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Showing 1 - 25 of
34 matches in All Departments
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Dracula - Play (Paperback)
John Godber, Jane Thornton, Bram Stoker; Screenplay by John Godber, Jane Thornton
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R276
Discovery Miles 2 760
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Written in 1897, Stoker's novel introduces the iconic character of
the vampire Count Dracula. Through a series of letters and diary
entries, the novel tells the story of Dracula's attempt to move
from Transylvania to England, and the battle between Dracula and a
small group of men and women led by Professor Abraham Van Helsing.
Although Stoker did not invent the vampire, he defined its modern
form as we know it today.
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Bouncers (Paperback)
John Godber, Jane Thornton
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R304
Discovery Miles 3 040
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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SHAFTED moves forwards and backwards over time, starting after the
miners strike in 1984. Act One demonstrates the depression and
hopelessness which engulfed a West Yorkshire mining village post
the strike and the plethora of menial jobs which HARRY found in
order to try to make a living. By the late 1990's DOT had suggested
they move to Bridlington to start a new life running a Boarding
House. Act Two starts in 2016 with DOT suffering from cancer,
immobile in a wheelchair, the act moves backwards thought to
success of the boarding house and their new life together, to the
time they left UPTON to run the boarding house in the 1990's.
Mark and Sally are travelling to Amsterdam to celebrate Mark's
fiftieth birthday at a Bruce Springsteen concert. Mark is not the
success he wants to be, Sally feels neglected and lonely - and the
journey across the Channel makes their unhappiness worse. For one
thing, their old friend Gill is travelling with them and arouses
conflicting emotions in Mark, who always had a soft spot for her;
for another, she has brought along Karl, her rough and
all-too-ready new boyfriend who knows a little too much about
Amsterdam's seedier side...From these beginnings John Godber has
crafted another salty comedy of social angst and the clash of
cultures in his inimitable style and with much near-the-knuckle
language.
Relief drama teacher, Mary faces an uphill struggle when she tries
to interest sixteen-year-olds Stacey, Kelly and Maggie in dance.
She isn't helped by the science-obsessed headmaster, nor by the
girl's patent lack of commitment, nor by the lack of funds and
resources, but she ploughs doggedly on. A trip to London to take
part in a dance competition proves to be a turning point; the
girls, though they don't win, gain confidence, and Mary nearly
becomes romantically involved with Stacey's dad, Jimmy. With an
energetic score by John Pattison and opportunities for dancing,
singing and acting, "Thick as a Brick" is all-round entertainment
laced with John Godber's characteristic insight and humour.
Preparing for a mystery trip to Scarborough ("she wouldn't book
till Dennis told her where we were going") three Northern coach
drivers pass the time remembering more exciting trips from the
past, such as the last one, down the Rhine Valley to Heidelberg.
Stick hates his passengers and wishes he was doing the Spanish run
instead of Johnny Mac. Larry is a Mario Lanza fan who's been making
trips for as long as anyone can remember and Frank ("don't
ask...it'll only shock you!") is their female counterpart. These
three actors take turns playing an assortment of passengers, from
the dotty old complainers to the retired miners seeking excitement
too late and on too little money. Escape is on everyone's mind but
no one knows quite what they're escaping from and how to go about
it. As Sissy says, it is "better going somewhere when you're
seventy-nine than going nowhere". A touching, often hilarious,
bitter-sweet play, full of John Godber's usual clever, perceptive
view of "men of the world".
The departure lounges of ten airports across Europe and America
provide a backdrop of delays, dangers and frustration as two
business executives, Jim and Steve, embark on a journey of
self-discovery. While the easy-going Steve spends time on the
mobile running a number of love interests with the morals of a cat,
Jim is determined to remain faithful to his wife Claire. The
arrival of young Zoe changes all that...The anxiety of the
departure lounge becomes all to personal for all involved, leading
to a sad yet hopeful ending.
