City Sugar is a stage play by Stephen Poliakoff. Originally staged at the Bush Theatre in 1975 and directed by Hugh Thomas, City Sugar’s cast was led by John Shrapnel as Leonard Brazil and supported by Leon Vitali and Lynne Miller. In 1976 the play then transferred to the Comedy Theatre with Adam Faith taking over as Leonard Brazil and James Aubrey as Rex. City Sugar, along with its companion piece Hitting Town, won Poliakoff the Evening Standard's Most Promising Playwright Award in 1976.
The play was widely performed in regional cities all over Britain, was presented at the Phoenix Theatre in New York City with Jeff Goldblum in the lead role and was made into a successful ITV television play.
City Sugar follows the story of the young waitress, Nicola, whom the audience first encountered in Poliakoff’s Hitting Town.
The story charts a week in the life of a DJ, Leonard Brazil, as he launches what he calls the competition of the century aimed directly at a youth audience. It is a promotional campaign designed to whip up excitement amongst the station's audience in preparation for a super-group's visit to the city. As Leonard runs the competition, he is tormented by self-loathing and takes out his anger on those around him. He singles out, Nicola Davies, one of his listeners and engineers that she comes in to the studio where he purposefully humiliates her.
The TV production was made with Scottish TV and Film Enterprises for ITV. In the television version Nicola Davies is played by Veronica Quilligan and Tim Curry plays the DJ Leonard Brazil. It was shot on film on location in Glasgow.