Difference between revisions of "The Sport of my Mad Mother"

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(Created page with "by Ann Jellicoe. Set in a cockney neighborhood of London, it combines realism, mysticism, music, dance, and ritual to create a powerful, feminist myth about modern civilization. ...")
 
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by Ann Jellicoe. Set in a cockney neighborhood of London, it combines realism, mysticism, music, dance, and ritual to create a powerful, feminist myth about modern civilization. A prize-winner in the 1956  playwright’s competition by ''The Observer'',  it was first staged by the Royal Court Theatre and directed by George Devine and Jellicoe. Although originally a commercial failure, the play was later performed all over the world in many different languages.  Jellicoe revised the original 1958 version in 1962 to create a better play.
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by Ann Jellicoe. Set in a cockney neighborhood of London, it combines realism, mysticism, music, dance, and ritual to create a powerful, feminist myth about modern civilization. A prize-winner in the 1956  playwright’s competition by ''The Observer'',  it was first staged by the Royal Court Theatre in 1958 and directed by George Devine and Jellicoe. Although originally a commercial failure, the play was later performed all over the world in many different languages.  Jellicoe revised the original 1958 version in 1962 to create a better play.
  
Performed at the [[Space Theatre]] in the 1970s, with **, [[Stefan Bubenzer]], **.   
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Performed in South Africa at the [[Space Theatre]] in the 1970s, with **, [[Stefan Bubenzer]], **.   
  
 
== Sources ==
 
== Sources ==

Revision as of 07:35, 11 September 2012

by Ann Jellicoe. Set in a cockney neighborhood of London, it combines realism, mysticism, music, dance, and ritual to create a powerful, feminist myth about modern civilization. A prize-winner in the 1956 playwright’s competition by The Observer, it was first staged by the Royal Court Theatre in 1958 and directed by George Devine and Jellicoe. Although originally a commercial failure, the play was later performed all over the world in many different languages. Jellicoe revised the original 1958 version in 1962 to create a better play.

Performed in South Africa at the Space Theatre in the 1970s, with **, Stefan Bubenzer, **.

Sources

Go to South African Theatre/Bibliography

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