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'Three options, as I see it - they'll kill it off entirely, you'll
let it die of natural causes, I'm going to make it live again.'
When the owner of a Sheffield scissor manufacturer dies, the future
of the factory site falls into uncertainty. Can it be reborn as a
fashionable music venue, converted into luxury apartments, or
somehow reinvigorated so the old business can survive? There's more
than just money or bricks and mortar at stake. It's about knowing
where you fit in the world - knowing that somewhere there's still a
place for you. Fresh, funny and heartfelt, Rock / Paper / Scissors
are three intricately interwoven plays by Chris Bush about family,
heritage and legacy. They were first performed simultaneously with
the same cast moving between three theatres in Sheffield - the
Crucible, the Lyceum and the Studio - as part of Sheffield
Theatres' fiftieth birthday celebrations in 2022. While the three
plays can be enjoyed separately, they also offer a uniquely
rewarding opportunity for any company looking to take on the
challenge of staging them together.
Award winning playwright Chris Bush reimagines the Faust myth to
explore what we must sacrifice to achieve greatness, and the legacy
that we leave behind. Faustus: That Damned Woman is a radical new
work in which the iconic character of Faustus becomes a woman who
makes the ultimate sacrifice in order to traverse centuries and
change the course of history. It is premiered at the Lyric
Hammersmith Theatre in January 2020, in a co production with
Headlong and Birmingham Repertory Theatre, prior to a UK tour. An
epic, ambitious, gothic, baroque fever dream of a piece that takes
a well known classic and inverts it to say something truthful about
the contemporary female experience.
'We stand on the edge On the threshold of On the entrance to
Stepping out from On the cusp...' Set in and around a swimming
pool, Chris Bush's play The Changing Room follows a group of
teenagers full of excitement, impatience and uncertainty. They know
change is coming, but not what it'll look like. Written
specifically for young people, The Changing Room was part of the
2018 National Theatre Connections Festival and was premiered by
youth theatres across the UK. It offers opportunities for a large,
flexible cast of any size or mix of genders, and incorporates
chorus work and music. No swimming pool required. This edition of
The Changing Room includes the words and music to Chris Bush's
original songs, arranged by Matt Winkworth.
'We'll tell the same old stories, all over again. And we won't
complain. Because it's Christmas.' It's Christmas Day, sort of, and
Alice, Mike and Tess - three generations of the one family - are
busy preparing a feast, singing songs, spinning yarns and
squabbling about snacks... like only a close family can. But
someone is missing from the table. Telling their stories in turns,
and breaking off for the odd musical interlude, the family pass the
time waiting for Tess's mum to arrive. As they do, we see a picture
of how one family forms its traditions - and how those traditions
matter most when there are problems on the horizon. The Last Noel
by Chris Bush is a funny, moving, uplifting play with original
songs. An innovative festive drama, it captures the unique bonds of
family and how coming together to share stories and a meal can be a
modern Christmas miracle. It was first produced in 2019 by Attic
Theatre Company and Arts at the Old Fire Station on a tour of
venues around London, before a Christmas run at the Old Fire
Station in Oxford.
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Steel (Paperback)
Chris Bush
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'I am the Labour Party candidate. Now ask me why.' 'Why?' 'Because
I am the best damn person for the job.' The top candidate without
question, Vanessa was made to be Mayor. Thirty years prior, Josie
just wants things to change and seeks a seat on the local council.
Chris Bush's play Steel explores the last three decades of women in
politics, asking what's changed and what still must. The play
premiered at Sheffield Theatres Studio in September 2018.
'I must have action! And if I cannot find it, I will make it.' Jane
Eyre may be poor, obscure, plain and little, but she has heart and
soul - and plenty of it. Chris Bush's witty and fleet-footed
adaptation lays bare the beating heart of Charlotte Bronte's
classic novel, whilst staying true to its revolutionary spirit.