Ron, a prematurely retired headteacher, and his wife, Yvonne, a
would-be marathoner, are on their first caravan holiday. Pitched on
a cliff in Yorkshire, the slightly dull, slightly snobby couple
grapple with this strange holiday. That evening an elderly caravan
appears next to theirs and sounds of noisy love-making cause Ron
and Yvonne to blush. Steph and Grant, a younger, more working-class
pair of seasoned caravanners have arrived and Ron's and Yvonne's
lives will never be the same.2 women, 2 men
Dennis is a hen-pecked IT manager stuck in a boring marriage until
a business trip to Amsterdam opens his eyes to a world in which
every sexual adventure is available. He has the time of his life
and more business trips are in store. The ten roles are cleverly
doubled and this comedy of sexual manners - sex versus love, women
exploiting men or vice versa, natural or unnatural behaviour - has
strong sexual language and verbal images.2 women, 3 men
In the late Seventies, five students on a drama teaching course at
a northern college discover sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll. Stan, a
mature student, and Rich, the local boy-made-good, share a room, as
do the girls - upper-crust Charlotte, feisty Helen and religious
Tina. Babs, their tutor, does her best for them, supporting them
through the travails of teaching practice with unruly kids, but the
student parties, romantic intrigues and class conflict take their
toll.4 women, 2 men
John Godber's striking, easily staged play explores the complex
relationship between a thirty-three year old theatre studies
teacher and his elderly parents. Martin Dawson has invited his
parents, Joan and Len, to visit him in the Lake District. This
'enjoyable' weekend break evolves into an opportunity for the
release of the pent-up frustrations of a lifetime. Godber
successfully combines biting humour with serious intent in this
thought-provoking comment on age, communication and life in
general.1 woman, 2 men
Mixing comedy with melancholy reflections on mariage, age, class,
and friendship, this play becomes a study of the English away from
home. Journalist Tom, despite having misgivings about leaving his
wife Gail, has joined his freind Andy on a golfing holiday in
Spain. Andy, who is married to Gail's freind Lynne, enthusiatically
joins the lager-lout brigade at their hotel and makes the most of
the opportunities for illicit sex that are available. Tom, holding
himself apart from the crowd, embarks on a platonic freindship with
Trish. Back in England, Andy keeps his infidelity secret but Tom
tells Gail of his innocent friendship with Trish and the seeds of
suspicion are instantly sown.
When Morris and Jean win the National Lottery their lives are
irredemably changed - the question is, for better or worse? The
cracks in their marriage widen, Jean keeps on winning and Morris
takes off to Amsterdam with an old flame, but will his prophesy
that bad luck always follows good turn out to be true? Can money
buy happiness? Is enough ever enough? John Godber addresses these
questions in his comic play, first presented by the Hull Truck
Theatre Company at the Spring Street Theatre in Hull.
In Amateur Rugby League, everything is personal. The truth of this
sentiment is proved time and again in Up 'n' Under II, the
hilarious sequel to John Godber's hit comedy about the mixed bag of
players making up the Wheatsheaf Arms team. Will the lost honour of
the Wheatsheaf Arms be retrieved in their match against the
Cobblers Arms? Audiences will be on the edges of their seats before
they find out!2 women, 7 men
Full of warmth, understanding and humour, this is an affectionate
and appealing portrait of an ordinary family struggling with
change, bereavement and the generation gap. On his graduation day
in 1978, John looks back over his teenage years, from 1967-1973,
recalling all the embarrassments, tensions, joys and sorrows of
family life in West Yorkshire. Older and better educated, he finds
himself alienated from his working-class family who cannot
understand his growing intellect and theatrical aspirations.5
women, 3 men, 1 woman or man
Set 'somewhere in the north of England' it centres on the amateur
rugby team from the Wheatsheaf Arms who can only muster a side of
four whose pride lies in their unbroken record of defeat.1 woman, 6
men
Spanning three generations, from 1947 to the present, this
compelling saga vividly captures the dreams, ambitions, joys,
fears, heartaches and disappointmen's of the Parker sisters, Annie
and May, whose hopes centre on May's son, Paul, and his academic
success.3 women, 3 men, 5 women or men
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Muddy Cows (Paperback)
John Godber
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R325
R209
Discovery Miles 2 090
Save R116 (36%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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"John Godber is one of the unsung heroes of British theatre,
reaching the giddy heights of number three in the most-performed
playwrights league table, nestled in behind Shakespeare and
Ayckbourn" - Guardian
Bouncers, a play about nightlife: "A show that's worth braving
any front of house, however formidable ... simply spellbinding"
Guardian; Happy Families: "The inseparable contradictions of family
love and oppression are carefully held in this fine comedy ...
superb characterisation ... the rhythms of Godber's dialogue are
freshly funny, the pace precise" (Independent); Shakers, a play
about party-goers: "This is one of those slices of life that
everyone can recognise and laugh at" Liverpool Daily Post
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