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"Scars are like medals. They show we have taken part in the life."Crocodile Seeking Refuge is the second play to be inspired by author Sonja Linden''s writing residency at The Medical Foundation for the Care of Victims of Torture. It deals with the lives of several refugees struggling to gain the right to residency in a Britain which is hostile to immigrants and refugees.
Introduced by award-winning writer Bonnie Greer with a unique bibliography by Susan Croft, Curator, London Theatre Museum. Includes: Harvest by Manjula Padmanabhan; Made in England by Parv Bancil; Brother to Brother by Michael McMillan; Calcutta Kosher by Shelly Silas and Under Their Influence by Wayne Buchanan.
One of the most prolific writers of plays for children, his intelligent adaptations of fairy tale classics appeal to audiences of all ages. This volume includes provocative renderings of "of Sleeping Beauty, Cinderella" and "Beauty and the Beast."
"Playing for the Heart "explores the struggle of young Evelyn Glennie to become a percussionist despite her profound deafness. "Eye of the Storm "offers young audiences a contemporary version of "The Tempest, "with the opportunity for disguises. "Red Red Shoes "uses the context of Eastern Europe to explore war, ethnic boundaries and the struggle for life and death through the contemporary reworking of an old myth.
The plays in Young Blood are set in many different places; Jamaica, ancient Greece, London's East End, the club scene and a world at the end of a hole in a jumper. These are plays about love, racism, absent fathers, leaving home, betrayal, drugs. Above all, in one way or another, each of them involves journeys and choices. Choices about who to love, where to live and what to be. You can use the plays or extracts of them to explore a particular issue or to look at that issue from a different angle. Each of the plays uses a different theatrical style, from the naturalism of Geraniums to the surreal world of The Girl who fell through a hole in her Jumper and the fast filmic style of Out of their Heads.This collection doesn't include production or teachers' notes. There are no fixed rules about how to use the plays. Produce the whole play to a paying audience or work on scenes. Play about with the casting. Double parts or have six people playing the same character. The most important thing is to have fun with the language, characters and staging so that young people enjoy working on the plays. All of the plays in this collection have a unique theatrical vision. Combine that with the energy, commitment and imagination of a group of young people and the results will definitely be worth watching!Includes the plays The Girl who fell through a hole in her jumper by Naomi Wallace and Bruce Mcleod, The Search for Odysseus by Charles Way, Darker The Berry by J.B.Rose, Geraniums by Sheila Yeger, and Out of their Heads by Marcus Romer.
The first drama anthology by Black and Asian women writers.
I Have Before Me a Remarkable Document... was inspired by the real life experiences of Rwandan refugees in the UK. The play tells the story of two people from entirely different worlds who meet at a Refugee Centre in London: Juliette is a young Rwandan asylum seeker, determined to write a book on the genocide that killed her family; Simon is a middle-aged failing novelist, whose job is to help people write. The play follows their funny and touching relationship and tackles issues that face many refugees who live in the UK today.I Have Before Me a Remarkable Document... was a Time Out Critics' Choice and was broadcast by BBC World Service as well as touring nationally and internationally. Following a London run and National UK tour, the play received its American premiere at Kansas City Rep in March 2005 and has subsequently gone on to receive more than 30 productions across the US.
The Arab-Israeli Cookbook is a drama created from the everyday realities of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The project began when the Caird Company sent the writer Robin Soans and directors Rima Brihi and Tim Roseman to Israel, Gaza and the West Bank in 2003. There they sampled a variety of dishes in homes, restaurants, shops and cafes and met dozens of people with different cultures, backgrounds and beliefs. Each person had a story to tell and a recipe to cook. Robin Soans has constructed a verbatim play from the words he collected. Arab and Israeli voices come together to bring insight and understanding to the melting pot of Middle Eastern affairs.There is a cookery book that accompanies the play with photographs of the people he met and their recipes.
A collection of plays from the Czech Republic, Poland, Hungary, Montenegro, Romania, Belorussia, and Yugoslavia.
In a country torn by war, two kids escape from a POW camp. Chased by the enemy, they steal a car and head for Paradise. Captured by a lone soldier, the two kids are forced to fight for survival, forced to choose where and what paradise really is. A provocative, bleakly humorous play for young people.
