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WWI Women's Football: Sheffield's Unsung Heroes
7 Mar
Summary
- Play chronicles female munitions workers during WWI.
- Dynamic ensemble cast captures the spirit of early female footballers.
- Story highlights women's fight for recognition on and off the field.

The Ladies Football Club, a play by Stefano Massini adapted by Tim Firth, explores the burgeoning interest in women's football during World War I. Set in Sheffield, it follows munitions workers who found a passion for the game while men were away fighting. The production features an 11-strong ensemble whose energetic movement direction evokes the spirit of football.
The narrative, however, can feel fragmented, with rapid shifts between scenes and characters sometimes reduced to single traits. Despite these storytelling fumbles, the play powerfully connects the defiance of these early female footballers to the success of the modern Lionesses.
This fictionalized account highlights how women claimed space on the factory floor and the football field, only to be excluded after the war's conclusion. The play ultimately stirs when it draws a line from past struggles to present-day triumphs.




