Haunted Child
By (Author) Joe Penhall
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Methuen Drama
12th April 2012
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
822.914
Paperback
112
Width 129mm, Height 198mm
100g
We have the tools to enlighten and yet our world is darkening. We live in an era of pessimism and worry; we are hollowed out, lurching from crisis to crisis, with no faith that anything will improve, and no great hopes to sustain us. So what's the answer A small boy is driving his mother to distraction - waking at night, hearing phantom noises and fixating on his absent father. Douglas attends an innocuous motivational course involving esoteric philosophy and mysteriously abandons his wife and child to "live in a specific, pre-ordained way according to the tenets of a spiritual leader." Is it a predatory cult or the solution to all their problems And how can a small child be expected to understand adult thinking at its most complex and self-destructive His first dramatic work since 2007, Haunted Child marks the return to the stage of multi-award winning playwright and screenwriter Joe Penhall. With his trademark dark humour and sly observation, he poignantly explores the gulf between childhood and adulthood and asks disturbing questions about the lure of spiritual release in increasingly difficult times.
Penhall is very good at creating a sense of unease. As a metaphor it is insidiously powerful. -- Michael Billington * Guardian *
Gets right under your skin - which is a credit both to Penhall's writing and to the finely judged unease of Jeremy Herrin's production. -- Paul Taylor * Independent *
Penhall's writing is not ostentatious in it's absence of answers; rather it discreetly poses a clutch of questions and just the kind of holes that strengthen the play rather than weakening it. -- Ian Shuttleworth * Financial Times *
An eagerly awaited premier by Joe Penhall..author of Some Voices and Blue/Orange. -- Kate Basset * Independent on Sunday *
An exploration of the fragility of identity. -- Andrzej Lukowski * Time Out London *
This high-energy play appeals to both head and heart. -- Aleks Sierz * Tribune *
Award-winning writer Joe Penhall was described by The Financial Times as 'one of the finest playwrights of his generation.' His debut at the Royal Court, Some Voices, won the John Whiting Award for best new play. His National Theatre play Blue/Orange won an Olivier Award, an Evening Standard Award and the Critics Circle Award for Best Play. Joe wrote and produced the BAFTA winning BBC serial Moses Jones and his feature film of Some Voices starred Daniel Craig and premiered in competition at the Cannes Film festival . This was followed by Enduring Love, also starring Daniel Craig, based on Ian McEwan's novel; and his adaptation of Cormac McCarthy's novel, The Road, starring Charlize Theron and Viggo Mortensen, which premiered in competition at the Venice Film Festival in 2009.