With actor-musicians, playful doubling, and a plethora of
nineteenth-century pop hits, it was first produced at the Stephen
Joseph Theatre, Scarborough, and the New Vic Theatre,
Newcastle-under-Lyme, in 2022, directed by Zoe Waterman. 'One of
the UK's most exciting young playwrights' The Stage 'A writer of
great wit and empathy' The Times
'I'd watch you eat. I'd eat you up. Look at you. You get it, don't
you? You're real.' Lori is a professional chef. Bex waits on tables
to make ends meet. One night together in a walk-in fridge and it's
the beginning of something beautiful. Lori has big plans, while Bex
is struggling. If we are what we eat, then Bex is in real trouble.
It's not her fault - the system is rigged. No one on minimum wage
and zero hours has the headspace to make their own yoghurt. Chris
Bush's Hungry is a play about food, love, class and grief in a
world where there's little left to savour. It was premiered in July
2021 in Paines Plough's the Roundabout, directed by Katie Posner,
as a co-production between Paines Plough and Belgrade Theatre as
part of Coventry City of Culture 2021, before touring the UK. 'One
of the UK's most exciting young playwrights' The Stage 'A writer of
great wit and empathy' The Times
National Theatre Connections is an annual festival which brings new
plays for young people to schools and youth theatres across the UK
and Ireland. Commissioning exciting work from leading playwrights,
the festival exposes actors aged 13-19 to the world of professional
theatre-making, giving them full control of a theatrical production
- from costume and set design to stage management and marketing
campaigns. NT Connections have published over 150 original plays
and regularly works with 500 theatre companies and 10,000 young
people each year. This anthology brings together 9 new plays by
some of the UK's most prolific and current writers and artists
alongside notes on each of the texts exploring performance for
schools and youth groups. Wind / Rush Generation(s) by Mojisola
Adebayo This is a play about the British Isles, its past and its
present. Set in a senior common room, in a prominent university, a
group of 1st year undergraduates are troubled, not by the weight of
their workload, but by a 'noisy' ghost. So they do what any group
self-respecting and intelligent university students would do in
such a situation - they get out the Ouija Board to confront their
spiritual irritant and lay them to rest - only to be confronted by
the full weight of Britain's colonial past - in all its gory glory.
Fusing naturalism, with physical theatre, spoken-word, absurdism,
poetry and direct address - this is event-theatre that whips along
with the grace, pace and hypnotic magnetism of a hurricane. Tuesday
by Alison Carr Tuesday is light, playful and nuanced in tone. And a
little bit sci-fi. The play centres on an ordinary Tuesday that
suddenly turns very weird indeed when a tear rips across the sky
over the school yard. The play touches on themes of friendship,
sibling love, family, identity, grief, bullying, loneliness and
responsibility. And in the process we might just learn something
about ourselves as well as some astronomical theories of the
multiverse! A series of public apologies (in response to an
unfortunate incident in the school lavatories) by John Donnelly
This satirical play is heightened in its naturalism, in its
seriousness, in its parody and piercing in its interrogation of how
our attempts to define ourselves in public are shaped by the fear
of saying the wrong thing. Presented quite literally as a series of
public apologies this play is spacious, flexible and welcoming of
inventive and imaginative interpretation as each iteration spirals
inevitably to its absurdist core. This is a play on words, on
convention, on manners, on institutions, on order, online and on
point. THE IT by Vivienne Franzmann THE IT is a play about a
teenage girl who has something growing inside her. She doesn't know
what it is, but she knows it's not a baby. It expands in her body.
It starts in her stomach, but quickly outgrows that, until
eventually ittakes over the entirety of her insides. It has claws.
