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Plays and Pinot: Bedroom Farce
Plays and Pinot: Bedroom Farce Synopsis Trevor and Susannah, whose marriage is on the rocks, inflict their miseries on their nearest and dearest: three couples whose own relationships are tenuous at best. Taking place sequentially in the three beleaguered couples’ bedrooms during one endless Saturday night of co-dependence and dysfunction, beds, tempers, and domestic order are ruffled, leading all the players to a hilariously touching epiphany. About the Playwright Alan Ayckbourn, in full Sir Alan Ayckbourn, (born April 12, 1939, London, England), is a successful and prolific British playwright, whose works—mostly farces and comedies—deal with marital and class conflicts and point out the fears and weaknesses of the English lower-middle class. He wrote more than 80 plays and other entertainments, most of which were first staged at the Stephen Joseph Theatre in Scarborough, Yorkshire, England. At age 15 Ayckbourn acted in school productions of William Shakespeare, and he began his professional acting career with the Stephen Joseph Company in Scarborough. When Ayckbourn wanted better roles to play, Joseph told him to write a part for himself in a play that the company would mount if it had merit. Ayckbourn produced his earliest plays in 1959–61 under the pseudonym Roland Allen. His plays—many of which were performed years before they were published—included Relatively Speaking (1968), Mixed Doubles: An Entertainment on Marriage (1970), How the Other Half Loves (1971), the trilogy The Norman Conquests (1973), Absurd Person Singular (1974), Intimate Exchanges (1985), Mr. A’s Amazing Maze Plays (1989), Body Language (1990), Invisible Friends (1991), Communicating Doors (1995), Comic Potential (1999), The Boy Who Fell into a Book (2000), and the trilogy Damsels in Distress (2002). -
Shakespeare in Love
FEB Shakespeare 26 MAR in Love 29 Based on the screenplay by Marc Norman & Tom Stoppard Adapted for the stage by Lee Hall Music by Alex Bechtel Directed by Matt Pfeiffer Welcome to Shakespeare in Love. Every year, many of you cry out to us “Dear God, no more Shakespeare!” While others plead “I loved your Winter’s Tale, your Richard III. Please put on Midsummer. I beg you for a Twelfth Night.” With Shakespeare In Love, the Purists and the Never Barders may unite to curse us with a plague on both our houses, but if they — and you — are someone who loves love, well then . Here is a love letter to romantic love, to the theatre, and to the rebellious, transgressive, mysterious, and glorious madness of both. Whether you keep Shakespeare close to your heart or far from it, we invite you to celebrate what he loved most: the stage, its players, poetry . and a dog. Zak Berkman, Producing Director Lend me your ears Matt Pfeiffer, Director I’ve been really blessed to spend most of my career working on the plays of William Shakespeare. I believe his plays are foundational to Western culture. Love him or hate him, his infuence is an essential part of our understanding of stories and storytelling. And I’ve had the privilege for the last six years of fostering a specifc approach to his plays. I found that attempting to be in conversation with the principals of the theatre practices of Shakespeare’s time was a good starting place—not so much aesthetically, but logistically. -
The 200 Plays That Every Theatre Major Should Read
