Jump to content

Charlotte Eagar

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Charlotte Eagar (born 1965) is a British journalist,[1] filmmaker, novelist, and communications consultant. She is co-producer and co-founder, with her husband William Stirling, of the Trojan Women Project, combined psycho social support multi-media strategic communications drama project for refugees, currently producing Trojans UK22-23-24 a UK wide drama project for refugees and asylum seekers.[2] Scooterman – the short rom-com directed by Kirsten Cavendish, which Eagar co-wrote and produced with Stirling and Kirsten Cavendish - won Audience-rated Best of the Fest at the LA Comedy Festival (2010) and Palm Springs (2010) and was selected, amongst other festivals, for Cannes Short Film Corner (2010).[3] The documentary about the Trojan Women Project’s 2013 pilot programme in Jordan, Queens of Syria[4], directed by Yasmin Fedda - which Eagar executive produced has won many awards, including Best Director in the Arab World at the Abu Dhabi Film Festival (2014).[5][6] The Trojans (2019), the performance film of the Trojan Women’s latest Glasgow-based drama therapy project, was selected by the Scottish Government as a Special Edition Performance for the Edinburgh International Culture Summit 2020.[7]

For her work as a foreign correspondent in Bosnia during the war (1992-6), Eagar was runner-up in the David Blundy Award for Foreign Stringer of the Year (1993)[8] and runner-up in Cosmopolitan Woman of the Year (Media Section) 1994.

Education

Eagar read Classics at Oxford and has a post graduate diploma in Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies from Edinburgh University. Her early life was spent in London and Shropshire, where her father the Irish/English cricketer and hockey player, Michael Eagar, was a housemaster.

Career[edit]

After a brief stint as an apprentice dress-designer for the couturier Victor Edelstein in 1986 where she helped make dresses for, amongst others, the late Princess of Wales,[9] Eagar headed to journalism. She started working at the Evening Standard and Daily Mail while still at university. Her first foreign story was covering the 1989 Romanian Revolution for the Scotsman as a freelancer, while still at Oxford. After spending some months covering the collapse of the former USSR in 1992, based in Kyiv and Moscow, and travelling and reporting widely throughout the Caucasus and Central Asia, as a freelancer, Eagar moved to Bosnia, where she became the Observer’s Balkans Correspondent, based in Sarajevo during the siege.[10] She covered the war in Bosnia until its end in 1996.[11] Her 2008 novel, The Girl in The Film, is inspired by her experiences during the war.

In the mid-nineties, Eagar moved back to London. `After working as Acting Deputy Features Editor of the Scotsman, with a column on Scotland on Sunday. she became Assistant Features Editor of the Mail on Sunday, and, in 1999, Deputy Features Editor of the Sunday Telegraph. After living in Rome for two years to work on her novel The Girl in the Film, she returned to be Contributing Editor on the Evening Standard magazine, specializing in investigative features, in the UK and abroad, and later Senior Editor of Tatler.[12]

Eagar also continued to write for many other publications – including Prospect[13], the Spectator, and Sunday Times Magazine,[14] , continuing her interest in foreign affairs, writing from Iraq for the Times Magazine in 2004 about the boom in governments sub-contracting security in war zones to private security firms[15] and the looting of artworks from Baghdad’s Iraq Museum and for [16] the Mail on Sunday, from places such as Afghanistsan (2006 - investigating alleged fraud by the British government on Afghan poppy farmers in Helmand); to South Korea (2008), investigating refugees being smuggled from North Korea to South Korea and covering the Somali pirate crisis in 2011-12.[17]

In 2012, she joined Newsweek as a Contributing Editor and was sent on assignment to various countries, including Italy and Bosnia, where she covered Srebrenica’s DNA identification program [18] amongst other stories. Her 2016 piece for Granta,[19], the Colonel's New Life, followed a Syrian family making the journey by boat and land from Turkey to Germany.

Films[edit]

In 2009-10 Eagar and her husband, William Stirling, co-wrote and co-produced their first film, Scooterman,[20] a short rom com starring Ed Stoppard and Georgina Rylance and directed and co-produced by Kirsten Cavendish (to watch Scooterman click on a link cited here).[21] Scooterman got into Cannes Short Film Corner (2010)[22] and won Audience-rated Best of the Fest at the LA Comedy Festival and Palm Springs.

