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The Blue Touch Paper - A Memoir (Hardcover, Limited edition): David Hare The Blue Touch Paper - A Memoir (Hardcover, Limited edition)
David Hare
R4,687 R4,150 Discovery Miles 41 500 Save R537 (11%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

When, in 2000, the National Theatre published its poll of the hundred best plays of the 20th century, David Hare had written five of them. Yet he was born in 1947 into an anonymous suburban street in Hastings. It is a world he believes to be as completely vanished as Victorian England.Now in his first panoramic work of memoir, ending as Margaret Thatcher comes to power in 1979, David Hare describes his childhood, his Anglo-Catholic education and his painful apprenticeship to the trade of dramatist. He sets the progress of his own life against the history of a time in which faith in hierarchy, deference, religion, the empire and finally politics all withered away. Only belief in private virtue remains.In his customarily dazzling prose and with great warmth and humour, David Hare explores how so radical a shift could have occurred, and how it is reflected in his own lifelong engagement with two disparate art forms - film and theatre. In The Blue Touch Paper David Hare describes a life of trial and error: both how he became a writer and the high price he and those around him paid for that decision.This limited edition version of the book is signed and slipcased, with high specification production throughout. Just 100 available.

The Absence of War (Paperback, Main): David Hare The Absence of War (Paperback, Main)
David Hare
R307 R258 Discovery Miles 2 580 Save R49 (16%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

The Absence of War offers a meditation on the classic problems of leadership, and is the third part of a critically acclaimed trilogy of plays (Racing Demon, Murmuring Judges) about British institutions. Its unsparing portrait of a Labour Party torn between past principles and future prosperity, and of a deeply sympathetic leader doomed to failure, made the play hugely controversial and prophetic when it was first presented at the National Theatre, London, in 1993. The Absence of War is much more than a piece of skilled reporting. It is actually cast as a classic tragedy.' Guardian

Straight Line Crazy (Paperback, Main): David Hare Straight Line Crazy (Paperback, Main)
David Hare
R259 R236 Discovery Miles 2 360 Save R23 (9%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

For forty uninterrupted years, Robert Moses was the most powerful man in New York. Though never elected to office, he manipulated those who were through a mix of guile, charm and intimidation. Motivated at first by a determination to improve the lives of New York City's workers, he created parks, bridges and 627 miles of expressway to connect the people to the great outdoors. But in the 1950s, groups of citizens began to organize against his schemes and against the motor car, campaigning for a very different idea of what a city should be. David Hare's blazing account of a man - played by Ralph Fiennes - whose iron will exposed the weakness of democracy in the face of charismatic conviction, premieres at the Bridge Theatre, London, in March 2022.

Beat the Devil - A Covid Monologue (Paperback, Main): David Hare Beat the Devil - A Covid Monologue (Paperback, Main)
David Hare
R176 R160 Discovery Miles 1 600 Save R16 (9%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Covid-19 seems to be a sort of dirty bomb, thrown into the body to cause havoc. On the same day that the UK government finally made the first of two decisive interventions that led to a conspicuously late lockdown, David Hare contracted Covid-19. Nobody seemed to know much about it then, and many doctors are not altogether sure they know much more today. Suffering a pageant of apparently random symptoms, Hare recalls the delirium of his illness, which mixed with fear, dream, honest medicine and dishonest politics to create a monologue of furious urgency and power.

Uncle Vanya (Paperback, Main): David Hare Uncle Vanya (Paperback, Main)
David Hare; Anton Chekhov
R302 R253 Discovery Miles 2 530 Save R49 (16%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Russia, late summer at the close of the nineteenth century. Vanya and his niece Sonya have worked for years to manage the country estate. Into this ordered and regular household come two new visitors, Sonya's father, an irritable professor, and his young wife Elena who, in the space of a few months, cause chaos, one by their selfishness, and the other by their sexual allure. Between them, they manage to have most of the inhabitants questioning their purpose in life, their happiness and, at times, their sanity. David Hare's version of Anton Chekhov's Uncle Vanya opens at Theatre Royal Bath in July 2019.

