Tales of the Tricycle Theatre
By (Author) Terry Stoller
Contributions by Michael Billington
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Methuen Drama
20th June 2013
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
792
Hardback
304
Width 138mm, Height 216mm
499g
Tales of the Tricycle Theatre provides an inside look at the history of the north London theatre which has achieved renown with its staging of black, Irish, verbatim and political drama. Co-published with the Society for Theatre Research, the book draws extensively on archival research and interviews with actors, playwrights, directors, designers and board members to document and celebrate the work of one of Londons most artistically exciting and politically engaged theatres. Terry Stoller presents the Tricycles story, giving you a front-row view of the theatres productions, including: - the work of generations of black British writers, from Mustapha Matura and Alfred Fagon to Roy Williams, Kwame Kwei-Armah and Bola Agbaje - Irish plays ranging from Bernard Shaws John Bulls Other Island to Brendan Behans The Hostage - its critically lauded political play cycles The Bomb A Partial History and The Great Game: Afghanistan, the latter performed at the Pentagon in 2011 [The Tricycle Theatre] has been both defiantly local and proudly international, it has held a mirror up to British society, and, above all, it has proved that political engagement is not incompatible with the highest artistic standards. It has helped make my life as a critic worthwhile . . . Michael Billington, Foreword
Tales of the Tricycle is not so much a full-scale history of the Kilburn-based theatre that opened in 1980 as a kind of patchwork quilt looking at highlights through the eyes of those that lived through them...this is the kind of book that should put smiles on the faces of readers on a constant basis. -- Philip Fisher * British Theatre Guide *
Terry Stoller writes about documentary and contemporary theatre. She has a Ph.D. in theatre from the Graduate Center of the City University of New York and has taught at various branches of CUNY. She was formerly a singer and an actress.