In London in the early 1980s Rissik taught part-time, worked as a script reader for the BBC and contributed arts criticism to many newspapers and magazines, including
Harpers and Queen,
Time Out,
Plays and Players, the
New Statesman and
The Times. In 1986 he joined the founding team of
The Independent as theatre and radio critic. By then he had been working for several years as a dramatist, principally for BBC Radio 4, although a TV play was broadcast by Thames in 1981.
Blue Pacific Island (1985), with
Juliet Stevenson and
Anthony Bate, was followed by the trilogy
A Man Alone in 1986, the first play of which won him a
Giles Cooper Award.
King Priam, a one-hour account of the Trojan War, written as a series of interconnected monologues by the leading participants, in response to a blind-date commission, and starring
Paul Scofield, was broadcast in 1987. It led – though with many false starts and delays – to 1998's four-and-a-half-hour, three-play sequence,
Troy, for
BBC Radio 3, which won great critical acclaim, being praised by one critic as "the greatest radio drama [anyone] could ever hear." Ken Garner, reviewing in The Express on Sunday wrote that it was "
Easily the radio drama event of the year... a triumph. No one could have wanted this compulsive, gripping epic a second shorter... a Trojan War for our time", while Anne Karpf, reviewing the plays in The Guardian described them as "
Irresistible. A magnificent marriage of the epic and demotic. Is there anywhere else in the world that this kind of work can be found? Radio 3: trail this, promote it, cherish it, and above all repeat it."
Troy was given a rehearsed reading at the Chichester Festival Theatre in 2000 and
workshopped at the
National Theatre Studio the following year. A one-woman show drawn from
Troy by actress
Gina Landor has been seen in London, New York, Rome, New Delhi and Belgrade. A further thematically linked three-play sequence set in the ancient world and was broadcast by Radio 3 at Easter 2004. The first of these,
Dionysos, was the third of his projects to feature Scofield, this time in one of his final roles.
Dionysos was accompanied by
The Art of Love, about the clash between the poet Ovid and the emperor Augustus, and
Resurrection, about the confrontation between Pilate and Christ. One critic described them as being "about transitions between old gods and new, state powers and spiritual forces". Four of Andrew Rissik's works have so far been published in 2015 by Scriptusbooks: the
Troy trilogy,
Dionysos,
The Art of Love and
Resurrection. == Other work==