The Methuen Drama Book of Royal Court Plays 2000-2010: Under the Blue Sky; Fallout; Motortown; My Child; Enron
By (Author) Ruth Little
By (author) David Eldridge
By (author) Roy Williams
By (author) Simon Stephens
By (author) Mike Bartlett
By (author) Lucy Prebble
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Methuen Drama
1st September 2010
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
822.9208
Paperback
464
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 27mm
378g
Five of the best plays from the first decade of the twenty-first century produced by the Royal Court Theatre, London. Royal Court Plays 2000-2010 is an essential anthology for anyone interested in the best work from the most important new writing theatre produced during the last decade.
Under the Blue Sky by David Eldridge is a touching and comic play about love, war and teaching. Produced in 2000 it was revived on the West End in 2008 and has become a turn-of-the-century classic. Roy Williams' play Fallout was written in response to the killing of Damilola Taylor and the McPherson report into racism in the Metropolitan Police and is an essential play exploring how black teenagers are drawn into violence and mutual mistrust. Motortown is about the 'war on terror' and the war in Iraq. Described as 'an instant modern classic, the first major anti-anti-war play of this era' (What's on Stage) Simon Stephens' play examines the effects of the war on individuals. Mike Bartlett emerged as one of the most exciting young writers of recent times when his play My Child premiered in 2007. A play about fatherhood, broken families and what it means to be a good parent, it was heaped with praise: 'Brutal, thrilling... unmissable' (Evening Standard). The final play, Enron, is an epic satire about the notorious rise and fall of Enron and its founding partners, written by Lucy Prebble. A huge hit and acclaimed by critics and audiences alike, the play transferred to the West End in 2010 and opened on Broadway that same year.
David Eldridge has had smash hits with his adaptation of Festen and with his play Market Boy. Roy Williams is one of the most prolific playwrights of his generation with three volumes of his plays published by Methuen Drama. Simon Stephens won the Olivier Award for Best New Play 2005. Stephens Plays 2 was published in 2009. Mike Bartlett's recent plays include Artefacts and Contractions. Lucy Prebble's debut play The Sugar Syndrome won her the Critics Circle Award for Most Promising New Playwright in 2003. Editor Ruth Little is Literary Manager at the Royal Court Theatre.