Days of Significance
By (Author) Roy Williams
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Methuen Drama
1st November 2006
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
822.914
Paperback
128
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 8mm
98g
Written in response to Much Ado About Nothing and performed by Dominic Cooke's Pericles and The Winter's Tale Company, Roy Williams' Days of Significance is set in market-town England and the deserts of Iraq. Two young soldiers join their friends to binge drink the night before they leave for active service. Their complex love lives and mortal fears directly impact on their tour of duty. Roy Williams looks at how the naive and malformed moral codes of these young men have catastrophic reverberations for the West's moral authority.
Williams has a remarkable talent for engineering unforced, truthful-seeming collisions between tragic emotion and irrelevant or blithely disreputable comedy' * Independent - Paul Taylor *
Days of Significance is a frankly terrifying and utterly compelling examination of the morality of sending young men to fight a war when they are ill-equipped to do so in every way' * Guardian - Michael Billington *
Brace yourself: this is tough, important stuff, alarmingly well done' * Mail on Sunday - Georgina Brown *
Williams, while he does not exonerate the behaviour of the soldiers, draws an immensely compassionate portrait of people propelled into hell' * Financial Times - Sarah Hemming *
Here is a state-of-the-nation play in which Williams leaves his comfort zone of writing about the black community and stretches himself imaginatively with terrific results' * Tribune - Aleks Sierz *
Roy Williams was the first recipient of the Alfred Fagon Award for Starstruck in 1997 which also won the John Whiting Award for the same year. His other plays include Josie's Boys, Night and Day, Home Boys which was broadcast on Radio 4 and Lift Off (Royal Court Theatre Upstairs). His more recent work includes The Gift (Birmingham Rep/Tricycle Theatre 2000), Clubland (Royal Court 2001), Little Sweet Thing (2005), and Slow Time (developed as part of the National Theatre's education programme, 2005).