Osment’s trilogy of ‘Devon Plays’ draw on his background growing up on a farm in North Devon and were produced in the mid-1990s by Cambridge Theatre Company (Method and Madness).
The Dearly Beloved (1993): ‘Local boy made good comes back to visit his mother in a small West Country town where his presence brings home to his friends who stayed put the various ways in which their lives have failed … you can’t but be reminded of Chekhov at times.’ Independent
What I Did in the Holidays (1995): ‘Osment’s wonderfully dense and detailed study of fraught life in rurally non-swinging Britain. The play charts a painfully funny path through the casual everyday cruelties inflicted by the thoughtless young and selfish old. Osment’s play is a delight.’ Evening Standard
Flesh and Blood (1996): ‘Brilliant at evoking the nostalgia of Devon country life in a strange, recidivist family … and in the elision between outdoor lust and indoor stuffiness.’ Observer