She feels them. Presented in the style of a direct to camera
documentary, this is a darkly comic state of the nation play
exploring adolescent mental health and the rage within, written
very specifically for today. The Marxist in Heaven by Hattie Naylor
The Marxist in Heaven is a play that does exactly what its title
page says it's going to do. The eponymous protagonist 'wakes up' in
paradise and once they get over the shock of this fundamental
contradiction of everything they believe in.....they get straight
back to work....and continue their lifelong struggle for equality
and fairness for all....even in death. Funny, playful, provocative,
pertinent and jam-packed with discourse, disputes, deities and
disco dancing by the bucketful, this upbeat buoyant allegory shines
its holy light on globalization and asks the salient questions -
who are we and what are we doing to ourselves?.....and what
conditioner do you use on your hair? Look Up by Andrew Muir Look Up
plunges us into a world free from adult intervention, supervision
and protection. It's about seeking the truth for yourself and
finding the space to find and be yourself. Nine young people are
creating new rules for what they hope will be a new and brighter
future full of hope in a world in which they can trust again. Each
one of them is unique, original and defiantly individual, break
into an abandoned building and set about claiming the space,
because that is what they do. They have rituals, they have rules,
together they are a tribe, they have faith in themselves....and
nothing and no one else. They are the future, unless the real world
catches up with them and then all they can hope for is that they
don't crash and burn like the adults they ran away from in the
first place. Crusaders by Frances Poet A group of teens gather to
take their French exam but none of them will step into the exam
hall. Because Kyle has had a vision and he'll use anything, even
miracles, to ensure his classmates accompany him. Together they
have just seven days to save themselves, save the world and be the
future. And Kyle is not the only one who has had the dream. All
across the globe, from Azerbaijan to Zambia, children are dreaming
and urging their peers to follow them to the promised land. Who
will follow? Who will lead? Who will make it? Witches Can't Be
Burned by Silva Semerciyan St. Paul's have won the schools Playfest
competition, three years in a row, by selecting recognised classics
from the canon and producing them at an exceptionally high level,
it's a tried and trusted formula. With straight A's student and
drama freak, Anuka cast as Abigail Williams in The Crucible by
Arthur Miller, the school seem to be well on course for another
triumph, which would be a record. However, as rehearsals gain
momentum, Anuka has an epiphany. An experience resulting in her
asking searching questions surrounding the text, the depiction and
perception of female characters, the meaning of loyalty, and the
values and traditions underpinning the very foundations of the
school. Thus, the scene is set for a confrontation of epic
proportions as Anuka seeks to break with tradition, before
tradition breaks her and all young women like her and reality
begins to take on the ominous hue of Miller's fictionalized Salem.
Dungeness by Chris Thompson . In a remote part of the UK, where
nothing ever happens, a group of teenagers share a safe house for
LGBT+ young people. While their shared home welcomes difference, it
can be tricky for self-appointed group leader Birdie to keep the
peace. The group must decide how they want to commemorate an attack
that happened to LGBT+ people, in a country far away. How do you
take to the streets and protest if you're not ready to tell the
world who you are? If you're invisible, does your voice still
count? A play about love, commemoration and protest.
A shocking crime divides the nation. Fingers are pointed, sides are
drawn, facts are hard to come by. Why did this happen? How do we
move on? What must we remember? It's easy to have an opinion
online, safe behind the anonymity of a keyboard, just like, share
and subscribe. But as the digital mob polish their pitchforks, the
world starts to question just how free should free speech be? The
Assassination of Katie Hopkins is a smart, witty new musical by
Chris Bush and Matt Winkworth about truth, celebrity and public
outrage.
Theatre has a funny way of getting to the heart of who we are now
and - particularly in the case of Connections - who we are going to
be. Drawing together the work of nine leading playwrights, National
Theatre Connections 2018 features work by some of the most exciting
contemporary playwrights. Gathered together in one volume, the
plays offer young performers an engaging selection of material to
perform, read or study. From friends building bridges and siblings
breaking down walls; girls making their voice heard and boys
searching for home; and not forgetting a band of unlikely action
heroes taking control of the weather. The anthology contains nine
play scripts along with imaginative production notes and exercises,
as well as a short introduction to the writing process for the
tenth Connections play [ BLANK ] by Alice Birch. National Theatre
Connections is an annual festival which brings new plays for young
people to schools and youth theatres across the UK and Ireland.
Commissioning exciting work from leading playwrights, the festival
exposes actors aged 13-19 to the world of professional
theatre-making, giving them full control of a theatrical production
- from costume and set design to stage management and marketing
campaigns. NT Connections have published over 150 original plays
and regularly works with 500 theatre companies and 10,000 young
people each year.
This motivational, often poetic self-help book has a streetwise
edge and is coupled with a powerful message for troubled teens and
young adults.
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