The Year of Magical Thinking - A Play by Joan Didion Based on Her Memoir (Paperback): Joan Didion The Year of Magical Thinking - A Play by Joan Didion Based on Her Memoir (Paperback)
Joan Didion; Introduction by David Hare
R302 R284 Discovery Miles 2 840 Save R18 (6%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

'This happened on December 30, 2003. That may seem a while ago but it won't when it happens to you...' In this adaptation of her award-winning, bestselling memoir, Joan Didion transforms the story of the sudden and unexpected loss of her husband and their only daughter into a stunning and powerful one-woman play. The first production of 'The Year of Magical Thinking', starring Vanessa Redgrave and directed by David Hare, was a runaway hit on Broadway in 2007. The same production is transferring to the National Theatre from April to July 2008.

Behind the Beautiful Forevers (Paperback, Main): David Hare Behind the Beautiful Forevers (Paperback, Main)
David Hare
R322 R252 Discovery Miles 2 520 Save R70 (22%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

It's not just that rich people don't know what they've got. They don't even know what they throw away. India is beginning to prosper. But beyond the luxury hotels surrounding Mumbai airport is an obstacle, a makeshift slum. It's home to foul mouthed Zehrunisa and her garbage sorting son Abdul, entrepreneurs both. Sunil, twelve, picks plastic. Manju, schoolteacher, hopes to be the settlement's first woman to gain a degree. Asha, go-to woman, exploits every scam to become a first-class person. And Fatima, One Leg, is about to make an accusation that will destroy herself and shatter the neighbourhood. Katherine Boo spent three years under the flight-path, recording the lives of Annawadi's diverse inhabitants. Now from Boo's book, which won the National Book Award for Non-Fiction in 2012, David Hare has fashioned an epic play for the stage which details the ingenious and sometimes violent ways in which the poor and disadvantaged negotiate with corruption to seek a handhold on capitalism's lowest rungs. David Hare's stage adaptation of Behind the Beautiful Forevers premiered at the National Theatre, London, in November 2014.

South Downs and Mere Fact, Mere Fiction (Paperback, Main): David Hare South Downs and Mere Fact, Mere Fiction (Paperback, Main)
David Hare
R302 R253 Discovery Miles 2 530 Save R49 (16%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

1962: A public school on the South Downs. John Blakemore is a solitary boy who finds it impossible either to understand or adapt to the ways of the school. His adolescent earnestness put off teacher and pupil alike. And now suddenly he seems to be in danger of losing his only friend. David Hare's emotional new play, written at the invitation of the Rattigan estate as a response to The Browning Version, is a meditation on faith, learning and teenage friendship, played against the backdrop of a Britain still fighting to maintain an established rule. Collected with South Downs is the text of Hare's lecture Mere Fact, Mere Fiction, delivered to the Royal Society of Literature in 2010. In a famous defence of documentary theatre, the author celebrates the power of metaphor to transform factual quite as much as fictional material.

Blue Room - Freely Adapted from Arthur Schnitzler's La Ronde (Paperback, 1st American ed): David Hare, Arthur Schnitzler Blue Room - Freely Adapted from Arthur Schnitzler's La Ronde (Paperback, 1st American ed)
David Hare, Arthur Schnitzler
R403 R327 Discovery Miles 3 270 Save R76 (19%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Arthur Schnitzler described Reigen, his loose series of sexual sketches, as "completely unprintable, " and indeed its premiere in 1921 spurred an obscenity suit. It was only when Max Ophuls made his famous film in 1950 that the work became better known as La Ronde. Now David Hare has reset these circular scenes of love and betrayal in the present day, with a cast of two actors playing a succession of characters whose sexual lives enmesh like a daisy chain. The Blue Room is a meditation on men and women, sex and social class, actors and the theater. With deft insight about the gap between the sexes, The Blue Room takes the treacherous Freudian subject of projection and desire and reinvents it in a bittersweet landscape that is both eternal and completely up-to-date.

The Judas Kiss (Paperback, 1st American ed): David Hare The Judas Kiss (Paperback, 1st American ed)
David Hare
R411 R336 Discovery Miles 3 360 Save R75 (18%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days

"If equal affection cannot be Let the more loving one be me." --W.H. Auden Oscar Wilde's relationship with Lord Alfred Douglas has inspired contemporary writers for decades. In his heartbreaking account of love tested to destruction, David Hare presents his powerful interpretation of what may have happened behind closed doors between Wilde and Douglas. The Judas Kiss lays bare the drama of two critical moments in Wilde's last years: the day he decides to stay in England and face imprisonment, and the night after his release, two years later, when the lover for whom he risked and lost everything betrays him. With a quiet but burning sense of outrage, The Judas Kiss presents the consequences of taking an uncompromisingly moral position in a world defined by fear, expedience, and conformity.