The 200 Plays That Every Theatre Major Should Read Aeschylus The Persians (472 BC) McCullers A Member of the Wedding The Orestia (458 BC) (1946) Prometheus Bound (456 BC) Miller Death of a Salesman (1949) Sophocles Antigone (442 BC) The Crucible (1953) Oedipus Rex (426 BC) A View From the Bridge (1955) Oedipus at Colonus (406 BC) The Price (1968) Euripdes Medea (431 BC) Ionesco The Bald Soprano (1950) Electra (417 BC) Rhinoceros (1960) The Trojan Women (415 BC) Inge Picnic (1953) The Bacchae (408 BC) Bus Stop (1955) Aristophanes The Birds (414 BC) Beckett Waiting for Godot (1953) Lysistrata (412 BC) Endgame (1957) The Frogs (405 BC) Osborne Look Back in Anger (1956) Plautus The Twin Menaechmi (195 BC) Frings Look Homeward Angel (1957) Terence The Brothers (160 BC) Pinter The Birthday Party (1958) Anonymous The Wakefield Creation The Homecoming (1965) (1350-1450) Hansberry A Raisin in the Sun (1959) Anonymous The Second Shepherd’s Play Weiss Marat/Sade (1959) (1350- 1450) Albee Zoo Story (1960 ) Anonymous Everyman (1500) Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf Machiavelli The Mandrake (1520) (1962) Udall Ralph Roister Doister Three Tall Women (1994) (1550-1553) Bolt A Man for All Seasons (1960) Stevenson Gammer Gurton’s Needle Orton What the Butler Saw (1969) (1552-1563) Marcus The Killing of Sister George Kyd The Spanish Tragedy (1586) (1965) Shakespeare Entire Collection of Plays Simon The Odd Couple (1965) Marlowe Dr. Faustus (1588) Brighton Beach Memoirs (1984 Jonson Volpone (1606) Biloxi Blues (1985) The Alchemist (1610) Broadway Bound (1986) -
The Monthly Magazine of the Atlanta Memorial Arts Center March 1977
THE MONTHLY MAGAZINE OF THE ATLANTA MEMORIAL ARTS CENTER MARCH 1977 I - \6uCanlell AGood Ol’ Boy By What Keeps Him Company Used to be you could spot one a country mile away. Getting tougher all the time though. Because the good ol' boys ain't who they used to be. Exactly. Now you're just as likely to find 'em moving and shaking in the dty as hunting and fisning in the country. They're run ning fast and working hard, trying to change the South. But still, beneath all that "Wall Street" outside, you'll find a little Main Street inside. Maybe that's why this New South everybody's talking about is turning out to be the real South. Because a good ol' boy has the sense to keep what's good, change what's not and the wisdom to know the difference. You can even see it in his whiskey. Rebel Yell, made and sold only below the Mason-Dixon line. Rebel Yell's whisper of wheat im parts a smooth, luxurious flavor tailored especially for the good ol' boy in each of us. Keep company with the Host Bourbon of the South. Ask for Rebel 1 Rebel yell Yell. And if you don't recognize any good ol' boys in the room, don't worry. They'll recognize you. Rebel Yell. .the dSep south. The Good Ol’Boys Bourbon. REBEL YELL DISTILLERY • LOUISVILLE. KENTUCKY • 90 PROOF • KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY j.p Allen FASHIONS FOR WOMEN & CHILDREN, Of Special Interest FURS, SHOES, COSMETICS & GIFTS AT THE CENTER ATLANTA COLLEGE OF ART New U.I.C.A. -
The Philosophy of Eugene O'neill
Loyola University Chicago Loyola eCommons Master's Theses Theses and Dissertations 1929 The Philosophy of Eugene O'Neill Judith Reynick Loyola University Chicago Follow this and additional works at: https://ecommons.luc.edu/luc_theses Part of the Philosophy Commons Recommended Citation Reynick, Judith, "The Philosophy of Eugene O'Neill" (1929). Master's Theses. 440. https://ecommons.luc.edu/luc_theses/440 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Theses and Dissertations at Loyola eCommons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Master's Theses by an authorized administrator of Loyola eCommons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 License. Copyright © 1929 Judith Reynick THE FrlILO~OPHY OF EUG~~B O'NEILL JUDITH Ri!."'YN 10K A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements i'or the degree of Master of Arts in Loyola University 1929 Judi th Reyni ck University of Chicago, Ph.B., 1921 • . Teacher of English, Schurz High School. TABLE ·OF GON'r~ . I. INTRODUCTION . 1. ate. temen t of problem 2. Method of dealing with problem·: 3. Brief sketch of au thor GROUPING' Romantic or objective Xaturalistic and autobiographical 3. Symbolic and subjective OONOLUS,IONS IV. LIS T OF PLAYS RE.'V lEi/ED v. BIBLIOGRAPHY F'..;:;",.-o_-----------------:--------, Eugene O'Neill, the American playwrightl That these terms are almost synonymous is the conclusion one is tl forced to, if , to him, a study of contemporary dramatic criticism of the last fourteen years is any criterion. -
