Platinum
By (Author) Hannah Patterson
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Methuen Drama
9th December 2016
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Creative writing and creative writing guides
Literary studies: plays and playwrights
Theatre direction and production
822.92
Paperback
80
Width 129mm, Height 198mm
91g
I just think you shouldnt put people on pedestals thats all. It makes them seem perfect when theyre not. Martha McDonald was a world-famous singer Grammy Hall of Fame resident, poster girl for revolution, and writer of one of the most iconic songs of the 1970s. Until she disappeared. For many years she hasnt written or sung a single note. Hidden from public view deep in the Californian Mountains, Martha guards a secret that, if revealed, will change everything. And only one other person holds a key to this enigma: her estranged daughter, Anna. Anna is desperately trying to escape the long shadow of her mothers fame and legacy. Will exposing the secret liberate her and her mother or might it destroy them both Hannah Pattersons intriguing play explores the impact that success and celebrity have on relationships and why honesty is not always the best policy. Platinum received its world premiere at the Hampstead Theatre Downstairs on 9 December 2016.
What begins as a riff on Whos Afraid of Virginia Woolf morphs into a modern-day Dolls House. * New York Times on "Playing With Grown Ups" *
The lighthearted title of Playing with Grown Ups disguises a darker core. Set over the course of a single evening, Hannah Pattersons ... play ... casts a nonjudgmental eye on a 40-year-old first-time mother who finds no pleasure in parenting ... There are echoes of A Dolls House and a refreshing lack of preachiness. * Time Out New York on "Playing With Grown Ups" *
[An] enjoyable and thought-provoking four-hander ... There is something for everyone in this sharply observed comedy, which tackles everything from middle-aged regret and the myth of having it all to the question of whether fulfilment lies in a pile of nappies. It is potential dynamite and there are moments when this piece fizzes with comedy, as well as emotion ... The play is smartly funny and intelligent, and dares to confront a taboo: that not every woman falls head over heels in love with her baby, and that sometimes work may be more alluring and fulfilling than motherhood. * Guardian on "Playing With Grown Ups" *
Engaging new writing that asks the important question "can women have it all" without providing a simplistic answer. * Daily Telegraph on "Playing With Grown Ups" *
Pattersons sharp, funny script twists the knife into twenty-first-century life, bleak in its portrayal ... of a generation of women struggling with the reality of feminisms legacy. * Stage on "Playing With Grown Ups" *
Hannah Patterson's theatre credits include Come To Where Im From (Paines Plough/Southbank Centre), Playing With Grown Ups (Theatre503/Brits off Broadway), MUCH (Cock Tavern), which she is adapting for film and Giving (Hampstead Theatre Downstairs).