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Jez Butterworth Plays: One (Paperback)
Loot Price: R453
Discovery Miles 4 530
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Jez Butterworth Plays: One (Paperback)
Series: NHB Collected Works
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Loot Price R453
Discovery Miles 4 530
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Four full-length plays and two previously unpublished shorts from
the multi-award-winning author of Jerusalem. Jez Butterworth burst
onto the theatre scene aged twenty-five with Mojo, 'one of the most
dazzling Royal Court main stage debuts in years' (Time Out). This
first volume of his Collected Plays contains that play plus the
three that followed, as well as two short one-person pieces
published here for the first time - everything in fact that
precedes Jerusalem, 'unarguably one of the best dramas of the
twenty-first century' (Guardian). Plays One includes: Mojo, staged
in 1995 but set in the Soho clubland of 1958, 'superbly captures
the atmosphere of the infant British rock and roll scene where
seedy low-lifers hustle for the big time' (Daily Telegraph). It is
'Beckett on speed' (Observer) by a 'dramatist of obvious talent and
terrific promise' (The Times). The Night Heron (2002) is set in the
Cambridgeshire Fens amongst assorted oddballs, birdwatchers and the
local constabulary. 'It's funny, it's sad, it's haunting and it
also strangely beautiful. Above all, it is quite unlike anything
you've ever seen before' (Daily Telegraph). In The Winterling
(2006) a gangland fugitive is visited by two associates from the
city who have other things on their mind than a jolly reunion. 'The
dialogue is testosterone taut, a sense of menace invades every
conversation... and as tales of torture and treachery unfold, the
black comedy never misses' (Time Out). Leavings (previously
unpublished), a short monologue about an old man whose dog has gone
missing. The housing estate in Parlour Song (2008) is 'a place of
illicit desire and painful memories, of bad dreams and mysterious
disappearances... a play that combines the comic, the erotic and
the downright disconcerting with superb panache' (Daily Telegraph).
The Naked Eye (previously unpublished), a short monologue about a
family preparing to watch Halley's Comet as it passes through the
night sky. Introducing the plays is an interview with Jez
Butterworth specially conducted for this volume.
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