Description
The first major collection by playwright Emily Mann contains four powerful docudramas. Based on extensive interviews of real people’s experiences, these plays explore various moral issues and questions that still resonate in America today.
Annulla: An Autobiography is a solo piece featuring the reflections of an elderly Jewish woman who survived the Holocaust by pretending to by Aryan. Jerry Talmer of the New York Post calls Annulla one bangup 90 minutes of theatre
I don’t know when I’ve been stimulated as much by anything on the living stage.”
Still Life is composed of interviews with a Vietnam War veteran with PTSD, the pregnant wife he physically and emotionally abuses, and the mistress who finds herself entranced by his passion and violence. This Obie Award-winning play is a powerful affair, full of passion and viability
Mann offers no easy answers or pat solutions, she simply invites us into these three characters lives” (Los Angeles Times).
Execution of Justice follows the trial of the former policeman who shot San Francisco Mayor George Moscone and openly gay City Supervisor Harvey Milk in 1979. Called thought-provoking
a taut courtroom drama” (New York Times), Execution of Justice is theatre reasserting its claim on the country’s moral conscience” (Washington Post).
Greensboro: A Requiem is a particularly all-American tragedy” (New York Times) as Mann interviews those involved in the largely unreported 1979 massacre of unarmed demonstrators by members of the Ku Klux Klan, Greensboro police force, and FBI. Forbes calls Greensboro a provocation, a potent exposé of the less-than-human thing’ which fuels the politics of hate and injustice in America.”
Emily Mann is one of a handful of contemporary playwrights rediscovering and redefining the art of the historical drama. The four plays in this new paperback personalize, with growing surety and power, the Holocaust (
Annulla), the Vietnam War (
Still Life), the assassination of San Francisco s mayor and openly gay supervisor (
Execution of Justice), and the 1979 North Carolina riot in which an anti-Klan rally turned into a Klan killing spree (
Greensboro: A Requiem). Mann always keeps the issues at flesh-and-blood level. Her plays take us on a tour of the hearts of both her heroes and her villains, which has the power to make them that much more heroic and villainous. Her sympathies may be left-wing, but her right-wing characters are never cartoons and her leftists are rarely unalloyed saints. All are written from the gut outward. She shows that such outsize characters don t belong just to the past. Once we look through her eyes, we can see these people walking among us every day.
shoppingexpress.pk's Advice
Note: Before to order any Amazon or eBay product please make sure product technically fulfill your need. We are just importing Amazon and eBay products from USA and have no technical support available. Also please read the product reviews on the Amazon before to order. Also to get any kind of warranty or quality check you can contact directly with the original manufacturer or visit their website. We will not provide any kind of support in that.