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Books > Language & Literature > Literature: texts > Drama texts, plays > From 1900 > General
(Applause Books). The complete scripts to two of Larry Gelbart's
most popular and powerful political satires. Review of Mastergate:
"If George Orwell were a gag writer, he could have written
Mastergate. Larry Gelbart's scathingly funny takeoff on the
Iran-Contra hearings is a spiky cactus flower in the desert of
American political theatre." Jack Kroll, Newsweek . Review of Power
Failure: "There is in his broad etching all the ethical outrage of
an Arthur Miller kvetching. And, oh, so much more fun " Carolyn
Clay, The Boston Phoenix .
All the farces of Russia's greatest dramatist are rendered here in
the classic lively translations which audiences and scholars alike
applaud on the stage and in the classroom. The blustering,
stuttering eloquence of Chekhov's unlikely heroes has endured to
shape the voice of contemporary theatre. This volume presents seven
minor masterpieces: Harmfulness of Tobacco, Swan Song, The Brute,
Marriage Proposal, Summer in the Country, A Wedding, The
Celebration.
This anthology gathers together recent work by the finest and most
controversial contemporary American women dramatists. Collectively,
this magnificent seven seeks to break the mold of the well-wrought
psychological play and its rigid emphasis on
realisticsocio-political drama. Includes: Occupational Hazard
(Rosalyn Drexler) * Us (Karen Malpede) * What of the Night? (Maria
Irene Forne) * Birth and After Birth (Tina Howe) * and more.
Have You Seen Zandile? is a wonderful South African resource, still
as fresh and absorbing as when it was first written. Perfectly
scripted, and with Gcina Mhlophe's sure instinct for stagecraft, it
recounts the very personal story of Zandile, who is snatched away
from her grandmother's loving care and taken to live with her
matriarchal family in rural Transkei. Moving, funny and convincing,
full of Zandile's shrewd, youthful insights, the play offers an
illuminating window into the 1960s world that it depicts, with its
issues of white dominance, rural hardship and black female
repression. Have You Seen Zandile? is already an established
favorite in performance circles, and is fast becoming a South
African classic.
A group of resourceful kids start "solution-seekers.com," a website
where "cybervisitors" can get answers to questions that trouble
them. But when one questioner asks the true meaning of Christmas,
the kids seek to unravel the mystery by journeying back through the
prophecies of the Old Testament. What they find is a series of "S"
words that reveal a "spectacular story " With creative characters,
humorous dialogue and great music, The "S" Files is a children's
Christmas musical your kids will love performing.
Collects for the first time major lesbian plays from controversial
cultural perspectives spanning more than a generation of work in
varied theatrical styles representing an amazing gamut of lesbian
politics from all over America. Includes: The Quintessential Image
(Jane Chambers) * The Postcard (Gloria Joyce Dickler) * A Lady and
a Woman (Shirlene Holmes) * Nasty Rumors and Final Remarks (Susan
Miller) * Desdemona (Paula Vogel) * and more!
If history is told by the victors, the story of war is usually told
by the blokes. Now it's the 'sheilas' turn. Nearly a thousand
Australian women had a part in the Vietnam War as entertainers,
typists, consular staff and army nurses. Their experiences were
extraordinary and they have now been brought to life in this
collage of true stories. The one thing these women have in common
is that their lives were changed forever by Vietnam. And for many
of them it was the most vital and alive they had ever felt. These
are the voices of those who were actually there; ordinary woman
revealing how they survived a war and discovered what they believed
in.
Two very different women meet during a long wait to buy subsidized
rice and discover they have more in common than their poverty; an
old man and a child share a last loving waltz; a cynical, disabled
gangster learns humanity from a committed social worker, and a
young girl finds her missing father and her role in the political
struggle. This collection of stage plays, one radio play and a
cinepoem, captures the essence of Zakes Mda’s method as a
dramatist- a slow but intimate process of revelation (on the part
of the characters). It is an artistic cooperation of the most
pleasurable kind.
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Sophiatown
(Paperback)
Junction Avenue Theatre Company
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R180
R141
Discovery Miles 1 410
Save R39 (22%)
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Ships in 5 - 10 working days
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Sophiatown was the ‘Chicago of South Africa’, a vibrant
community that produced not only gangsters and shebeen queens but
leading journalists, writers, musicians and politicians, and gave
urban African culture its rhythm and style. This play, based on the
life history of Sophiatown, opened at the Market Theatre in
Johannesburg in February 1986 to great acclaim. The play won the AA
Life Vita Award for Playwright of the Year 1985/86. This new
edition of the play includes an introduction which sets the work in
its historical context.
