Harrower's first play,
Knives in Hens, which premiered at Edinburgh's
Traverse Theatre in 1995, was considered a critical and popular success. It deals with a relationship triangle in a rural setting, and a woman's internal quest to find out what she wants from life. Subsequent plays include
Kill the Old Torture Their Young (Traverse, 1998), which follows a disparate group of characters across an unnamed city, mixing realism with poetry and fantasy.
Presence (Royal Court Theatre Upstairs, April 2001) takes another look at the
Beatles' residency at the
Indra club in Hamburg on the eve of their success, and
Dark Earth (Traverse, August 2003) begins as a broad comedy and turns into a speculation about the meaning of history and the land. Harrower has also written adaptations including:
The Chrysalids (1999), adapted from
John Wyndham's novel, for the National Theatre's Connections project;
Six Characters Looking for an Author, a version of
Pirandello's
Six Characters in Search of an Author, first staged at the
Young Vic in 2000; Chekhov's
Ivanov (2002), performed at the
National Theatre; and Buchner's
Woyzeck, performed at the
Edinburgh Lyceum in 2002. He has also translated
The Girl on the Sofa (2002), by
Jon Fosse, presented in a joint production by the Edinburgh International Festival and the Schaubuhne, Berlin, and Schiller's
Mary Stuart for the
National Theatre of Scotland/Royal Lyceum, Edinburgh/Citizens' Theatre, Glasgow. In 2005, his play
Blackbird was produced by the Edinburgh International Festival, directed by
Peter Stein and transferred in February 2006 to the
Albery Theatre in London's West End It depicts the meeting between a young woman and a middle-aged man who, fifteen years earlier when she was twelve years old, kidnapped and raped her. In April 2008 the play was revived by David Grindley at the
Rose Theatre, Kingston prior to a national tour . In 2011, this play was produced by Rogue Machine in Los Angeles. This production won the LA Drama Critics Circle Award for Best Writing and Lead Performance by Sam Anderson. His play
365 was presented by the
National Theatre of Scotland at the Edinburgh International Festival in 2008, directed by
Vicky Featherstone. The play recounts the stories of 14 young people who have been in care are now living on their own in 'practice flats'. It was subsequently performed in London at the
Lyric Theatre, Hammersmith. In 2011, he wrote a new version of
Gogol's classic text,
The Government Inspector, produced at London's
Young Vic Theatre, directed by
Richard Jones and starring
The Mighty Boosh's
Julian Barratt and
Smack the Pony's
Doon Mackichan and
Kyle Soller. ==Plays==