Each Slow Dusk
By (Author) Rory Mullarkey
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Methuen Drama
9th December 2014
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
822.92
Paperback
48
Width 129mm, Height 198mm
66g
The Private misses the farm. The Captain dreams of painting. The Corporal relishes the fight. And a hundred years later, The Woman seeks to understand. 1916 In the darkness of the French night, three young soldiers, a private, a corporal and a captain, cross no mans land towards the enemy trench. Stealth is key to their survival and so they walk in silence, with nothing to communicate the thoughts in their heads save for the barest of gestures. 2014 A woman goes on a day trip to visit the touristic monuments commemorating the Battle of the Somme at Vimy Ridge and the Loghnagar Crater the site of a mine explosion that killed over 6,000 people where she encounters remembrance, restaurants and bright, themed gift shops. Each Slow Dusk is a startling play about action, humanity, and the legacy of war. Immersing you in the reality of conflict through vivid, thrilling detail, it gives you a fresh way of thinking about war from the past soldiers perspective to the womans present-day experience. Each Slow Dusk was published to coincide with the first production and national tour of the play by Pentabus Rural Theatre Company, in autumn, 2014.
Rory Mullarkey won the 2014 George Devine Award for his play The Wolf from the Door and was the recipient of the Pinter Commission in 2014 an award given annually by Lady Antonia Fraser, Harold Pinters widow, to support a new commission at the Royal Court. He was the Royal Courts writer-on-attachment in 2010 and has been closely associated with the theatres international work, translating Russian-language plays from Latvia, Russia and Ukraine, including Aleksey Scherbaks Remembrance Day as part of the 2011 International Season and for a number of staged readings. His first full-length play, Cannibals, opened at the Royal Exchange Manchester in 2013, where he became the youngest playwright to have his work performed on their main stage. In 2014, Rory Mullarkey won the Harold Pinter Playwriting Prize, the George Devine Award (jointly with Alice Birch) and the James Tait Black Prize for Drama for his play Cannibals, published by Methuen Drama.