London, still.
Another day, another savagely late post. Apologies to the very few people who read this blog! I am very hard up for time, again. I was away all last week, and am mostly catching up.
Next week for the RC we have individual 1/2 hour tutorials to discuss potential ideas for our new play, so I need to sort out my ideas in my head (I have a couple of srtongish- impressions which I am considering combining if possible). I went the the V&A museum yesterday with my spare London-time - it was good, but I think after a while my brains topped taking in the beautiful objects.
In other news, I am bloody fed up of having wet feet, so I am selling a piece of spare PC stuff in order to buy a pair of boots.
I read all of the previously mentioned plays (see below), as well as Caryl Churchill's Drunk Enough to say I Love You (which puts the Bush/Blair relationship as a stilted relationship between two gay lovers) and found them all very different but each very valuable in terms of different styles of writing theatre (as I'm sure was intended). I think I found Woyczeck the most stylistically interesting, but (as usual) struggled with most of the female characters, or messages about women in all the plays (except those in A Raisin in the Sun) -it's not to say that bad, mean, unthinking, singularily sexualised women don't exist, but they are others too... A thought for another day perhaps. When you write for an under-represented group, you are almost always 'representing' not just 'portraying', doubly so in A Raisin in the Sun - another reason why that play is so astonishing. Do read it. I wish I could see it, I think it would have quite a transformative feeling/effect.
Anyway, must get on. Need to formulate ideas for my new play, tentaively titled Eismas/Mine.
tataa! Hxx
Next week for the RC we have individual 1/2 hour tutorials to discuss potential ideas for our new play, so I need to sort out my ideas in my head (I have a couple of srtongish- impressions which I am considering combining if possible). I went the the V&A museum yesterday with my spare London-time - it was good, but I think after a while my brains topped taking in the beautiful objects.
In other news, I am bloody fed up of having wet feet, so I am selling a piece of spare PC stuff in order to buy a pair of boots.
I read all of the previously mentioned plays (see below), as well as Caryl Churchill's Drunk Enough to say I Love You (which puts the Bush/Blair relationship as a stilted relationship between two gay lovers) and found them all very different but each very valuable in terms of different styles of writing theatre (as I'm sure was intended). I think I found Woyczeck the most stylistically interesting, but (as usual) struggled with most of the female characters, or messages about women in all the plays (except those in A Raisin in the Sun) -it's not to say that bad, mean, unthinking, singularily sexualised women don't exist, but they are others too... A thought for another day perhaps. When you write for an under-represented group, you are almost always 'representing' not just 'portraying', doubly so in A Raisin in the Sun - another reason why that play is so astonishing. Do read it. I wish I could see it, I think it would have quite a transformative feeling/effect.
Anyway, must get on. Need to formulate ideas for my new play, tentaively titled Eismas/Mine.
tataa! Hxx
3 comments:
There's a recent film of A Raisin in the Sun you could watch - it stars Puff Daddy though, so not sure how good it will be...
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Raisin-Sun-Sean-Diddy-Combs/dp/B0015GQ3FO/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=dvd&qid=1225982039&sr=1-1
oooh, thanks!
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