Companion book of recipes to Soans' Arab-Israeli Cookbook, the play text. Simple recipes offering the best of Middle Eastern food and more. Gathered in Israel and Palestine from ordinary people going about their everyday lives, the author found that each person had a story to tell and a recipe to cook. Robin Soans tells of his moving encounters with the people of the region and provides authentic pictures of those he met, the places he visited and the food he tasted. We bring you their individual recipes handed down through the generations - from carrot cake to kebabs, from falafels to gefilte fish, from tabbouleh to tuna melt ...
English version of Carriere''s popular French play L''Aide Memoire.One morning, confirmed bachelor Jean-Jacques leaves his door ajar-and a total stranger slips into his life. Is she a squatter, somewhat deranged, or a woman from his past? Jean-Jacques'' orderly world is turned upside down, when what started as a comic encounter changes his life forever.
A poignant novel about loss and self-discovery, it unravels a mysterious chain of events that touches people across different decades and continents - but can they all find each other before time runs out? Set in the 1980s.
A story of mishaps and adventure on the beautiful French canals in which a grumpy grandfather learns to love his feisty granddaughter, and along the way uncovers a burning secret about his son, locked up in a French prison. A beautifully written and expertly plotted tale from a critically-acclaimed novelist.
By Mick Jackson, adapted for the stage by Nick WoodStage adaptation of Mick Jackson's celebrated novel (1997), which was shortlisted for the Booker Prize, the Whitbread First Novel Award and winner of the Royal Society of Authors' First Novel Award.Adapted by Nick Wood, critically acclaimed playwright and bestselling author of A Girl With A Book and Other Plays; his works are performed extensively in the UK, USA and Europe.Co-produced by Nottingham Playhouse (co-producer of the critically acclaimed stage version of 1984) and Nick Wood's AJTC (A Girl with a Book). A life of fascination, obsession and deep scientific curiosity.William Cavendish-Scott-Bentinck is an eccentric Nottinghamshire aristocrat whose imagination and curiosity know no bounds. This deceptively simple man struggles to come to terms with a world that is teeming with new knowledge, ill-founded opinion and gossip.Why does he hide himself away? What is his fascination with tunnels? Will he ever unearth the secrets hidden in his memory?In a sequence of events that are often curious and frequently hilarious, he reveals moments of surprising perception and wisdom. The Underground Man is a delectable blend of fact and fiction in which the intriguing details of a complex life are richly explored through the vibrant imagination of a gentle soul.
Eight Plays from Singapore, Vietnam, Malaysia, Thailand, the Philippines, Indonesia and CambodiaSelected and Edited by Cheryl Robson and Aubrey MellorPlaywrights: Jean Tay, Floy Quintos, Tew Bunnag, Ann Lee, Nguyen Dang Chuong, Joned Suryatmoko, Alfian Sa'at, Chhon Sina
A list of 50 excellent plays for young people compiled by two experts in the field. Includes information about the history of theatre in education dedicated to children and young people and the best companies working in the field in the United Kingdom.
A thrilling story of art, crime and high society from an indigenous author at the peak of his craft.
* Award-winning playwright Cowan explores the issue of classroom bullying and how teachers deal with it. * Useful to promote discussion of bullying and homophobia. * Suitable for schools, colleges and youth theatres to perform.
It''s New Zealand, 1914, and the biggest war the world has known has just broken out in Europe.William eagerly enlists for the army but his younger brother, Edmund, is a conscientious objector and refuses to fight. While William trains to be a soldier, Edmund is arrested.Both brothers will end up on the bloody battlefields of France, but their journeys there are very different. And what they experience at the front line will challenge the beliefs that led them there.
An historical novel about the birth of motor racing, based on the true story of rivalry between champions.
A collection of new plays from some of the best playwrights whose work has been produced in London New Play Festival.
Five plays by important women writers in the Dutch theatre translated into English for the first time includes: Write Me in the Sand by Inez Van DullemenThe Caracal by Judith HerzbergA Thread in the Dark by Hella HaasseEat by Matin Van VeldhuizenDossier: Ronald Akkerman by Suzanne Van Lohuizen
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