the project. They should be so proud of their performance.鈥
Standing ovations
The play, which ran for three days in February, drew audiences of fellow students, staff, performing arts alumni, friends, family, along with arts journalists, agents, and casting directors. The atmosphere throughout the run was one of connection and shared experience, as many viewers recognised elements of their own time at QMU in the stories onstage. The production now stands as a memorable milestone in QMU鈥檚 drama and performing arts journey.