Felicity McCall

{{short description|Irish journalist, writer and broadcaster}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2025}}

{{BLP sources|date=June 2023}}

Felicity McCall is an Irish journalist, writer and broadcaster who began her career with two decades working for the BBC in Northern Ireland. She has over twenty published works include novels, non-fiction, plays, and anthologies.

Life

McCall worked for the BBC for twenty years and in around 2000 she settled down to being a full-time writer.{{Cite web|title=Felicity McCall|url=http://littleisland.ie/authors/felicity-mccall/|access-date=2021-12-10|website=Little Island|language=en-US}}

In 2006 she published a biography of Agnes Jones, the Irish nursing pioneer who was inspired by Florence Nightingale and reformed the Liverpool workhouses.{{Cite book|last=McCall|first=Felicity|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=vCGlMgAACAAJ|title=Agnes Jones|date=2006|publisher=Guildhall Press|isbn=978-0-946451-96-8|language=en}}

Her plays have been professionally produced in the UK, Ireland, the US, and Australasia; her awards include the UK National Lottery Award for Heritage 2011 for We Were Brothers; two Epic Ireland awards in 2013 for Every Bottle has a Story to Tell; two Meyer Whitworth nominations, for No Goodbyes (2008) and We Were Brothers (2010); and the Tyrone Guthrie Scriptwriting Award (2006–07). Much of her work is based on historical fact or social activism. Her screenplay credits include Agnes (Ambient Light/GSCA 2006), based on the life of the Irish nursing pioneer Agnes Jones, and Jam (Brassneck Productions).{{citation needed|date=November 2021}}

McCall is also a director and founding member of theatre groups Handful Productions and Postscript, and co-founded the Derry Writers' Group. She served on the Irish Executive of the National Union of Journalists.{{citation needed|date=June 2016}}

References

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