Obedience, Struggle and Revolt (Paperback, Main): David Hare Obedience, Struggle and Revolt (Paperback, Main)
David Hare
R310 R239 Discovery Miles 2 390 Save R71 (23%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

What is a political playwright? Does theatre have any direct effect on society? Why choose to work in a medium which speaks to so few? Is theatre itself facing oblivion? All frequent questions addressed to David Hare over the last thirty-five years, as his work has taken him from the travelling fringe to the National Theatre, from seasons on Broadway to performances in prisons, church halls and on bare floors. Since 1978, Hare has sought uniquely to address these and other questions in occasional lectures given both in Britain and abroad. Now, for the first time, these lectures are collected together with some of his more recent prose pieces about God, Iraq, Israel/Palestine and the privatisation of the railways. Bringing to the lectern the same wit, insight and gift for the essential for which his plays are known, Hare presents the distilled result of a lifetime's sustained thinking about art and politics.

Plenty (Paperback, Main): David Hare Plenty (Paperback, Main)
David Hare
R302 R253 Discovery Miles 2 530 Save R49 (16%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

After opening to sometimes bewildered reviews at the National Theatre in 1978, David Hare's wildly ambitious play Plenty established itself as a landmark modern classic in its 1982 New York production, which transferred to Broadway with Kate Nelligan playing Susan Traherne. Counterpointing the experiences of a fiercely intelligent Englishwoman flown into France as a secret agent during the Second World War with her life in the following twenty years, David Hare offers a unique view of post-war history, as well as making a powerful statement about changing values and the collapse of ideals embodied in a single life. 'The richest, certainly the most resonant experience of my theatrical year.' Clive Barnes, Sunday Times 'An explosive theatrical version of a world that was won and lost during and after World War II.' Frank Rich, New York Times Plenty was made into a film from a screenplay by David Hare with Meryl Streep, Charles Dance and John Gielgud. Plenty returned to The Public, New York, in October 2016 with Susan Traherne played by Rachel Weisz.

The Blue Touch Paper - A Memoir (Paperback, Main): David Hare The Blue Touch Paper - A Memoir (Paperback, Main)
David Hare 1
R318 R248 Discovery Miles 2 480 Save R70 (22%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

When, in 2000, the National Theatre published its poll of the hundred best plays of the 20th century, David Hare had written five of them. Yet he was born in 1947 into an anonymous suburban street in Hastings. It is a world he believes to be as completely vanished as Victorian England. Now in his first panoramic work of memoir, ending as Margaret Thatcher comes to power in 1979, David Hare describes his childhood, his Anglo-Catholic education and his painful apprenticeship to the trade of dramatist. He sets the progress of his own life against the history of a time in which faith in hierarchy, deference, religion, the empire and finally politics all withered away. Only belief in private virtue remains. In his customarily dazzling prose and with great warmth and humour, David Hare explores how so radical a shift could have occurred, and how it is reflected in his own lifelong engagement with two disparate art forms - film and theatre. In The Blue Touch Paper David Hare describes a life of trial and error: both how he became a writer and the high price he and those around him paid for that decision.

Stuff Happens (Paperback, Main): David Hare Stuff Happens (Paperback, Main)
David Hare
R356 R257 Discovery Miles 2 570 Save R99 (28%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Stuff happens... And it's untidy, and freedom's untidy, and free people are free to make mistakes and commit crimes and do bad things.' The famous response of American Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld to the looting of Baghdad at a press conference in 2003 provides the title for David Hare's play about the extraordinary process leading up to the invasion of Iraq. Stuff Happens premiered at the National Theatre, London, in 2004 and has subsequently been performed around the world. 'Stuff Happens may make you openly boo, hiss, cheer or even cry, but it will also remind you why this 2,500 year-old art form remains the best way for human beings to collectively experience and contemplate the effects of war.' Los Angeles Times 'A totally compelling play that ruthlessly exposes the dubious premises on which the Iraq war was fought... One comes out enriched, informed and moved by Hare's ability to turn recent politics into historical drama.' Guardian

Enemies (Paperback, Main): Maxim Gorky Enemies (Paperback, Main)
Maxim Gorky; Translated by David Hare
R363 Discovery Miles 3 630 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

1905. Russia is at a turning point. Zakhar Bardin is from the landowning class, but is now the uneasy owner of a factory. His managing director is determined to face down militant workers on a point of principle. But the shutting of the business has tragic consequences for everyone concerned. Gorky's extraordinary play, which was written in exile and banned in his home country, presents a panoramic view of a restless society, with a bourgeoisie no longer sure of its own values, and a working class steadily facing up to the terrifying sacrifices ahead. Described by Ronald Bryden in the Observer in 1971 as 'a real discovery . . . the missing link between Chekhov and the Russian revolution', Enemies has a dramatic breadth, humour and ambition unique to Gorky. Maxim Gorky's Enemies is adapted by David Hare and premiered at the Almeida Theatre, London, in May 2006.

