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Clean Break is a British theatre company set up in 1979 by two women in prison. It exists to tell the stories of women with experience of the criminal justice system and to transform women's lives through theatre. Over 40 years, Clean Break has commissioned some of the most progressive and brilliant women writers to write ground-breaking plays, alongside developing the writing skills of the women they work with in its London studios and in prisons. This is a collection of monologues from this canon. Rebel Voices: Monologues for Women by Women celebrates the opportunities inherent when women represent themselves. Offering female performers a diverse set of monologues reflecting a range of characters in age, ethnicity and lived experience, the material is drawn from a mix of published and unpublished works. This book is for any performer who does not see themselves represented in mainstream plays, for lovers of radical women's theatre and for rebels everywhere who believe that the act of speaking and being heard can create change.
The true-life drama of the extraordinary bond between two identical twin girls and their struggle to find a voice. Refusing to speak to adults, identical twins June and Jennifer Gibbons communicate in their own private language, their only relationship being their intense and turbulent bond with each other. Inspired by Marjorie Wallace's bestselling book The Silent Twins, Polly Teale and Linda Brogan's powerful play is an astonishing and moving portrayal of the secret world of a very special but ultimately destructive alliance between two sisters. Speechless was first performed by Shared Experience and Sherman Theatre Cymru at the Traverse Theatre, Edinburgh, in 2010. It was the winner of an Edinburgh Fringe First Award.
An unflinching portrait of a family in crisis from an
award-winning writer 'The night you threw me out I was frightened. But not as much as
I am being back here ? I don't belong here no more.' Lauren's come back for Christmas dinner, but she's not staying.
They've found her a place with a cr?che so she can do her exams.
Dad thinks she should stay home and Mum thinks she should have kept
her legs shut. It's Moss Side 1974. What's in the Cat premiered at Contact Theatre, Manchester, in
November 2005 before transferring to the Royal Court, London, in
December. Linda Brogan's work includes a production of Basil and Beattie
(Royal Exchange/Liverpool Everyman) and commissions by
Wolsey/Tricycle (The Very Thought of You), Clean Break (Black
Crows) and Contact (Ghost Town). She was a winner of the Alfred
Fagon Award in 2001. 'Compelling, and often very funny, viewing. Four Stars' Manchester Online
A powerful story of three women and their love for one man. It's the 1970s and a young black boy dances the shuffle better than anyone but that isn't going to fill his belly. Teenager Hazel gives him what he wants. Older woman Leonora gives him what he needs. His mum Queenie won't give him anything more than a catering tin of beans. The fight is on..."Black Crows" opens at the Arcola Theatre in March 2007 in a production by Clean Break Theatre Co.
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