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Overview

It's Cabaret, we've got our heads down and we're dancing and drinking as fast as we can. The enemy is on its way, but this time it doesn't have guns and gas it has storms and earthquakes, fire and brimstone.... You were the glimmer. At the end of the tunnel. And you went out.

An all-pervasive fear of the future and a guilty pleasure in the excesses of the present drive Mike Bartlett's epic rollercoaster of a play from 1968 to 2525 and back again.

Earthquakes in London includes burlesque strip shows, bad dreams, social breakdown, population explosion, worldwide paranoia. It is a fast and furious metropolitan crash of people, scenes and decades, as three sisters attempt to navigate their dislocated lives and loves, while their dysfunctional father, a brilliant scientist, predicts global catastrophe.

Mike Bartlett's contemporary and directed dialogue combines a strong sense of humanity with epic ambition, as well as finely-aimed shafts of political comment embedded effortlessly into every scene. Earthquakes in London represents modern playwriting at its most exciting and ambitious.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781350138803
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 09/09/2021
Series: Student Editions
Pages: 200
Product dimensions: 5.97(w) x 8.01(h) x 0.54(d)

About the Author

Mike Barlett's debut, My Child (Royal Court, May 2007) saw him hailed by The Stage as 'one of the most exciting new talents to emerge in recent times'. He is a winner of the Old Vic New Voices Award for Artefacts (Bush Theatre), and is currently participating in the prestigious Pearson Playwrights Scheme. He won the Writer's Guild Tinniswood and Imison prizes for his radio play, Not Talking.

Table of Contents

Chronology

Commentary:
Characters and Plot
Climate Change
Generation and Gender Gaps
From the Personal to the Epic: Bartlett's Political Theatre
The play's first production and reception: the National Theatre, Headlong, Rupert Goold, Miriam Buether.
Interview with Mike Bartlett

Play Text

Further Reading
Notes

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