Nell Leyshon is a British playwright and novelist.
Nell Leyshon was born and grew up in Somerset, and spent half of her childhood in Glastonbury, and the other half in a small farming village on the edge of the Somerset Levels. She had a mixed education, and ended up attending art college for a year before moving to London. A first career culminated in working as a Production Assistant then Producer in TV commercials for directors including Ridley and Tony Scott, which she gave up to spend a year in Spain.
She attended the University of Southampton as a mature student, and, after graduating, decided to focus on started writing. Her first novel, Black Dirt, was published by Picador in May 2004 and was long-listed for the Orange Prize and runner up for the Commonwealth Prize. Find herself struggling with prose, she secured a commission from BBC Radio 4 to write a play, Milk, which went on to win the Richard Imison Award for best first radio play. Her second drama was runner up for the Meyer Whitworth Award.
Since then, she has she alternated between prose, stage drama and radio.
Her third novel, The Colour of Milk, was published by Penguin in May 2012. It was honoured in translation, winning the Prix Interallié in France where it was also shortlisted for the Prix Femina, and being voted the book of the year in Spain. Her most recent novel, Memoirs of a Dipper was published in 2015.
Her second play, Comfort me with Apples, won an Evening Standard Theatre Award for most promising playwright, and was nominated for an Laurence Olivier Award. She later adapted Daphne du Maurier's Don’t Look Now for the Lyceum, Sheffield which later transferred to the Lyric, Hammersmith. Her play Bedlam was the first written by a woman to be performed at Shakespeare’s Globe. She has also written plays for the Theatre Royal, Plymouth, and RADA.