Eagar has also Exec Produced and produced several documentaries as part of her work at the Trojan Women Project, including Queens of Syria, The World to Hear, and The Trojans 2019 Edinburgh Festival, and Queens of Syria 2016 Young Vic/Developing Artists co-production theatrical performance films.[23]

Humanitarian and Strategic communications work - Trojan Women Project[edit]

Since 2007, Eagar has occasionally devised and run communication campaigns, firstly for her ownprojects eg The Girl in the Film.[24] Scooter man,[25][26]

In 2013, inspired by training films Eagar and Stirling had written and directed for M&S’s Kenyan partner Vegpro in Nairobi with a Kenyan cast of Vegpro workers,[27] Eagar and Stirling set up the Trojan Women Project,[28] a Not For Profit combined psycho-social support and strategic communications drama project for refugees.

The Trojan Women Project (Initially called the Syria Trojan Women Project) was first set up at the request of Oxfam and backed by the British charity Prospero World (the UK registered charity No1163952.[29]

Originally working with Syrian refugees in Jordan, Trojan Women Project now works mainly in the UK, with refugees and asylum seekers from many countries and is backed by the National Lottery Heritage Fund. The project has been designed to help refugees overcome their isolation, depression, and trauma, through regular drama workshops, while giving the participants, through plays and films, a platform to tell their stories to the world. It creates both a process and a product. The concept involves refugees working their own stories into the text of a play – most usually Euripides’ great anti-war tragedy, The Trojan Women - through regular workshops, and then performing their play.

As part of the strategy of TWP, Eagar and Stirling commissioned and Exec Produced a documentary, Queens of Syria[30] (directed by Yasmin Fedda and produced by Itab Azzam and Georgina Paget), about the project, which has won many awards.[31][32] (The film was produced by Refuge Productions Ltd, which Eagar and Stirling and others set up to support the Trojan Women Project.)

As per the aim of TWP, their original 2013 Jordan-based production, Syria: The Trojan Women, directed by the Syrian director Omar Abusaada, with an all-female cast of Syrian refugees - and the accompanying documentary Queens of Syria - was widely covered by the international media.[33] In 2014, the project and the Syrian cast also featured in a special skype Gala event at Georgetown University, hosted by Georgetown’s Laboratory for Global Performance and Politics[34] and at Columbia University, hosted by their Centre for Core Curriculum and their Global Mental Health program.[35]

Since 2013, the Trojan Women Project has continued this pattern of drama workshops in Jordan, Europe, and the UK, with performances combined with accompanying films. The Trojan Women Project and their films are now shown and studied at many US and UK universities, (including Oxford,[36] UCLA,[37] Edinburgh,[38] Yale[39] and Austen University, Texas) and have also featured in various academic articles.[40]

TWP other projects include the Jordan-based first ever Arabic adaption of the musical Oliver! (2015)[41] with a junior cast of Syrian refugees children, supported by Sir Cameron Mackintosh ,and Welcome to Zaatari/We Are All Refugees (2015), an English/Arabic radio drama, set in Zaatari camp, with a Syrian refugee cast, that was broadcast on BBC Radio 4[42] and BBC Arabic.[43][44] Their 2016 adaptation of The Trojan Women, also called Queens of Syria, directed by Zoe Lafferty and co-produced with the Young Vic and the theatrical charity Developing Artists,[45] toured the UK. It was extremely well-received, with four and five-star reviews, focussing on the courage of the cast.[46] Footage from Queens of Syria 2016 Young Vic/Developing Artists Theatrical Performance Film was included in the British Museum’s 2019 Troy: Myth and Reality exhibition.[47][48] The documentary of the tour, The World to Hear (2018),[49] directed by Charlotte Ginsborg and Anatole Sloan and produced by Eagar and Stirling, was screened at the Glasgow Film Festival[50] and the London International Documentary Festival[51] in 2017/18. They also ran Kaleidoscope, radio drama writing workshops for Syrian refugees in Aberdeen, Glasgow, and Heidelberg in 2016-17, backed by the UNHCR.[52][53]

In 2018-19 Eagar and Stirling ran drama workshops for Syrian refugees re-settled in Glasgow, backed by Glasgow City Council, which culminated in The Trojans, their third adaptation of Euripides’ Trojan Women, directed by Victoria Beesley, with a mixed-gender Syrian cast. The Trojans premiered at Platform Theatre in Glasgow in February 2019[54] and was given four star reviews.[55] The play then went to the Edinburgh Festival in August 2019 with the Pleasance EICC, playing to an audience of over 500 people,[56] again, with four-star reviews.[57]

