Available Formats
Gail Louw: Collected Plays
By (Author) Gail Louw
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Oberon Books Ltd
28th May 2015
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
822.92
Paperback
200
Width 130mm, Height 210mm
234g
Four plays, four iconic characters Blonde Poison: Stella Goldschlag, a Jewish woman living illegally in war-torn Berlin, is betrayed and tortured. When offered the chance of saving herself and her parents from the death camps, she agrees to be a Greifer for the Gestapo and inform on Jews in hiding. Decades after the war Stella agrees to be interviewed by a well-respected journalist her last chance for redemption. Can she ever be released from her past Blonde Poison was the winner of an Argus Angel Award for artistic excellence (Brighton Festival 2012). Miss Dierich Regrets A moving two-hander which depicts the end of Marlenes life, now a recluse within the confines of her bedroom. Her daughter, Maria, has tried unsuccessfully to move her to a care home, but Dietrich believes this will destroy the glamorous femme fatale image that she has fought so long to preserve. Shackleton's Carpenter: Shackletons ship, Endurance, sank in Antarctica, leaving him and his crew of 27 stranded. Harry McNish, Shackletons carpenter and brilliant shipwright, challenged The Boss, but went all the way with him, ensuring all lives were saved after a journey universally agreed to be the most astonishing voyage of survival in history What was it that caused this man to antagonise the hero of Antarctica How does he come to terms with it now, alone and destitute on the wharfs of Wellington, New Zealand. Two Sisters: Is it possible to lose your innocence at 70 Rika and Edith, close and caring sisters, finally discover the truth about their past. Can they adapt or will they now, after all these years, become strangers This heartwarmng play reveals the sweetness and sadness of journeys through life that are inextricably entwined.
Gail Louw is now a full-time playwright and adoring grandmother. Having spent much of her previous life as an academic she now has the luxury of concentrating on writing exhaustively researched plays. Gail is Jewish, but thinks "she may not be a terribly good one"! However, her life has been shaped by the death of both her mother's parents in a concentration camp and the rich culture of her upbringing. This has inspired many of Gail's professional productions including Killing Faith, Two Sisters and Joe ho ho.