Platonov (Paperback, Main): Anton Pavlovich Chekhov Platonov (Paperback, Main)
Anton Pavlovich Chekhov; Adapted by David Hare; Translated by David Hare
R365 Discovery Miles 3 650 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

In 1997, the celebrated contemporary playwright David Hare adapted a little-known play called Ivanov, and in doing so revealed the young Chekhov as a markedly different writer from the one English-speaking audiences were familiar with. Now Hare has produced a streamlined new version of Chekhov's freshman drama Platonov, an abandoned seven-hour manuscript in which Chekhov recasts Don Juan as a Russian schoolmaster. Again, we encounter a great writer who is funnier, more exuberant, and more wildly romantic than anyone expected.

The Breath of Life (Paperback, Main): David Hare The Breath of Life (Paperback, Main)
David Hare
R271 R207 Discovery Miles 2 070 Save R64 (24%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

"Life being what it is, one dreams of revenge."

Gauguin's epithet serves as the motto for this moral tale of two woman, both in their sixties, whose lives are interwoven in ways neither of them yet understands. Madeleine Palmer is a retired curator, living alone on the Isle of Wight. One day to her door comes Frances Beale, a woman she has met only once, who is now enjoying sudden success, late in life, as a popular novelist. The progress of a single night comes fascinatingly to echo the hidden course of their lives.

David Hare has been described by The Times as "Britain's leading contemporary playwright" and by the New York Post as "one of the few major playwrights in our language."

The Breath of Life premièred at the Theatre Royal Haymarket, London, in October 2002.

David Hare Plays 2 - Fanshen; A Map of the World; Saigon; The Bay at Nice; The Secret Rapture (Paperback, Main): David Hare David Hare Plays 2 - Fanshen; A Map of the World; Saigon; The Bay at Nice; The Secret Rapture (Paperback, Main)
David Hare
R542 R468 Discovery Miles 4 680 Save R74 (14%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

In 1975, David Hare co-founded the Joint Stock Theatre Company, for whom he adapted Fanshen, William Hinton's book on the Chinese Revolution. Like most of Hare's political plays, Fanshen refuses to simplify complex moral issues. Focusing on the difficulties, mistakes, and corruptions of the revolution, Hare ultimately implies that those involved can learn from their mistakes and perhaps even move towards a more ideal society. After 1975, Hare began to write for the National Theatre which produced A Map of the World, which takes its title from Oscar Wilde's observation that "A map of the world that does not include Utopia is not worth even glancing at," contrasts the cynicism of a successful novelist with an aggressive and idealistic young journalist. In Saigon, Barbara, a British woman, is a clerk at a bank in Saigon. She meets a CIA operative and the two fall in love just before the Vietcong take over the city.This unique wartime romance gives an unusual perspective of war from two Westerners ostensibly on the outside, but tied to the money and power which drives the war.

Also included in this volume are The Bay at Nice, which premiered at the National in 1986 and The Secret Rapture, which tells the story of two sisters coping with their father's death.

Murmuring Judges (Paperback, Main): David Hare Murmuring Judges (Paperback, Main)
David Hare
R302 R231 Discovery Miles 2 310 Save R71 (24%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

A young lawyer's involvement in her first case leads her through a criminal justice system - police, courts and prisons - which is cracking at the seams. Murmuring Judges is the second play in David Hare's highly acclaimed trilogy about British institutions. Racing Demon, which won four awards as Play of the Year in 1990, was the first part of the trilogy and examined the Church. The Absence of War, a play about the Labour Party, completed the trilogy.

