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Dead At Last, At Last No More Air

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Dead At Last, At Last No More Air

Contributors:

By (Author) Werner Schwab
Translated by Meredith Oakes
Foreword by Diana Damian Martin

ISBN:

9781783191451

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Oberon Books Ltd

Publication Date:

6th May 2014

Country:

United Kingdom

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Main Subject:
Dewey:

832.914

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

100

Dimensions:

Width 130mm, Height 210mm

Weight:

109g

Description

Foreword by Diana Damian Martin Werner Schwabs final work, also known as a theatre-extinction comedy, is a brutal, irreverent and bizarrely comical piece about what happens when an emerging stage production is sabotaged by outsiders. Following a dispute with the cast, the director replaces all the actors with pensioners from a nearby home for the elderly. At first compliant and polite, the forgotten and dispossessed gradually start to question the directors authority, leading to a coup dtat where the theatres cleaning lady is selected as the groups leader. Not everybody survives the new order. Werner Schwab was only thirty-five years old when he was found dead in his room following a New Years Eve drinking spree in 1994. He was, at the time, the undisputed star of German speaking theatre who effortlessly rose to fame for his unique talent with language and his darkly humorous, confrontational narratives. In only four years, he completed fifteen plays with Dead at Last, At Last No More Air (Endlich tot, endlich keine luftmehr) being his last.

Reviews

From backstage farces to postmodern deconstruction, theatre has a habit of turning its gaze on itself. This tendency is pushed to breaking point in Werner Shwab's last play...introducing European theatre in translation to British audiences is both exciting and necessary...thrilling. * What's On Stage *
Fans of anti-naturalistic, avant garde German meta-theatre would do well to head over to the [theatre]...hats off to Meredith Oakes, who must have had a few nosebleeds while translating this wild and prickly beast. * Londonist *
Schwab uses language and humour to offer a contemporary critique of culture and politics, that is hoped will challenge audiences * London Theatre *
It abuses and abandons a staggering number of theatre conventions to show us the failure of established theatre to convey meaning to an audience * Everything Theatre *

Author Bio

Werner Schwab is one of Austria's most famous playwrights, second only to Thomas Bernhard in popularity. He was only 35 years old when he was found dead in his room following a New Years Eve drinking spree in 1994. He was, at the time, the undisputed star of German-speaking theatre who effortlessly rose to fame for his unique talent with language and his darkly humorous, confrontational narratives. In only four years, he completed fifteen plays with Dead at Last, No More Air (Endlich tot, endlich keine luft mehr) being his last.

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