Blackta: Modern Plays
Autor Nathaniel Martello-Whiteen Limba Engleză Paperback – 24 oct 2012
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781408173596
ISBN-10: 140817359X
Pagini: 80
Dimensiuni: 129 x 198 x 13 mm
Greutate: 0.11 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Methuen Drama
Seria Modern Plays
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 140817359X
Pagini: 80
Dimensiuni: 129 x 198 x 13 mm
Greutate: 0.11 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Methuen Drama
Seria Modern Plays
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Blackta will capitalise The Young Vic's current run of recent successes such as A Doll's House and Mad About the Boy.
Notă biografică
Nathaniel Martello-White is a British actor and playwright. Best-known for his acting career, with credits including Joe Turner's Come And Gone and The Brothers Size at the Young Vic, as well as A Midsummer Night's Dream, City Madame, Marat/Sade (RSC), Innocence (Arcola) and Oxford Street (Royal Court), he has also written an anthology of poetry called A Western Nightmare. Blackta, Martello-White's first play, premiered at the Young Vic in 2012.
Recenzii
If the white establishment views black people in sub-human terms, Martello-White does not. He has written detailed human parts with authentic, poetic voices, rooted in London...At its best, Blackta examines what it means to be a black male in modern Britain...David Lan's production is edgy and unflinching. A sensitive balance is struck between comedy and despair.
Nathaniel Martello-White's debut play is concerned with more than just the various hurdles faced by black actors; it also encompasses broader themes of race, identity and masculinity. The play rattles along, a little bit like Beckett on amphetamines, presenting a frantic hamster wheel world in which its characters - named for their skin tone: black, brown, yellow - are forever being tested...The play has a lot to say and for much of the time it does so with humour and verve
Nathaniel Martello-White's rambunctious writing debut begins as a satire about struggling British actors, but soon launches into a lacerating gallop through masculinity at bay ... his demotic writing is drenched in testosterone. Blackta is angry as a bagful of spanners.
A sparky satire about the life of black British thesps . Martello-White is excellent at demotic street dialogue and joshing banter
Martello-White's salty, realist dialogue has the unmistakeable tang of truth to it . the unfairness of 'the thing' is spelled out powerfully in Martello-White's promising and original debut, which never has to preach to get its message across.
Crackling with the author's flair for producing street-wise demotic, edgy banter . combining an acute ear for dialogue with a bold and eloquent visual concept, Blackta is a genuinely promising and original debut
Blackta is an assured and discomforting play, ricocheting between slangy chat, self-critical satire, searing rage, and fantasies.
The play has many glories, not least its searing rhetoric, its unflinching honesty and its moments of sublime physical comedy ... This is not a parable of the acting profession or of some crushed racial minority. It's a story of everyday ambition, of life in the urban rat race, of perseverance triumphing over adversity. And it contains perhaps the finest, and funniest, speech about slavery I've heard.
Nathaniel Martello-White's debut play is concerned with more than just the various hurdles faced by black actors; it also encompasses broader themes of race, identity and masculinity. The play rattles along, a little bit like Beckett on amphetamines, presenting a frantic hamster wheel world in which its characters - named for their skin tone: black, brown, yellow - are forever being tested...The play has a lot to say and for much of the time it does so with humour and verve
Nathaniel Martello-White's rambunctious writing debut begins as a satire about struggling British actors, but soon launches into a lacerating gallop through masculinity at bay ... his demotic writing is drenched in testosterone. Blackta is angry as a bagful of spanners.
A sparky satire about the life of black British thesps . Martello-White is excellent at demotic street dialogue and joshing banter
Martello-White's salty, realist dialogue has the unmistakeable tang of truth to it . the unfairness of 'the thing' is spelled out powerfully in Martello-White's promising and original debut, which never has to preach to get its message across.
Crackling with the author's flair for producing street-wise demotic, edgy banter . combining an acute ear for dialogue with a bold and eloquent visual concept, Blackta is a genuinely promising and original debut
Blackta is an assured and discomforting play, ricocheting between slangy chat, self-critical satire, searing rage, and fantasies.
The play has many glories, not least its searing rhetoric, its unflinching honesty and its moments of sublime physical comedy ... This is not a parable of the acting profession or of some crushed racial minority. It's a story of everyday ambition, of life in the urban rat race, of perseverance triumphing over adversity. And it contains perhaps the finest, and funniest, speech about slavery I've heard.