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Saint Joan
by George Bernard Shaw
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by George Bernard Shaw
Some months ago we asked for suggestions of plays readers would like to have read. Here are the results.I
Contemporary British/Irish Playwrights: Brian Friel (Dancing at Lughnasa?)
Conor McPherson (The Seafarer?)
Look Back in Anger (2)
A good production of any Chekov (The Seagull?)
The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie
The Dog Logs
That Championship Season
Mass Appeal
Tru
Full Gallop
Kindertransport
Taming of the Shrew
The Little Foxes
The Kentucky Cycle
The Immoralist
The Boys Next Door
Fuddy Meers
True West.
Tartuffe
The only worst thing you could have told me was….
Uncommon Women and Others
Forever Yours Marie Louie.
The Heart is a Lonely Hunter
Midsummer Nights Dream
The Little Prince
Sex, Drugs, and Rock & Roll
Copenhagen
Rebecca
Turn of the Screw
Dark of the Moon
The Rainmaker
Kennedy’s Children
Savage in Limbo
Mamet’s Faustus
Accidental Death of an Anarchist
The Curious Savage
Traveler Without Luggage, Jean Anouilh;
Something Singing, Christian Hamilton
Every Tuesday night for the next six months Cold Reads will focus on plays by Tennessee Williams.
This month we’re reading early one-acts, warming up for all of his first thirteen (and only successful) Broadway plays. We start one every other week, and finish it the next.
Call it a Tribute.
Our rough schedule (adjusting for holidays):
Jun 2 & 9: The Glass Menagerie (1944)
Jun 16 & 23: A Streetcar Named Desire (1947)
Jun 30 & July 6: Summer and Smoke (1948)
Jul 13 & 20: The Rose Tattoo (1951)
Jul 27 & Aug 4: Camino Real (1953)
Aug 11 & 18: Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1955)
Aug 25 & Sep 1: Orpheus Descending (1957)
Sep 8 & 15: Suddenly, Last Summer (1958)
Sep 23 & 30: Sweet Bird of Youth (1959)
Oct 7 & 13: Period of Adjustment (1960)
Oct 20 & 27: The Night of the Iguana (1961)
Nov 3 & 10: The Eccentricities of a Nightingale (1962)
Nov 17 & 23: The Milk Train Doesn’t Stop Here Anymore (1963)
We gather now in Charlotte at the Plaza Midwood Library (although we may branch out, depending on the response). Just let us know you’re coming by joining the Facebook Group event (click here).
If you don’t use Facebook, leave a comment on this page.
Pick and choose. Come for your favorites—or the ones you don’t already know. There’s no obligation. When folks stop coming, we stop.
Doesn’t mean you can’t read Tennessee. Pick another day or time. Have friends over and, instead of Trivial Pursuit…
No problem. We post scripts on line. Just download them to your e-reader (or print it out). You’ll need a password (copyright laws). Request one in the comment box. Then pick a time and place, call some friends.
Again, that’s just our base group. Some may read all thirteen in a long weekend; others may just pick and choose. It doesn’t matter how it’s done—our goal is to encourage people to read plays.
Why Tennessee?
After Eugene O’Neill, Williams and Miller stand out as America’s titan playwrights. We read twenty by O’Neill six years ago. We’ll do Miller next.
More to come
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by Luigi Pirandello
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by William Congreve
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All for Love-print (small font, two-column landscape)
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