We Wait in Joyful Hope
By (Author) Brian Mullin
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Methuen Drama
1st August 2016
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
812.6
Paperback
112
Width 129mm, Height 198mm
100g
One wants to restore the image of the Church, gain back the communitys trust. And as you know, this part of town has long been resistant to social progress. Otherwise Sister Bernadine wouldnt need to work so hard. Sister Bernie D'Amato doesn't look like a nun. In an oversize Bob Marley T-shirt, she smokes pot, befriends local gangs and passes out condoms to the Ukrainian prostitutes who cruise around their New Jersey slum. When the womens shelter Bernie runs comes under threat from a property developer, she vows to fight back, and recruits a teenage X-Factor wannabe and an ageing ex-nun to help. But as pressure mounts on the shelter to take their pay-out and close down, tensions start to mount in a community struggling to survive. We Wait In Joyful Hope is a funny and touching exploration of religion and capitalism in contemporary USA. Theatre503 Writer in Residence Brian Mullin delivers a sparkling state of the nation debut drama. This edition is published to coincide with the plays world premiere at Theatre503, London, in May 2016.
Brian Mullin, is an American playwright and dramaturg based in London. He is the dramaturg for Babakas Theatre Company whose first production Our Fathers toured internationally. Brians work was developed at the Lincoln Center Directors Lab, Ars Nova and Dixon Place in the United States, before re-located to London in 2009 to attend the MA Writing for Performance course at Goldsmiths. In the UK, his play M4M was workshopped in High Tides Genesis LAB and he received a Mauve New World commission from Ovalhouse/Pink Fringe to write It Gets Better. He is a former member of the Orange Tree Writers Group and a founding member of international devising company Babakas. As a dramaturg and writing tutor, he has worked at venues including the Arcola, the Tricycle, and the National Theatres New Views course. He holds degrees in theatre and literature from Yale and Oxford, where he was a Rhodes Scholar.