Eugene O'neill and Samuel Beckett
This thesis has been submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for a postgraduate degree (e.g. PhD, MPhil, DClinPsychol) at the University of Edinburgh. Please note the following terms and conditions of use: • This work is protected by copyright and other intellectual property rights, which are retained by the thesis author, unless otherwise stated. • A copy can be downloaded for personal non-commercial research or study, without prior permission or charge. • This thesis cannot be reproduced or quoted extensively from without first obtaining permission in writing from the author. • The content must not be changed in any way or sold commercially in any format or medium without the formal permission of the author. • When referring to this work, full bibliographic details including the author, title, awarding institution and date of the thesis must be given. Theatrical Experience in search of God ; Pessimism and Promise: Eugene O’Neill and Samuel Beckett Seung- En, Song MPhil in English Literature The University of Edinburgh 2012 Song 1 Declaration I hereby declare that this thesis has been composed by myself only. Except for ideas and passages properly acknowledged in the text, this writing is all my own work. The work has not been previously submitted for any other degree or professional qualification. Signed, Seung-En, Song The University of Edinburgh Song 2 Acknowledgements Writing this thesis was a pilgrimage experience, leading me from darkness to light. It would not have been possible to complete this journey without the support of many people: my supervisor, Dr. Olga Taxidou, my academic advisor, M Van De Zande, Professor Choi, Dr. -
Abbey Theatre's
Under the leadership of Artistic Director Barbara Gaines and Executive Director Criss Henderson, Chicago A NOTE FROM DIRECTOR CAITRÍONA MCLAUGHLIN Shakespeare has redefined what a great American Shakespeare theater can be—a company that defies When Neil Murray and Graham McLaren (directors of theatrical category. This Regional Tony Award-winning the Abbey Theatre) asked me to direct Roddy Doyle’s theater’s year-round season features as many as twenty new play Two Pints and tour it to pubs around productions and 650 performances—including plays, Ireland, I was thrilled. As someone who has made musicals, world premieres, family programming, and presentations from around the globe. theatre in an array of found and site-sympathetic The work is enjoyed by 225,000 audience members annually, with one in four under the age of spaces, including pubs, shops, piers, beneath eighteen. Chicago Shakespeare is the city’s leading producer of international work, and touring flyovers, and one time inside a de-sanctified church, its own productions across five continents has garnered multiple accolades, including the putting theatre on in pubs around Ireland felt like a prestigious Laurence Olivier Award. Emblematic of its role as a global theater, the company sort of homecoming. I suspect every theatre director spearheaded Shakespeare 400 Chicago, celebrating Shakespeare’s legacy in a citywide, based outside of Dublin has had a production of yearlong international arts and culture festival, which engaged 1.1 million people. The Theater’s some sort or another perform in a pub, so why did nationally acclaimed arts in literacy programs support the work of English and drama teachers, this feel different? and bring Shakespeare to life on stage for tens of thousands of their students each school year. -
1998 Acquisitions
