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Topic: Drama without Depression?( Topic Closed) | |
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divewench
Player Joined: 11/15/09 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 12 |
Topic: Drama without Depression? Posted: 11/15/09 at 12:56pm |
Hello all!
I am the Chair of the Playreading Committee for my local community theatre. We don't get started until January, but I'm trying to put together a list of plays to read now, so we can hit the ground running. I've already compiled a pretty good list of plays, many from here (Thank you!), but it's still a bit thin in the area of Drama.
What I'm looking for is some serious, sink-your-teeth-into-it drama, but something that's still upbeat or at least hopeful at the end. A bit of included comedy is great, as long as the show is still clearly a drama.
Shows I already have on the list:
Anna in the Tropics
Independence
The Lion in Winter
And Miss Reardon Drinks a Little
The Night of the Iguana
Two Sisters and a Piano
'Night, Mother
The Grapes of Wrath
Children of a Lesser God
The Miracle Worker
Also, our theatre has a rule that we can't do a show that we've produced within the past 10 years, which makes the job a tad more difficult.
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DWolfman
Celebrity Joined: 7/07/05 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 134 |
Posted: 11/15/09 at 2:34pm |
Winner of the Outer Critics Circle Award for Best Off Broadway Play
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Even a man who is pure of heart...
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tristanrobin
Celebrity Joined: 4/25/05 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 704 |
Posted: 11/15/09 at 8:35pm |
Every play by Beth Henley (Miss Firecracker Contest, Crimes of the Heart, The Wake of Jamie Foster, etc.)
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http://tristanrobin.blogspot.com
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pdavis69
Celebrity Joined: 3/26/06 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 437 |
Posted: 11/16/09 at 10:19am |
"something that's still upbeat or at least hopeful at the end"
If this is what you are looking for, you might want to take a closer look at 'night Mother. Not much of a bright future for either character in that play.
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Patrick L. Davis
Fort Findlay Playhouse |
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divewench
Player Joined: 11/15/09 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 12 |
Posted: 11/16/09 at 10:57am |
Thanks so much for the suggestions! I'm still happy to get more too.
Yes, I know 'Night, Mother isn't exactly hopeful, but it's such a good script I couldn't resist making people read it anyway.
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Lazy Bee
Star Joined: 2/21/07 Location: United Kingdom Online Status: Offline Posts: 89 |
Posted: 11/17/09 at 7:37am |
There's a list of 23 possible shows here.
A few of those are on the light side (probably Richard Coleman's shows should be classed as comedies), others may be gloomy - it depends what you find uplifting! - but in particular I would look at:- - For the Good of the Family by George Douglas Lee - The Loft by James Brosnahan - Looking Back by David Wheatley All the scripts can be read in full on-line. |
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pjturner07
Walk-On Joined: 11/23/09 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 7 |
Posted: 11/23/09 at 5:35am |
If you are looking at 'night mother, you might take a look at a little known gem called Radium Girls. We are producing it this spring.
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divewench
Player Joined: 11/15/09 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 12 |
Posted: 11/23/09 at 4:13pm |
Radium Girls looks great. I'm definitely putting that on the list to read. Thanks so much!
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More Theatre, Less Drama!
http://www.pentacletheatre.org/ |
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Mike Swy
Walk-On Joined: 11/23/08 Online Status: Offline Posts: 0 |
Posted: 11/23/09 at 8:05pm |
Of course without knowing what you've done in the last 10 years I/we could be suggesting repeats but "On Golden Pond" and "Steel Magnolias" both have drama, they certainly have their laughs, too, and both end on a very hopeful note. Sometimes these type of scripts (with the humor, also) will attract more of an audience than a straight drama.
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"I never quite got the hang of real life." Phoebe Craddock, "Romantic Comedy"
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edh915
Celebrity Joined: 11/19/09 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 325 |
Posted: 11/24/09 at 2:16pm |
I go for the gentle comedy with dramatic moments and overall "feel good" ending. Three of my favorites are:
Enchanted April - (cast of 8) England in the 1920's. Two ladies fleeing from unhappy marriages rent a villa in Italy for the month of April. Two other ladies come along to help share expenses. All have their own problems. When the two husbands and the handsome owner of the villa arrive out of the blue (due to plot complications), you know that the happy ending is not for behind. Excellent show. We sold out 12 of the 14 performances we gave (120 capacity auditorium). Visiting Mr. Green - (cast of 2) Modern day. A young man is assigned community service and compelled to visit an aging widower. What starts as a fractious relationship (the old man doesn't want visitors, and the young man doesn't want to be there) turns into a caring relationship. Good comic moments interspersed with moving dramatic ones. Each man has his own secret unhappiness. (The young man is gay and unaccepted by his family, the old man has been estranged from his only child for decades.) They ultimately help each other to a "tear in your eye and smile on your face" happy hopeful ending. A Majority of One - (12 or so, some doubling) Late 1950's. Middle aged Jewish widow who lost a son in World War II goes to Japan with her daughter and State Department son-in-law. She meets and comes to know, respect, and love a widowed Japanese business man who lost a daughter at Hiroshima. A gently comic, non-preachy, mature inter-cultural love story that has a few things to say about discrimination and understanding. Superb teary-eyed smiling ending here too. Was made into a movie in the early sixties with Rosalind Russell and Alec Guinness. I've directed Enchanted April twice, and Mr. Green once. I'd do them both again if I could. And I'm still looking for a group who will take a chance on A Majority of One. |
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