In 2020, The Trojans were asked by the Scottish Government to be one of their key partners in the Edinburgh International Culture Summit.[58] During Covid, TWP ran Enscripted, a programme of regular zoom black comedy-drama groups, working with Syrian participants from all over the Middle East, Europe, and the UK.[59]

Academic reach

The films made as part of the reach of the Trojan Women Project are regularly screened with Q&A panels, at festivals and at US and UK universities, often studied as part of their syllabuses, on courses ranging from Drama and Diversity (UCLA[60]) to Classics (Oxford,[61] Cambridge,[62] Edinburgh,[63] Brown, Yale,[64] Austin Texas, etc) and Psychology (Columbia[65]). TWP's work has also been the subject of several academic articles eg.[66]

Books[67][edit]

In 2008, Eagar published The Girl in the Film, a novel set in Sarajevo during the war and post-war years.[68] She recently contributed a chapter to Contemporary Representations of Forced Migration in Europe, edited by Fiona Barclay and Beatrice Ivey of Stirling University (2024).[69]

  1. ^ "Charlotte Eagar". www.charlotteeagar.plus.com. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  2. ^ "Trojan Women Project | United Kingdom". TWP. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  3. ^ "Scooterman (Short 2010)". IMDb. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  4. ^ "Queens of Syria (2014)". IMDb. 30 October 2014. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  5. ^ Queens of Syria - IMDb, retrieved 6 July 2021
  6. ^ "Queens of Syria — Yasmin Fedda". yasminfedda.com. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  7. ^ "Trojan Women Project". Edinburgh International Culture Summit. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  8. ^ "Awards for journalism". The Independent. 22 October 2011. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  9. ^ Eager, Charlotte (22 March 2013). "'I made Diana's White House ballgown'". Financial Times. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  10. ^ "Bloomsbury Collections - Reporting the Siege of Sarajevo". www.bloomsburycollections.com. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  11. ^ Refugees, United Nations High Commissioner for. "Refworld | "A Dark and Closed Place": Past & Present H. R. Abuses in Foca". Refworld. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  12. ^ "Shadow Force: Private Security Contractors in Iraq". The SHAFR Guide Online. January 2009. doi:10.1163/2468-1733_shafr_sim260040030. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  13. ^ Eagar, Charlotte (25 February 2007). "Feminists in burkhas". Prospect Magazine. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  14. ^ Eagar, Charlotte. "The house of secrets and lies". The Times. ISSN 0140-0460. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  15. ^ Pitney, John J. Jr.; Levin, John-Clark (12 December 2013). Private Anti-Piracy Navies: How Warships for Hire are Changing Maritime Security. Lexington Books. ISBN 978-0-7391-7333-6.
  16. ^ Eagar, Charlotte. "The secret war to save Iraq's heritage from smugglers". The Times. ISSN 0140-0460. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  17. ^ Pitney, John J. Jr.; Levin, John-Clark (12 December 2013). Private Anti-Piracy Navies: How Warships for Hire are Changing Maritime Security. Lexington Books. ISBN 978-0-7391-7333-6.
  18. ^ "Charlotte Eagar". Newsweek. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  19. ^ "The Colonel's New Life". Granta. 16 February 2017. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  20. ^ "Scooterman (Short 2010)". IMDb. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  21. ^ Company, Cavendish Fante Picture (24 January 2012), Scooterman, retrieved 7 July 2021
  22. ^ Eagar, Charlotte. "Just one more push". The Times. ISSN 0140-0460. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  23. ^ "WATCH OUR FILMS". TWP. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  24. ^ "Jessica Mann - September 2008 Crime Round-up". Literary Review. Retrieved 7 July 2021.
  25. ^ Eagar, Charlotte. "Just one more push". The Times. ISSN 0140-0460. Retrieved 7 July 2021.
  26. ^ Times, The Sunday. "Scooterman: the film". The Times. ISSN 0140-0460. Retrieved 7 July 2021.
  27. ^ "Other Projects by William and Charlotte". TWP. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  28. ^ "Trojan Women Project | United Kingdom". TWP. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  29. ^ "Prospero World: Syria: The Trojan Women". prosperoworldcharity. Retrieved 7 July 2021.
  30. ^ "Queens of Syria (2014)". IMDb. 30 October 2014. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  31. ^ Queens of Syria - IMDb, retrieved 6 July 2021
