NEWSAR
Multi-perspective news intelligence
SRCThe Guardian - World News
LANGEN
LEANCenter-Left
WORDS597
ENT11
MON · 2026-06-15 · 11:00 GMTBRIEF NSR-2026-0615-84584
News/Savage, a play about Paul O’Grady’s rise to national treasur…
NSR-2026-0615-84584News Report·EN·Human Interest

Savage, a play about Paul O’Grady’s rise to national treasure, to premiere in February

A new play titled "Savage," inspired by the life of Paul O'Grady, will premiere in February at Curve Theatre Leicester before a West End run. The play, developed with support from O'Grady's widower, Andre Portasio, will chart his journey from care worker to his drag persona Lily Savage and eventual status as a national treasure.

Amelia HillThe Guardian - World NewsFiled 2026-06-15 · 11:00 GMTLean · Center-LeftRead · 3 min
Savage, a play about Paul O’Grady’s rise to national treasure, to premiere in February
The Guardian - World NewsFIG 01
Reading time
3min
Word count
597words
Sources cited
3cited
Entities identified
11entities
Quality score
100%
§ 01

Briefing Summary

AI-generated
NEWSAR · AI

A new play titled "Savage," inspired by the life of Paul O'Grady, will premiere in February at Curve Theatre Leicester before a West End run. The play, developed with support from O'Grady's widower, Andre Portasio, will chart his journey from care worker to his drag persona Lily Savage and eventual status as a national treasure. Danny Beard, winner of RuPaul's Drag Race UK, will portray O'Grady. Playwright Jonathan Harvey aims to showcase the era of drag Lily Savage represented and O'Grady's bravery during the Aids crisis. The script, which O'Grady approved before his death, draws heavily from his autobiographies and ends with Lily Savage's retirement in 2005.

Confidence 0.90Sources 3Claims 5Entities 11
§ 02

Article analysis

Model · rule-based
Framing
Human Interest
Social Justice
Tone
Measured
AI-assessed
CalmNeutralAlarmist
Factuality
0.60 / 1.00
Mixed
LowHigh
Sources cited
3
Well sourced
FewMany
§ 03

Key claims

5 extracted
01

Lily Savage's drag was described as 'the real deal: a singer, performer and comedian who could hold a room for an hour', contrasting with modern drag.

quoteDanny Beard
Confidence
1.00
02

Playwright Jonathan Harvey sent the first draft of the play to Paul O'Grady before his death, and O'Grady was 'really happy with it'.

quoteJonathan Harvey
Confidence
1.00
03

Danny Beard, winner of RuPaul's Drag Race UK, will play Paul O'Grady in the production.

factual
Confidence
1.00
04

The play charts Paul O'Grady's journey from care worker to Lily Savage, and then to a national treasure.

factual
Confidence
1.00
05

A new play titled 'Savage' will premiere in February at Curve Theatre Leicester, inspired by the life of Paul O'Grady.

factual
Confidence
1.00
§ 04

Full report

3 min read · 597 words
Few showbusiness careers begin in a towering blond beehive in the gay pubs of Vauxhall and end with MPs pausing prime minister’s questions to pay tribute.But a new play inspired by the life of Paul O’Grady will chart the beginning of that unlikely journey from care worker to Lily Savage, with her dextrous use of expletives, to national treasure presenting heartwarming teatime TV shows about rescue dogs with Queen Camilla.Developed with the support of O’Grady’s widower, Andre Portasio, Savage will receive its world premiere at Curve Theatre Leicester next February before a planned run in London’s West End.Danny Beard, a winner of RuPaul’s Drag Race UK, will play O’Grady. He said that telling his hero’s story “feels terrifying”.Paul O’Grady as Lily Savage in 2012. Photograph: Graham Whitby Boot/Allstar“Paul was uniquely loved across all different age ranges and communities. He really was a national treasure,” he said.Beard said the production offered younger audiences a chance to encounter a very different era of drag to the one they might know. “Today, drag has become Americanised,” he said. “It’s four minutes of lip-syncing, a polished look and a fantasy. But Lily Savage was the real deal: a singer, performer and comedian who could hold a room for an hour.”That, said the playwright Jonathan Harvey, whose credits include Beautiful Thing, Gimme Gimme Gimme and Closer To Heaven, was one reason he was keen to bring O’Grady’s story back to the stage. “I want the younger generation to see whose shoulders today’s drag queens are standing – or sitting – on,” he said.Savage explores the years before O’Grady became a fixture of mainstream British television, charting the years he performed through the Aids crisis, openly mocking police officers during raids on gay venues (including when they all wore rubber gloves in case of contagion). During one raid, O’Grady initially thought the police squad were strippers – a supposition he was swiftly disabused of when he was briefly arrested.The play also pays tribute to O’Grady’s bravery when, off stage, he regularly visited men dying of Aids-related illnesses in hospital, sharing cigarettes with them in solidarity before Aids was understood or effective treatments developed.Harvey said he was deeply grateful to have had something few writers of posthumous dramas enjoyed: the chance to hear what his subject thought of the script.“I sent Paul the first draft of the play just a few months before he died and he was really happy with it,” he said.“Why wouldn’t he be?” he added, with a guffaw. “There’s hardly a line of dialogue in the play that isn’t taken from one of Paul’s autobiographies.“Paul really liked the sound of his own voice – his first autobiography is quite long and ends when he’s just turning 17. As a result, I had this embarrassment of riches to work with, which made writing an absolute joy,” he said.After O’Grady died, Harvey put the play away for a couple of months. “This work that had been celebratory had taken on a much sadder note,” he said. “When I brought it back out, it was still a joy, but it was now about honouring someone dearly loved, who had left us.”The play ends with O’Grady retiring Savage in 2005, claiming she had swapped her favourite tipple of Blue Nun for life in a French convent.Yet, as Harvey’s script hints, the character’s disappearance would do little to slow the performer’s ascent: by the time of his death, aged 67, O’Grady was one of the country’s most recognisable broadcasters, working not just on this play but preparing to record a new programme for Boom Radio.
§ 05

Entities

11 identified
§ 06

Keywords & salience

10 terms
paul o'grady
1.00
lily savage
0.90
drag queen
0.80
theatre play
0.70
national treasure
0.70
aids crisis
0.60
showbusiness career
0.50
west end
0.40
danny beard
0.40
jonathan harvey
0.40
§ 07

Topic connections

Interactive graph
No topic relationship data available yet. This graph will appear once topic relationships have been computed.