"The Coast of Utopia", which can be enjoyed as a whole or as three
separate plays, follows a group of young intellectuals from the
country houses and cafes of the 1830s, through the European
revolutions of 1848-9, to exile in London in the 1850s. The trilogy
as a whole tells an epic story of romantics and revolutionaries
caught up in the struggle for political freedom in an age of
emperors.
In this, the first anthology to focus exclusively on the lives of
black South African women, the work of both emerging playwrights
and national and international award-winners are represented. Plays
by Maishe Maponya appear alongside the work of notable emerging
writers, including Lueen Conning, Ismail Mahommed, Thulani Mtshali,
Muthal Naidoo and Magi Williams. The collection consists of six
full-length and four one-act plays as well as editorial
introductions, interviews with the playwrights, photographers,
artistic statements and production histories. Written during and
after the apartheid era, the plays present a variety of approaches
and theatrical styles, from solo performances to collective
creations. An array of women's and men's voices are represented,
dramatising diverse issues such as women's rights, racial identity,
displacement from home, the struggle to keep families together,
violence against women and education in the old and new South
Africa.
Lorca's Blood Wedding is a classic of twentieth-century theatre. The story is based on a newspaper fragment which told of a family vendetta and a bride who ran away with the son of the enemy family. Lorca uses it to investigate the subjects which fascinated him: desire, repression, ritual, and the constraints and commitments of the rural Spanish community in which the play is rooted. Ted Hughes's version stays close in spirit and letter to the original Spanish. With marvellous directness, he fuses Lorca's vision to his own, and the result is a powerful poetic text which captures all the violence and pathos of the play for an English-speaking audience.
'This remarkable play is about a nightmare all women must have
dreamed at some time, and most men...' Ronald Bryden, Observer
(1967) 'Joe Egg is unlike any play I've seen; concerns about
whether it's dated fade next to the claims that can now be made for
it. It's in the collisions between pious and rogue thoughts that
the play's energy lies. We don't know what to feel. Which is why,
once seen, Joe Egg won't go away.' Robert Butler, Independent on
Sunday (1993)
Klima, a celebrated jazz trumpeter, receives a phone call
announcing that a young nurse with whom he spent a brief night at a
fertility spa is pregnant. She has decided he is the father. And so
begins a comedy which, during five madcap days, unfolds with
ever-increasing speed. Klima's beautiful, jealous wife, the nurse's
equally jealous boyfriend, a fanatical gynaecologist, a rich
American, at once Don Juan and saint, and an elderly political
prisoner who, just before his emigration, is holding a farewell
party at the spa are all drawn into this black comedy, as in A
Midsummer Night's Dream. As usual, Milan Kundera poses serious
questions with a blasphemous lightness which makes us understand
that the modern world has taken away our right to tragedy.
From novelist and screenwriter Roddy Doyle come these two colorful plays. both set in the North Dublin suburb of Barrytown. In Brownbread, three young men kidnap a bishop but soon come to realize--when the U.S. Marines invade--that their brilliant adventure is nothing more than a colossal mistake. War is set at the Hiker's Rest, a pub where two trivia addicts meet every month to answer questions posed by Denis trhe quizmaster who hates wrong answers and shoots to kill. These earthy, exuberant works show why The New York Times Book Review says Doyle's "versatility and brio...may shock the neighbors, but...you can't take your eyes off him."
Often called the most autobiographical of Arthur Miller's plays, After the Fall probes deeply into the psyche of Quentin, a man who ruthlessly revisits his past to explain the catastrophe that is his life. His journey backward takes him through a troubled upbringing, the bitter death of his mother, and a series of failed relationships.
J. M. Synge was one of the key dramatists in the flourishing world of Irish literature at the turn of the century. This volume offers all of Synge's published plays, which range from racy comedy to stark tragedy, all sharing a memorable lyricism. The introduction to this new, definitive edition of Synge's plays sets them--and his other work--in the context of the Irish literary movement, with special attention to his role as one of the founders of the Abbey Theatre and his work alongside W. B. Yeats and Lady Gregory. Under the General Editorship of Michael Cordner of the University of York, the texts of the plays have been newly edited and are presented with a scholarly introduction and detailed annotation. Riders to the Sea; The Shadow of the Glen; The Tinker's Wedding; The Well of the Saints; The Playboy of the Western World; Deirdre of the Sorrows;This book is intended for students of Irish Literature (especially drama).
Mark and Stevie's relaxing Saturday afternoon grinds to a halt when
two door-to-door salesmen make their way into the house with a
sales pitch that becomes increasingly relentless as the day
progresses.
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