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You've heard of magic hour right? We're in it. right now.
Journalist Katy is desperate for her big break, and an interview in
Paris with world famous concert pianist Silvia de Zingaro looks
like just her chance. But the odds are against her. After a
disastrous interview, Katy feels certain there's a bigger story
there than meets the eye. She hunts for clues, finding Silvia has a
collection of mystical books and an apparent fixation with composer
Erik Satie. Just as Katy's hope begins to fade, a mysterious
night-time encounter with the pianist may well give her the scoop
she's looking for... This compelling new play examines music, time
and attention in our modern digital age. This edition was published
to coincide with the world premiere at the Royal Shakespeare
Company in Stratford Upon Avon in June 2019.
Drawing together the work of 10 leading playwrights, this National
Theatre Connections anthology features work by some of the most
exciting and established contemporary playwrights. Gathered
together in one volume, the plays collected offer young performers
between the ages of 13 and 19 an engaging selection of material to
perform, read or study. Each play has been specifically
commissioned by the National Theatre's literary department with the
young performer in mind. The anthology contains 10 play scripts;
notes from the writer and director of each play, addressing the
themes and ideas behind the play; and production notes and
exercises for the drama groups. This year's anniversary anthology
includes plays by Suhayla El-Bushra, Anders Lustgarten, Robin
French, Tim Etchells, Patrick Marber, Kellie Smith, Lizzie Nunnery,
Harriet Braun and Alistair McDowall.
All the rooms reek of lavender and rose petals. There's something
dead about it. Like flowers the day after a ball. Returning to her
home town in the house of her dreams, her husband with a new job on
the horizon, and a feeling of change in the air. Yet, for Heather,
there is only the feeling of boredom, a feeling as futile as it is
fatal. A powerful and emotionally charged play about a woman's
separation and isolation from the affluent, materialistic society
that she has become a part of. Set in 1960s Edgbaston, Heather
Gardner is a fresh and stylish new take on Ibsen's Hedda Gabler. It
is written by one of the UK's most promising young writers Robin
French, whose first play, Bear Hug, won the Royal Court Young
Writer's Festival and was produced at the Royal Court in 2004,
where it earned an extended run.
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