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The Trojan Women: La/darfur Dreamscape Charles a Duncombe
The Trojan Women: La/darfur Dreamscape
Charles a Duncombe
Publisher Marketing: Nominated for "Best Adaptation," 2009 LA Weekly Theater Awards. Based on first person narratives of atrocities and genocide are drawn from reports published by Human Rights Watch, Congo Watch, the United Nations, and Amnesty International, this powerful new work by City Garage playwright Charles Duncombe resets Euripides famous tragedy in the war-torn Darfur of today. At its heart, the familiar characters of the ancient story-Queen Hecuba, her women, Cassandra, Andromache-watch the destruction of their city, are driven from their homeland, and taken away as slaves. In the foreground are events of today and the recent past: the wars in Darfur, and Congo, Rwanda, Chechnya, Bosnia, and the violence endured by the women and children victimized in those conflicts. "The geopolitical realities in Duncombe's freewheeling text range from the harrowing statistics of recent genocides to sardonic swipes at our blog-infested society. Darfur, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, overpopulation, climate change and more punctuate the same gender positions that have driven this saga since its Peloponnesian War premiere... Duncombe and director Frederique Michel pull few punches in the wake of burning Illium...this company watershed is a triumph." --"Critic's Choice" Los Angeles Times Contributor Bio: Duncombe, Charles A Charles Duncombe is the author of the City Garage texts Atrocities (2000), Cinema Stories: Ceremonies of Unendurable Bondage (2002), Oedipustext/LA (2003) Patriot Act: A Reality Show (2004), and Caged (2014). He also wrote the company's adaptations of Heiner Muller: Medeatext; Los Angeles/Despoiled Shore (2000); Frederick of Prussia/George W's Dream of Sleep (2001); and The Mission (Accomplished) (2008). His English-language versions (with Frederique Michel) of Moliere's The Bourgeois Gentilhomme and The School For Wives premiered in 2009 and 2010 at City Garage. Patriot Act won the 2004 Fratti-Newman Award for Political Playwriting. All three of his Muller adaptations were nominated for the LA Weekly's "Best Adaptation" award, as was his contemporary version of The Trojan Women: LA/Dafur Dreamscape in 2010. He is also the author of the short story collection Ceremonies of Unendurable Bondage and Other Stories. He lives in Los Angeles. He lives in Los Angeles.
| Medios de comunicación | Libros Paperback Book (Libro con tapa blanda y lomo encolado) |
| Publicado | 21 de febrero de 2012 |
| ISBN13 | 9781470031718 |
| Editores | Createspace |
| Páginas | 122 |
| Dimensiones | 133 × 203 × 7 mm · 136 g |