Frayn Plays: 1 : Alphabetical Order; Donkeys' Years; Clouds; Make and Break; Noises Off-9780413592804

Frayn Plays: 1 : Alphabetical Order; Donkeys' Years; Clouds; Make and Break; Noises Off by Frayn, Michael, Frayn, Michael

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Author: Frayn, Michael, Frayn, Michael

Plays, playscripts

Published on 12 December 1985 by Bloomsbury Publishing PLC (Methuen Drama) in the United Kingdom as part of 'the Contemporary Dramatists' series.

Paperback | 560 pages
203 x 133 x 33 | 614g

'One of theatre's subtlest, most sophisticated minds' (The Times) Alphabetical Order: 'A comic essay about two types of woman...a very intelligent comedy because of its classic simplicity, and unusual in the way that the two types of women do not become stereotypes' (Daily Telegraph); Donkeys' Years, a satire on the establishment and British Institutions 'Gorgeous farce, all the funnier for emerging from credible aspirations and natural anxieties...the play is richer and cannier than we expect farces to be.' (New Statesman); Clouds, is a satire on government sponsored trips and a portrait of sexual jealousy,'it is poignantly and unerringly funny' (Guardian); Make and Break is a satirical commentary on British corporate interests abroad 'Full of pain, ruthless observation, and a sense of humour which is sardonic, lunatic and warm' (Sunday Times); Noises Off - the West End hit play about a company of actors stepping from a sex farce into their own nightmarish lives backstage 'A very intelligent joke about the fragility of all forms of drama...a pulverisingly funny play.'(Guardian)'All of these plays are attempts to show something of the world, not to change it or to promote any particular idea of it. That's not to say there are no ideas in them. In fact what they are all about in one way or another is the way in which we impose our ideas upon the world around us...it might be objected that one single theme is a somewhat sparse provision to sustain five separate and dissimilar plays. I can only say that it is a theme which has occupied philosophers for over two thousand years and one which is likely to occupy them for at least two thousand more...'(Michael Frayn)