1998 Acquisitions PAINTINGS PRINTS Carl Rice Embrey, Shells, 1972. Acrylic on panel, 47 7/8 x 71 7/8 in. Albert Belleroche, Rêverie, 1903. Lithograph, image 13 3/4 x Museum purchase with funds from Charline and Red McCombs, 17 1/4 in. Museum purchase, 1998.5. 1998.3. Henry Caro-Delvaille, Maternité, ca.1905. Lithograph, Ernest Lawson, Harbor in Winter, ca. 1908. Oil on canvas, image 22 x 17 1/4 in. Museum purchase, 1998.6. 24 1/4 x 29 1/2 in. Bequest of Gloria and Dan Oppenheimer, Honoré Daumier, Ne vous y frottez pas (Don’t Meddle With It), 1834. 1998.10. Lithograph, image 13 1/4 x 17 3/4 in. Museum purchase in memory Bill Reily, Variations on a Xuande Bowl, 1959. Oil on canvas, of Alexander J. Oppenheimer, 1998.23. 70 1/2 x 54 in. Gift of Maryanne MacGuarin Leeper in memory of Marsden Hartley, Apples in a Basket, 1923. Lithograph, image Blanche and John Palmer Leeper, 1998.21. 13 1/2 x 18 1/2 in. Museum purchase in memory of Alexander J. Kent Rush, Untitled, 1978. Collage with acrylic, charcoal, and Oppenheimer, 1998.24. graphite on panel, 67 x 48 in. Gift of Jane and Arthur Stieren, Maximilian Kurzweil, Der Polster (The Pillow), ca.1903. 1998.9. Woodcut, image 11 1/4 x 10 1/4 in. Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Frederic J. SCULPTURE Oppenheimer in memory of Alexander J. Oppenheimer, 1998.4. Pierre-Jean David d’Angers, Philopoemen, 1837. Gilded bronze, Louis LeGrand, The End, ca.1887. Two etching and aquatints, 19 in. -
Alan Ayckbourn: Complete Play List
Alan Ayckbourn - Complete Writing Credit: Alan Ayckbourn’s Official Website www.alanayckbourn.net License: This resource is available for free reproduction providing it is credited, is not used for commercial purposes and has not been modified without permission. Full Length Plays 1959 The Square Cat 1959 Love After All 1960 Dad’s Tale 1961 Standing Room Only 1962 Christmas V Mastermind 1963 Mr Whatnot 1965 Meet My Father subsequently Relatively Speaking (revised) 1967 The Sparrow 1969 How The Other Half Loves 1970 The Story So Far… subsequently Me Times Me Time Me (revised) subsequently Me Times Me (revised) subsequently Family Circles (revised) 1971 Time And Time Again 1972 Absurd Person Singular 1973 The Norman Conquests comprising Fancy Meeting You subsequently Table Manners Make Yourself At Home subsequently Living Together Round And Round The Garden 1974 Absent Friends 1974 Confusions 1975 Jeeves (with Andrew Lloyd Webber) subsequently By Jeeves (with Andrew Lloyd Webber) (revised) 1975 Bedroom Farce 1976 Just Between Ourselves 1977 Ten Times Table 1978 Joking Apart 1979 Sisterly Feelings 1979 Taking Steps 1980 Suburban Strains (with Paul Todd) 1980 Season’s Greetings 1981 Way Upstream 1981 Making Tracks (with Paul Todd) 1982 Intimate Exchanges comprising Events On A Hotel Terrace Affairs In A Tent Love In The Mist A Cricket Match A Game Of Golf A Pageant A Garden Fete A One Man Protest 1983 It Could Be Any One Of Us subsequently It Could Be Any One Of Us (revised) 1984 A Chorus Of Disapproval 1985 Woman In Mind 1987 A Small Family Business 1987 Henceforward… 1988 Man Of The Moment 1988 Mr. -
Cocteau En La Cerámica
Jean Cocteau «en la cerámica» Cocteau y la cerámica Cocteau et la céramique 25 Explicación Castellano Explicación frances 25 Jean Cocteau nació en París en1889 y como muchos hombres de esa época, aún es joven cuando descubre la guerra y su séquito de horrores. En 1916, a su vuelta del frente, llega a París y frecuenta a los artistas e intelectuales de Montparnasse, donde conoce, entre otros, a Pablo Picasso, Guillaume Apollinaire, Max Jacob, etc. ¡Encuentros fundamentales cuando se tiene poco más de veinte años! Picasso le pasa 8 años y su amistad durará hasta la muerte del poeta. Cocteau, paralelamente a una obra literaria inmensa, a una doble carrera de dramaturgo y cineasta, toda su vida dibujará y practicará las técnicas plásticas más diversas, abordando la pintura, las diferentes formas del grabado, la tapicería, etc., y al final de su vida, la cerámica, en la que se expresa libremente su universo poético. Es el ejemplo por excelencia del artista multidisciplinar adelantado a su tiempo. Es evidente que su enfoque de la unión de la tierra con el fuego es consecuencia de un largo compañerismo y de una sólida amistad con el pintor español. Asimismo se debe a su acer - camiento geográfico en la Costa Azul, que conlleva encuentros periódicos entre los dos hombres. Jean Cocteau est né à Paris en1889 et comme beaucoup d’hommes, à cette époque, il est encore jeune lorsqu’il découvre la guerre et son cortège d’horreurs. En 1916, à son retour du front des opérations militaires, il regagne Paris et fréquente les artistes et intellectuels de Montparnasse, où il rencontre, entre autres, Pablo Picasso, Guillaume Apollinaire, Max Jacob,… Des rencontres essentielles lorsque l’on a qu’un peu plus de vingt ans!. -