Mother Courage and Her Children (Paperback, New Edition - New Edition): Bertolt Brecht Mother Courage and Her Children (Paperback, New Edition - New Edition)
Bertolt Brecht; Translated by David Hare; Edited by David Hare
R373 Discovery Miles 3 730 Ships in 9 - 15 working days

This version of Brecht's great anti-war play by playwright David Hare was premiered by the National Theatre, London, in November 1995. It adopts a freer approach to the text than many editions, adapting the original rather than offering a close translation. In this chronicle of the Thirty Years War, Mother Courage follows the armies back and forth across Europe, selling provisions and liquor from her canteen wagon. One by one she loses her children to the war but will not part with her livelihood - the wagon. The Berlin production of 1949, with Helene Weigel as Mother Courage, marked the foundation of the Berliner Ensemble. Considered by many to be one of the greatest anti-war plays ever written and Brecht's masterpiece, it remains a powerful example of Brecht's Epic Theatre and pioneering theatrical style.

My Zinc Bed (Paperback): David Hare My Zinc Bed (Paperback)
David Hare
R401 R325 Discovery Miles 3 250 Save R76 (19%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Continues the run of work in which Hare has sought to describe the atmosphere of contemporary Britain. A successful entrepreneur, Victor Quinn, employs a young poet, Paul Peplow, to decorate the legend of his fast-growing Internet business. Nothing prepares either man for an outcome which makes for a compelling story of romance and addiction.

The House of Bernarda Alba (Paperback, Main): Federico Garcia Lorca The House of Bernarda Alba (Paperback, Main)
Federico Garcia Lorca; Translated by David Hare
R301 R230 Discovery Miles 2 300 Save R71 (24%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

'Better never to lay eyes on a man, never to have seen one. Ever since I was a child, I've been frightened: the look of men, yoking up the oxen, picking up sacks of wheat, calling to each other, their thick voices, their thick boots. Every time I passed, fear of their hands, of their touch. God made me weak and ugly. It's his way of keeping them away.' So pronounces one of five unmarried daughters before her elder sister, being the richest if least attractive of the bunch, is hastily betrothed. The youngest, burning with desire, begins a passionate, clandestine affair with her sister's suitor. She's spied upon by a jealous sibling, with devastating consequences. The House of Bernarda Alba, in this new version, premieres at the National Theatre, London, in March 2005.

The Vertical Hour (Paperback, Main): David Hare The Vertical Hour (Paperback, Main)
David Hare
R276 R212 Discovery Miles 2 120 Save R64 (23%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Nadia Blye is a young American war reporter turned academic who teaches Political Studies at Yale. A brief holiday with her boyfriend brings her into contact with a kind of Englishman whose culture and background is a surprise and a challenge, both to her and to her relationship. For thirty five years, David Hare has written plays which catch the flavour of our times, the interconnection between our secret motives and our public politics. Now, at last, he writes about an American, seeking to illustrate how life has subtly changed for so many people in the West in the new century. The Vertical Hour received its world premiere at the Music Box Theater, Broadway, on November 30, 2006, and received its UK premiere at the Royal Court Theatre, London, on 17 January 2008.

Young Chekhov - Platonov; Ivanov; The Seagull (Paperback, Main): Anton Chekhov Young Chekhov - Platonov; Ivanov; The Seagull (Paperback, Main)
Anton Chekhov; Translated by David Hare
R506 R384 Discovery Miles 3 840 Save R122 (24%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Anton Chekhov is one of the undisputed masters of world drama. He is usually thought to hide himself behind his characters and stories, keeping his own personality well off-stage. But when he was young he wrote three plays - Platonov, Ivanov and The Seagull - which, with their thrilling sunbursts of youthful anger and romanticism, reveal a very different playwright from the one known by his mature, more familiar work. Young Chekhov brings these three blazing dramas together in versions by internationally acclaimed dramatist David Hare, offering the chance to explore the birth of a revolutionary dramatic voice. The plays show a writer freeing himself from the constraints of nineteenth-century melodrama and herald the shift into the twentieth century, and the birth of the modern stage. The Young Chekhov season premiered at the Chichester Festival Theatre in the autumn of 2015.

Acting Up (Paperback, Main): David Hare Acting Up (Paperback, Main)
David Hare
R490 R408 Discovery Miles 4 080 Save R82 (17%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days

After writing a monologue on the subject of Israel and Palestine, David Hare forced himself to make his debut on the professional stage at the age of fifty-one. When his success at London's austere Royal Court theatre led to an invitation to appear in New York at a somewhat flashier Broadway venue, Hare was transformed from a shadowy playwright into an actor alone on the stage every night for ninety minutes.

Hare's hilarious diary of his experience on both sides of the Atlantic tells of his difficulties in coming to terms with his frightening change of career, but also grapples with more serious questions about what the difference is between acting and performance, and whether anyone can learn to do either.

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