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2m / Dramatic Comedy A moving car. A father and son. The father
drives. The son's face is pressed against the rolled up window. A
lifetime can pass in the sixty miles between a boy's soccer
practice and his father's new apartment. In this moving play about
family relationships, we see just how much time and space can exist
between the pleather seats of a father's used car. The world
premiere of Sixty Miles to Silver Lake opened at Soho Rep, New York
City on January 15, 2009. "Nothing - and everything - happens in
the hourlong car ride on a California highway depicted by Dan
LeFranc in Sixty Miles to Silver Lake. Time marches onward (and
jumps backward) in this painfully honest two-hander about the
fragile relationship between a divorced dad and the son he picks up
every Saturday after soccer practice and drives to his home for the
weekend. But to this alienated pair, it's one endless ritual of
loving and hating and hurting." -Variety
HighTide Theatre Festival was founded in 2006 and has since become
one of the most prolific homes of new writing. It has been
described by the Telegraph as "one of the little gems of the
artistic calendar in Britain" and by the Daily Mail as "famous for
championing emerging playwrights and contemporary theatre". 2016
marks ten years of HighTide, during which time numerous emerging
playwrights and new plays have shot to prominence. This anniversary
volume brings together four of the key plays that have come out of
HighTide Theatre Festival's programme during this time: Ditch by
Beth Steel is a clear-eyed look at how we might behave when the
conveniences of our civilisation are taken away, and a frightening
vision of a future that could all too easily be ours. peddling by
Harry Melling is a poetic monologue about a young homeless man,
which confronts whether it's a good thing to turn a blind eye and
let people get on with their lives, or whether that's exactly how
people fall through the cracks. The Big Meal by American writer Dan
LeFranc is a deeply comic and touching drama that looks at love,
marriage, raising children and the general onslaught of life.
Lampedusa by Anders Lustgarten follows the day-to-day life of those
whose job it is to enforce our harsh new rules on immigration: an
Italian coastguard and a payday lender from Leeds. All now
established in their own right, these four plays demonstrate
HighTide's extraordinary role in identifying and nurturing writers
tackling some of the biggest issues of today. The volume was
published to coincide with HighTide's 10th annual festival in
September 2016 and features an introduction by HighTide Artistic
Director, Steven Atkinson.
"The Methuen Drama Book of New American Plays" is an anthology of
six outstanding plays from some of the most exciting playwrights
currently receiving critical acclaim in the States. It showcases
work produced at a number of the leading theatres during the last
decade and charts something of the extraordinary range of current
playwriting in America. It will be invaluable not only to readers
and theatergoers in the U.S., but to those around the world seeking
out new American plays and an insight into how U.S. playwrights are
engaging with their current social and political environment. There
is a rich collection of distinctive, diverse voices at work in the
contemporary American theatre and this brings together six of the
best, with work by David Adjmi, Marcus Gardley, Young Jean Lee,
Katori Hall, Christopher Shinn and Dan LeFranc. The featured plays
range from the intimate to the epic, the personal to the national
and taken together explore a variety of cultural perspectives on
life in America. The first play, David Adjmi's "Stunning," is an
excavation of ruptured identity set in modern day Midwood,
Brooklyn, in the heart of the insular Syrian-Jewish community;
Marcus Gardley's lyrical epic "The Road Weeps, The Well Runs Dry"
deals with the migration of Black Seminoles, is set in mid-1800s
Oklahoma and speaks directly to modern spirituality, relocation and
cultural history; Young Jean Lee's "Pullman, WA" deals with
self-hatred and the self-help culture in her formally inventive
three-character play; Katori Hall's "Hurt Village "uses the real
housing project of "Hurt Village" as a potent allegory for urban
neglect set against the backdrop of the Iraq war; Christopher
Shinn's "Dying City" melds the personal and political in a
theatrical crucible that cracks open our response to 9/11 and Abu
Graib, and finally Dan LeFranc's "The Big Meal," an
inter-generational play spanning eighty years, is set in the
mid-west in a generic restaurant and considers family legacy and
how some of the smallest events in life turn out to be the most
significant.
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