|
Showing 1 - 8 of
8 matches in All Departments
Jane's trapped in her middle school computer lab playing "The
Oregon Trail" for what feels like hours. The game becomes life and
rips us back to the trail, 1848, where we travel in a covered wagon
with Jane's great-great-grandmother. As Game moves us, back,
forward, and back again, Now-Jane and Then-Jane's sadnesses are
delicately juxtaposed in this play-meets-video-game about
depression, Then and Now.
Della makes cakes, not judgment calls - those she leaves to her
husband, Tim. But when the girl she helped raise comes back home to
North Carolina to get married, and the fiance is actually a
fiancee, Della's life gets turned upside down. She can't really
make a cake for such a wedding, can she? For the first time in her
life, Della has to think for herself.
Is there a heaven? Joe says no; it's all a bunch of hokum. His
wife, Roberta, has always claimed to agree. But lately she's
beginning to wonder, especially when they find themselves in church
a lot, having reached the age when funerals are more frequent than
weddings. Their granddaughter, Ellie, doesn't have time in her own
busy life to ponder the afterlife. But when mortality confronts
them, her grandmother's claim to have gone to heaven and back
doesn't sound s
Characters: 2 male, 2 female Interior Young wife Melody has never
been to a funeral - until her husband dies in a plane crash.
Expected to instantly assume proper widowhood, Melody is left to
wonder, what's the right way to grieve? Fortunately, her
mother-in-law is a professional. Widow, that is. Under her
guidance, Melody must try her best to be a good little widow. A sad
comedy about loss and longing. "Delicately satisfying... Ms.
Brunstetter] writes fresh, unfussy dialogue and characters who earn
their laughs and emotional moments by honest means." -The New York
Times "Bekah Brunstetter's powerful new play marries the humor and
sadness of grief. Brunstetter's words pierce the soul, and she
makes the depths of the human experience profoundly relatable...Her
multidimensional characters' pain radiated through my veins, and at
the end, I just wanted to feel it all over again. Critic's Pick." -
Backstage
Dramatic Comedy / Characters: 4m, 3f / Interior Set Bekah
Brunstetter makes her Off Broadway debut in September 2009 at the
Atlantic Theatre Company! Ron is back from his third and final tour
in Iraq, and his wife Sara is excited to restart their life
together in their new home. When a young marine visits the family,
life is turned upside down. Sara's sister is swept off her feet;
her daughter Lacey trades her dresses for combat boots, and Ron
gets hungry for real military action. In this disarmingly funny and
candid drama, Bekah Brunstetter raises challenging questions about
what it means when the military is woven into the fabric of a
family, and service is far more than just a job. "The young
scribe's talent and potential are obvious in this Southern-basted
dramatic comedy about the war mystique as it plays out on the
American home front..." - Variety "...Poignancy and terrific humor
in both the writing and performances..." - Theatremania.com "If
there's anything that stands out about Oohrah! at the Atlantic
Theater Company's Stage II, it's the off-Broadway introduction of
playwright Bekah Brunstetter, whose play is a fascinating, original
take on something we've come to see rather often nowadays: the war
play. ..Let's hope we hear her voice uptown again real soon." -
nytheatre.com "The play skillfully depicts how the demands of
military service affect an individual family and society as a
whole. Brunstetter's people are real and funny. She never
condescends to them or treats them as symbols to put a point
across...A big hurrah for Oohrah! - Back Stage "There have been
plenty of plays about the Iraq War on New York stages in the past
several years but few that deal as directly with the viewpoints of
military families as Oohrah!...Bekah Brunstetter makes an
impressively smart debut (no one could argue that she doesn't have
dramatic chops)" - MusicOMH
One of Manhattan's most established play festivals, the Samuel
French Off-Off Broadway Short Play Festival fosters the work of
young writers, giving them the exposure of publication and
representation. The festival resulting in this collection was held
July 15th-20th, 2008 at the Peter Jay Sharp Theatre on 42nd Street
in New York City. From the initial submission pool, approximately
50 plays were chosen to be performed over a period of one week. A
panel of judges comprised of New York area theater professionals,
critics, and educators nominated one or more of each evening's
plays as finalists. The final round was then held on the last day
of the Festival. Out of these plays, six winners listed below were
chosen by Samuel French, Inc. to receive publication and licensing
contracts. Contents: F*cking Art Ayravana Flies or A Pretty Dish
The Thread Men The Dying Breed The Grave Juniper; Jubilee
Diane, Georgia, and Joanne are three modern women living very
different lives. Unbeknownst to them, they are all pining after the
same young man, Trevor: sexy, stoned, oblivious; a surfer on a rad,
rad philosophical journey.
|
Choices (Paperback)
Ivan Magrin-Chagnolleau; Ivan Magrin-Chagnolleau, Bekah Brunstetter
|
R452
Discovery Miles 4 520
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
|
You may like...
Ab Wheel
R209
R149
Discovery Miles 1 490
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
|