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This collection of three plays for young performers from
multi-award-winning playwright Rory Mullarkey offers astutely
relevant and powerfully theatrical pieces of drama. Each offering
large and flexible casts for non-gender specific performers, they
are perfect for performances and study by young performers aged
13-23. Presented in the style of eloquent contemporary verse, Flood
explores the consequences of global warming and salvaging hope in
the midst of despair. The play was originally commissioned by
National Youth Theatre and was performed at Hong Kong Youth Arts
Foundation in 2018. The Grandfathers explores the personal
experience of warfare and what it takes to train to fight for your
country. The play was first performed as part of National Theatre
Connections, 2012, before being revived at Bristol Old Vic and the
National Theatre's Shed. Through a collection of vignettes, On The
Threshing Floor captures the speed, strangeness and confusion of
living through pivotal moments of history. The play premiered at
Hampstead Theatre and uses a large ensemble cast exploring themes
of work, government and society. Popular with drama schools, youth
groups and young people, this collection provides an excellent
resource for those looking for large-scale and flexible plays to
produce, perform and study.
A village. A dragon. A damsel in distress. Into the story walks
George: wandering knight, freedom fighter, enemy of tyrants the
world over. One epic battle later and a nation is born. As the
village grows into a town, and the town into a city, the myth of
Saint George which once brought a people together, threatens to
divide them.
We don't actually drink coffee at my coffee morning. - What do you
do, then? - We discuss the violent overthrow of the government.
Also, there's flower arranging. In this intensely imaginative and
daringly brave-thinking play, award-winning playwright Rory
Mullarkey imagines a wild road trip across Middle England.
Together, Lady Catherine and her young protege Leo enlist every
tearoom, hot yoga class and Women's Institute group on a mission to
change the country forever. This play was the 2014 Pinter
Commission and the winner of the George Devine Award. It received
its world premiere production at the Royal Court Theatre Upstairs
on 10 September 2014, starring Anna Chancellor as Lady Catherine
and directed by James Macdonald.
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Pity (Paperback)
Rory Mullarkey
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R385
Discovery Miles 3 850
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Two bombs in one day is a foul coincidence Don't forget the
lightning strike A normal day. A person stands in the market square
watching the world go by. What happens next verges on the
ridiculous. There's ice cream. Sunshine. Shops. Some dogs. A
wedding. Bombs. Candles. Blood. Lightning. Sandwiches. Snipers.
Looting. Gunshots. Babies. Actors. Azaleas. Famine. Fountains.
Statues. Atrocities. And tanks. (Probably). Rory Mullarkey's new
play asks whether things really are getting worse. And if we care.
The Private misses the farm. The Captain dreams of painting. The
Corporal relishes the fight. And a hundred years later, The Woman
seeks to understand. 1916 - In the darkness of the French night,
three young soldiers, a private, a corporal and a captain, cross no
man's land towards the enemy trench. Stealth is key to their
survival and so they walk in silence, with nothing to communicate
the thoughts in their heads save for the barest of gestures. 2014 -
A woman goes on a day trip to visit the touristic monuments
commemorating the Battle of the Somme at Vimy Ridge and the
Loghnagar Crater - the site of a mine explosion that killed over
6,000 people - where she encounters remembrance, restaurants and
bright, themed gift shops. Each Slow Dusk is a startling play about
action, humanity, and the legacy of war. Immersing you in the
reality of conflict through vivid, thrilling detail, it gives you a
fresh way of thinking about war - from the past soldiers'
perspective to the woman's present-day experience. Each Slow Dusk
was published to coincide with the first production and national
tour of the play by Pentabus Rural Theatre Company, in autumn,
2014.
A remarkable writer - an original fresh voice, with a sharp
political edge (Vicky Featherstone, Artistic Director the Royal
Court Theatre). British writer Rory Mullarkey is the winner of the
Harold Pinter Commission, the James Tait Black Prize for Drama and
the George Devine Award for most promising playwright. His original
work has been staged at the Royal Court Theatre, the National
Theatre, Manchester Royal Exchange and Shakespeare's Globe Theatre.