  32. ^ "Queens of Syria — Yasmin Fedda". yasminfedda.com. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  33. ^ "BBC World Service - Outlook, Syrian Women Play Greek Tragedy". BBC. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  34. ^ Voices Unheard: The Syria: Trojan Women Summit—Washington, DC—Amman, Jordan—Sept 19, 2014, archived from the original on 15 December 2021, retrieved 6 July 2021
  35. ^ "Center for Core Curriculum co-sponsors Syria:Trojan Women event". Columbia College. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  36. ^ "Syria Trojan Women". www.torch.ox.ac.uk. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  37. ^ "Film Screening: Queens of Syria". Center for the Study of Women. 14 September 2017. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  38. ^ "'Queens of Syria': Screening". The University of Edinburgh. 20 February 2018. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  39. ^ "Paul Eberwine, BA/MA 2018, in Eidolon | Yale Department of Classics". classics.yale.edu. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  40. ^ Ziter, Edward Blaise (June 2017). "The Syria Trojan Women : Rethinking the public with therapeutic theater". Communication and the Public. 2 (2): 177–190. doi:10.1177/2057047317711956. ISSN 2057-0473. S2CID 134338839.
  41. ^ 'Oliver' with a twist: refugees take on classic - CNN Video, 7 September 2015, retrieved 6 July 2021
  42. ^ "BBC Radio 4 - 15 Minute Drama, Welcome to Zaatari - Available now". BBC. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  43. ^ EST, Charlotte Eagar On 12/07/14 at 2:05 PM (7 December 2014). "Days of Our Refugee Lives". Newsweek. Retrieved 6 July 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  44. ^ "Soap Opera Dramatizes Lives of Syrian Refugees | The Takeaway". WNYC Studios. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  45. ^ "Queens of Syria". Young Vic website. 4 July 2016. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  46. ^ Maxwell, Dominic. "Theatre: Queens of Syria, Young Vic, SE1". The Times. ISSN 0140-0460. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  47. ^ "Troy: Myth and Reality review – bearing gifts, without the horse". The Guardian. 24 November 2019. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  48. ^ "Troy: myth and reality". The British Museum. 21 November 2019. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  49. ^ "The World to Hear: Queens of Syria UK Theatre Tour (Short 2017)". IMDb. 26 November 2017. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  50. ^ Theatre, Glasgow Film (6 July 2021). "Scotland's original independent cinema is the". Glasgow Film Theatre. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  51. ^ The World to Hear, retrieved 6 July 2021
  52. ^ Refugees, United Nations High Commissioner for. "Syrian refugee drama project moves from stage to screen, and back". UNHCR. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  53. ^ "Syrian refugees share stories of exile thanks to UNHCR backed project". Times of Oman. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  54. ^ "The Trojans". Scottish Refugee Council. 30 January 2019. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  55. ^ "The Trojans". Edinburgh Festival. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  56. ^ "The Trojans". website. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  57. ^ "The Trojans | Review". The Wee Review | Scotland's arts and culture magazine. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  58. ^ "Trojan Women Project". Edinburgh International Culture Summit. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  59. ^ "'En-Scripted' - Black Comedy". TWP. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  60. ^ "Film Screening: Queens of Syria". Center for the Study of Women. 14 September 2017. Retrieved 7 July 2021.
  61. ^ "Syria Trojan Women". www.torch.ox.ac.uk. Retrieved 7 July 2021.
  62. ^ "Screening of Queens of Syria to take place at St Johns | StJohns". www.joh.cam.ac.uk. Retrieved 7 July 2021.
  63. ^ "'Queens of Syria': Screening". The University of Edinburgh. 20 February 2018. Retrieved 7 July 2021.
  64. ^ "Paul Eberwine, BA/MA 2018, in Eidolon | Yale Department of Classics". classics.yale.edu. Retrieved 7 July 2021.
  65. ^ "Center for Core Curriculum co-sponsors Syria:Trojan Women event". Columbia College. Retrieved 7 July 2021.
  66. ^ Ziter, Edward Blaise (June 2017). "The Syria Trojan Women : Rethinking the public with therapeutic theater". Communication and the Public. 2 (2): 177–190. doi:10.1177/2057047317711956. ISSN 2057-0473. S2CID 134338839.
  67. ^ Contemporary Representations of Forced Migration in Europe. doi:10.1007/978-3-031-47831-4.
  68. ^ Eagar, Charlotte (1 July 2008). The Girl in the Film. ASIN 0955830273.
  69. ^ Contemporary Representations of Forced Migration in Europe. doi:10.1007/978-3-031-47831-4.

References[edit]