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Come home with the Walkers in the unforgettable third season of Brothers And Sisters. Television’s most captivating family is back with more secrets and surprises than ever before. It’s a new year full of exciting developments. Robert and Kitty dream of parenthood, and the future of Ojai Foods hangs by a thread. Witness every business (and social) affair of the Walker and the Harper families in Season Three, complete with never-before-seen bonus features available only on DVD.
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Twin Dragons (Hardcover)
Eric Baitz; Illustrated by Mary Jane Clayton
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R617
Discovery Miles 6 170
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Full Length, Drama Characters: 3 male, 2 female 2 Interior Sets
Isaac Geldhart, the imperious scion of a family owned publishing
house, is under siege. A takeover is being engineered by his son
Aaron, who sees the firm's profitability steadily declining and
wants to publish a trashy novel to bring in the bucks. Isaac plans
to go on publishing scholarly works such as a multi volume history
of Nazi medical experiments. Aaron has the necessary yen from
Japanese backers but he needs the votes of his brother and sister.
Reluctantly, they side against the old man. The second act takes
place in the library of Isaac's townhouse a few years after his
forced retirement. He has become so irascible and eccentric that
his children have asked the court to judge his competence. Isaac,
who survived the Holocaust and transcended the death of his wife to
build an important publishing company from scratch, faces his
greatest challenge: persuading the psychiatric social worker that
he is sane. "A deeply compassionate play." N.Y. Times "A remarkably
intelligent drama." N.Y. Newsday.
This book offers an interdisciplinary conversation on utopia
clustered around cultural and communication practises in terms of
political and ethical projects. It sheds light on cultural and
discursive aspects characterising the polysemous concept of utopia
conceived as an ongoing process that is put into practice in the
present. Against this backdrop, the book raises questions for
intellectual work, seeks out an enlightening breach in academic
field boundaries, invites a revision of the forms of knowledge
production, and encourages pedagogical actions for the development
of critical thinking.
Jon Robin Baitz has been praised as one of America's foremost
playwrights on themes of conscience. Now from the author of The
Substance of Fire comes an absorbing new play about power and money
and the ruinous effects it can have on friendship, love, marriage,
and ultimately oneself. In this modern tragedy set in urban New
York City, Wall Street powerhouse Sandy Sonenberg finds his
personal and professional life threatened by the unraveling secrets
of his past. After burying his true sexual identity, a lethal
affair with a young male associate forces Sonenberg to confront a
lifetime of unrequited love and betrayal.
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Hedda Gabler (Paperback, 1st ed)
Henrik Ibsen; Adapted by Jon Robin Baitz; Foreword by Susan Faludi
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R346
R318
Discovery Miles 3 180
Save R28 (8%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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In 1890, Henrik Ibsen premiered Hedda Gabler, a play questioning
the role of women in Victorian society. Some audiences have viewed
Gabler as a woman driven to desperation simply because her world
has turned out to be less charmed than she hoped. For others, she
is a victim of her times, unwilling to devote herself, as was
expected of her, to the duties of home.
Jon Robin Baitz has brushed away the cobwebs, and he serves as
an ambassador from Ibsen's age to our own, preserving the intensity
of the original but translating it into a spare, contemporary
idiom. His adaptation provides an opportunity to understand the
play through a lens shaped by feminism and a theatrical tradition
beginning with Beckett. Trapped by the conventions of her age,
Gabler is both a martyr and a female incarnation of Vladimir and
Estragon, longing for a salvation that will likely never
arrive.
Kenneth Lonergan is known for his trademark humor and genius for
capturing the real heart and soul of human interactions. Time
magazine raved that he is among our most gifted, unflinching and
unpretentious new playwrights, and called his first play, This Is
Our Youth, one of the ten best plays of 1998. With The Waverly
Gallery, Lonergan has once again shown himself to have one of the
keenest ears of any working playwright (Ben Brantley, The New York
Times). A powerfully poignant and often hilarious play, The Waverly
Gallery is about the final years of a generous, chatty, and feisty
grandmother's final battle against Alzheimer's disease. Gladys is
an old school lefty and social activist and longtime owner of a
small art gallery in Greenwich Village. The play explores her fight
to retain her independence and the subsequent effect of her decline
on her family, especially her grandson. More than a memory play,
The Waverly Gallery captures the humor and strength of a family in
the face of crisis. You will be awed by Lonergan's writing. --
Christopher Isherwood, Variety; [Lonergan] has written a loving but
brutal, commercial yet unflinching American family drama that knows
about the simultaneous human systems of entertainment and agony. As
anyone who cares about aging loved ones already knows, life on that
particular edge is often so real you have to laugh. . . he is
dead-on about family in all its simultaneous affection and
irritation. -- Linda Winer, Newsday; A stirring and soulful, comic
drama ... classically so, a la Glass Menagerie ... Waverly is often
deeply funny. It is both painful and hilarious. -- Ben Brantley,
The New York Times
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Bait (CD)
Bait
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R341
Discovery Miles 3 410
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Twin Dragons (Paperback)
Eric Baitz; Illustrated by Mary Jane Clayton
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R429
Discovery Miles 4 290
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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In OTHER DESERT CITIES, Brooke Wyeth returns home to Palm Springs
to visit her parents after a six-year absence. A once-promising
novelist, she announces to her family the imminent publication of a
memoir dredging up a pivotal and tragic event in the family's
history - a wound that her parents don't want reopened. Brooke has
come home to draw a line in the sand and is daring her family to
cross it. Her brother won't play her game; her aunt knows way too
much, and her parents fall into all their old routines as they
plead with her to keep their story quiet. In this family, secrets
are currency and everyone is rich. In simplest terms, the play is
about a girl who comes home to the desert with a story about where
she is from, who her people really are, what she thinks they really
are. Her parents represent an Establishment that she feels has
betrayed this country. She goes to war with them, and blood is
spilled.
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