His first play collection brings together three previously
published plays with two unpublished works. A writer of
"considerable talent" (Telegraph), this is a powerful and diverse
collection from an established contemporary voice. Single Sex: "a
truly disturbing and twisted tale of obsession" (Culture Bean)
Tourism: A compelling and humorous take on modern cultural
identities. Cannibals: "Brilliantly exciting drama" (Independent)
Wolf From the Door: "Fervent and bracingly original...laced with
exuberant absurdity and moments of twisted humour..." (Evening
Standard) Each Slow Dusk: 'A great war play, original and richly
reflective in form . . . [It] encapsulates the British soldier's
experience in under an hour . . . Remarkable.' ReviewsGate
A civilised and complacent culture is on the brink of collapse...
The tide of change is coming. Madam Ranyevskaya's liberal world of
privilege and pleasure is beginning to show cracks, but she and her
family live on in denial. Lopakhin wants to rescue Ranyevskaya. The
hard-working son of one of her family's serfs, his new-found wealth
can offer shelter and security to the woman he has loved since
boyhood, but it will come at a high price. Meanwhile, revolution
hangs in the air, the poor and hungry are pushing at the doors, and
the tutor Trofimov predicts a tumultuous change for everybody.
Chekhov's final masterpiece is full of wild humour and piercing
sadness in this fresh, funny and honest new translation by
award-winning playwright and Russian speaker Rory Mullarkey. A
portrait of changing times, it maps the building tensions between
the desperate longing to hold onto what is familiar and the
restless lure of the new.
He who learns must suffer. Before setting out for the Trojan War,
King Agamemnon sacrificed his daughter Iphigenia. Many years later,
when Agamemnon returns to his palace, his adulterous Queen
Clytemnestra takes her revenge by brutally murdering him and
installing her lover on the throne. How will the gods judge
Orestes, their estranged son, who must avenge his father's death by
murdering his mother? The curse of the House of Atreus, passing
from generation to generation, is one of the great myths of Western
literature. In the hands of Aeschylus, the story enacts the final
victory of reason and justice over superstition and barbarity. The
original trilogy, comprising Agamemnon, The Libation Bearers and
Eumenides, is distilled into one thrilling three-act play in this
magnificent new translation by award-winning playwright Rory
Mullarkey.
On a farm, in a village, on the fringe of Europe, life is simple
but hard. When the sweeping forces of war and progress pass
through, Lizaveta must run for her life. Finding shelter on an old
woman's farm, she tries to piece her life back together. But her
past catches up with her and she must keep moving. Her journey
through a land of mud and blood, icon painters and holy fools,
takes her across continents to the other side of the world. Through
Lizaveta's eyes familiar places and notions of love, family and
identity become distant and strange. Cannibals is a bold and unique
play by Manchester playwright, Rory Mullarkey. It is his first
full-length play, written while he was Pearson Playwright in
Residence at the Royal Exchange in 2011.
Can you be a hero if you fought for Nazi Germany? The Latvians who
fought for the Third Reich and halted the Red Army parade as heroes
every year through the streets of Riga. As a growing number of
young Russians campaign to halt the 'fascist' march, their Latvian
counterparts join the veterans in commemoration. When teenager Anya
becomes a political activist, her father's attempts to calm the
situation stir up a storm of extremist patriotism. Remembrance Day
takes an look at the fight for the political soul of Latvia.
This brilliant new collection of ten plays for young people will
prove indispensable to schools, colleges and youth theatre groups.
Specially commissioned by the National Theatre for the Connections
Festival 2012 involving 200 schools and youth theatre groups across
the UK and Ireland, each play is accompanied by production notes
and exercises. Power struggles, rites of passage, love and
forbidden relationships are some of the rich themes that run
through the 2012 cycle of plays. Some are deeply funny, some are
provocative and some reflective; and one has really catchy songs!
For the 2012 Festival, the anthology has an international feel and
offers a window on the world. It includes from Australia a play
based on a nineteenth century court case in which a teenage girl
was falsely convicted; from Brazil a drama about young lovers
doomed to tragedy; set in Russia, a play exploring differing
attitudes to National Service and the collapse of the Soviet Union
in 1991; a drama about students' rights to an education and the
Cultural Revolution of 1966 in China; and a comedy involving a
group of Irish country girls travelling to London to audition for
the X-Factor.
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