In The Press

BBC Radio London – Bobby Friction, Harjap Bhangal, Tanika Gupta and Chef Rajen Patel, Tanika Gupta: Hedda – September 2025

Tanika Gupta speaks to Bobby about her latest production, Hedda which opens in October at the Orange Tree Theatre in Richmond and runs until the 22nd November 2025.


‘If audiences are crying, I’ve done my job’: closing the stories of a generation of British south Asians | The Guardian – October 2024

Actors Meera Syal and Shobna Gulati, with playwright Tanika Gupta, explain how their National Theatre production springs from the anguish of losing their mothers


First Person: playwright Tanika Gupta on being back in the rehearsal room once more – June 2021

‘There is a lot of talk about de-colonising the curriculum, but we also need to de-colonise our theatres to make British theatre relevant’ – Tanika Gupta.


Playwright Tanika Gupta on her new drama about young Gandhi in London

“Gupta’s 25-year career has been remarkably wide-ranging: comedies have rubbed shoulders with historical dramas; stage plays have sat alongside scripts for television, radio and film. In person, she is warm and wittily self-deprecating; on the page she has a gift for making tough subjects accessible” – Sarah Hemming.


Arts Industry PROFILE: Making the difference – April 2021

‘Tanika Gupta is not just the leading British Asian playwright, multi-award-winning with more than 20 plays performed in her 25-year career. Nor is she merely a leading British woman playwright, though she is that too. What she almost certainly is, is our most versatile writer for stage, screen and radio’


Portrait of the artist: Tanika Gupta, playwright – The Guardian – Feb 2011

‘I was once called “the Asian woman Bengali writer.” I thought, why not just call me a writer?’


No more excuses for male bias, say top playwrights including Timberlake Wertenbaker and Tanika Gupta – The Stage – 2018

‘Leading playwrights including Timberlake Wertenbaker, Charlotte Jones and Tanika Gupta are demanding theatre makes bigger strides to address the under-representation of female writers.’


Tanika Gupta: ‘My great uncle’s remarkable story made me want to write’ – Whats On Stage – August 2017

‘Ultimately the play is about Gandhi’s civil disobedience versus violent insurrection and how each couldn’t have succeeded without the other.’


The Observer guide to the best autumn culture – Sept 2019

‘A new version of A Doll’s House, written by Tanika Gupta – who moves the action to Calcutta and invites us to look at the play’s gender politics through the lens of British colonialism.’