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Gizmo - Don't Eat Little Charlie

Gizmo - Don't Eat Little Charlie( )
Author: Ayckbourn, Alan
Dorst, Tankred
Ehler, Ursula
Series title:Connections Ser.
ISBN:978-0-7487-4289-9
Publication Date:Jun 2001
Publisher:Nelson Thornes Limited
Book Format:Paperback
List Price:AUD $38.50
Book Description:

Ten plays have been selected from the BT National Connections scheme, in which some of the brightest contemporary playwrights in the UK and Europe were commissioned by the Royal National Theatre to produce original drama specifically for young people.

Book Details
Pages:1
Detailed Subjects: Juvenile Nonfiction / Drama
Physical Dimensions (W X L X H):12.4 x 19.4 x 0.7 cm
Book Weight:0.18 Kilograms
Author Biography
Ayckbourn, Alan (Author)
Many American tourists who flock to the annual Ayckbourn offering in London's West End, think of Alan Ayckbourn as Great Britain's Neil Simon. The analogy holds true to the extent that the relationship between Ayckbourn's and Simon's plays illustrates the difference between British and American theater and audiences. Both writers capture the social machinations of middle-class characters in daily situations that are made compelling simply by the addition of clever but conventional plots, dramatic intrigues, twists, and discoveries.

However, where Simon's plays tend to evolve into a condition of broad pathos or comedy, luxuriating in bittersweet melodrama, Ayckbourn's offerings revel in ever increasing intricacy, sharply incisive verbal dueling, and a dark social resonance that sounds much greater depths than in Simon's drama.

Ayckbourn's scripts embody boggling challenges for directors and actors as well as audiences. Intimate Exchanges (1985), for example, a sequence of plays for ten characters played by only two actors, involves numerous moments when an actor chooses to send the script off on one of two alternative directions. The Norman Conquests (1975) typifies Ayckbourn's determination to squeeze as much as possible out of a dramatic construct. The trilogy's first play, Table Manners, offers a typical Ayckbourn scenario with family traumas played against each other in the constrained setting of a dining room. In the second and third plays, Living Together and Round and Round the Garden, the audience is exposed to simultaneous layers of action that occur in two other venues, the living room and garden, when characters are not onstage in the dining room. Each play makes sense on its own, but the trilogy taken as a whole embodies a vision of this family that is larger than the sum of the individual parts. Aychbourn has also been known for rather experimental staging. The Way Upstream (1982), for example, is set on and around a boat and requires floodin



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