After graduating university, Eatough relocated to
Glasgow and co-founded theatre company
Suspect Culture with playwright
David Greig and composer
Nick Powell. and
Airport (1995), Eatough soon took on the role of director. He remained in that capacity for the remainder of Suspect Culture's shows, including productions such as
Timeless (1997),
Mainstream (1999),
Candide 2000 (2000),
Casanova (2001),
Lament (2002), and
8000m (2004). after which Eatough continued to work as a freelance theatre maker. His work is often collaborative, especially across different artistic disciplines, such as visual arts and film. In 2012, Eatough and visual artist
Graham Fagen created
The Making of Us, a work presented as a live filmic installation at Glasgow's
Tramway performance centre, and later released as a film. Fagen had previously worked with Suspect Culture on the visual arts exhibition
Killing Time in 2006. Eatough collaborated with conceptual artist
Simon Starling on
‘At Twilight: A play for two actors, three musicians, one dancer, eight masks (and a donkey costume)’, a production commissioned by
The Common Guild in 2016. to develop two short films based on
Anthony Burgess' book series about fictional poet Enderby. The project, entitled
No End to Enderby was premiered at the
Manchester International Festival, and took the form of two short films based on the first and last chapter of the four
Enderby novels. The films were originally screened at the
Whitworth Art Gallery in Manchester in September 2017, and were also shown as part of the Glasgow International Festival in 2018. In 2015, Eatough reunited with Suspect Culture collaborators David Greig and Nick Powell for a stage adaptation of
Alasdair Gray's 1981 novel
Lanark. The play premiered as part of the
Edinburgh International Festival at the
Royal Lyceum Theatre in August 2015, before moving to Glasgow's
Citizens Theatre. Eatough's practice-led academic research led to the play
How to Act, which was produced by the
National Theatre of Scotland. The play premiered at
Summerhall during the 2017
Edinburgh International Festival, and toured across Scotland in March 2018. and was awarded a Ph.D. from
Lancaster University in 2016. ==Selected works==