Other Half PR
CONTACT: Nancy Richards – 917-873-6389 (cell) /[email protected] MEDIA PAGE: www.northcoastrep.org/press FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE, PLEASE: NORTH COAST REP SERVES UP BANQUET OF FUN IN HOW THE OTHER HALF LOVES By Sir Alan Ayckbourn Performances Beginning Wednesday, April 11, 2018 Running Through Sunday, May 6, 2018 Now extended by popular demand to May 13, 2018 Directed by Geoffrey Sherman Solana Beach, CA Britain’s comic genius, Sir Alan Ayckbourn, has penned a fast-paced and hilariously funny theatrical feast that stands as a classic modern comedy. With the precision of a master chef, Sir Ayckbourn mixes three very different marriages into a pot, simmering with sex, jealousy, and liberally spiced with ingenious stagecraft. Full of clever, razor-sharp dialogue and impeccable split-second timing, HOW THE OTHER HALF LOVES is a treat you won’t want to miss. Find out why The London Daily Mail called this “a delicious, jolly good show.” Geoffrey Sherman directs Jacqueline Ritz,* James Newcomb,* Sharon Rietkerk,* Christopher M. Williams,* Noelle Marion,* and Benjamin Cole. The design team includes Marty Burnett (Scenic Design), Matthew Novotny (Lighting Design), Aaron Rumley (Sound), Elisa Benzoni (Costumes), and Holly Gillard (Prop Design). Cindy Rumley* is the Stage Manager. *The actor or stage manager appears through the courtesy of Actors’ Equity Association, the union of professional actors and stage managers in the United States. For background information and photos, go to www.northcoastrep.org/press. HOW THE OTHER HALF LOVES previews begin Wednesday, April 11. Opening Night on Saturday, April 14, at 8pm. There will be a special talkback on Friday, April 20, with the cast and artistic director. -
Ayckbourn's Stage Reaction to Families Buried In
AYCKBOURN’S STAGE REACTION TO FAMILIES BURIED IN TECHNOLOGY KAĞAN KAYA Cumhuriyet University, Sivas Abstract: The paper analyses the premature warnings of British playwright, Alan Ayckbourn, who foresees that the modern family has been under the onslaught of technology. His dystopia, Henceforward... (1987) , set in the flat of the high-tech addict protagonist, Jerome, tells one of the traditional family stories of the playwright. However, the paper focuses on Ayckbourn’s neglected dramatic mission - that of securing the British family. Keywords: Alan Ayckbourn, British drama, dystopia, family, technology “Happy families are all alike; every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way.” (Tolstoy (2001), 1875-1877:1) 1. Introduction British playwright, Sir Alan Ayckbourn, is often referred to as a famous farceur. However, he is not pleased with this label, because with a “tireless dedication to the idea of theatre and... fierce moral concern with the state of the nation,” (Billington 1989), he has a distinctive multi-dimensional understanding of drama. In fact, he expresses sociologically harsh criticism of British middle-class man through his black comedy, in the light of his vision of drama. Henceforward... , which is the thirty-fourth play of the playwright, is a very noteworthy fraction of Ayckbourn’s tenet, for several reasons. It received the Evening Standard Award for Best Comedy in 1989. It was the second quickest transfer of all Alan Ayckbourn plays to the US, Houston’s Alley Theatre. Even the title of the play suggests a kind of manifesto of the playwright which declares that he is resolute in the changes of his drama.