'Squires focuses on the aftermath of the shooting of a young Kentish soldier, Bobby, while on patrol in Helmand province. He ostensibly died a hero but, on the day of his funeral, we see his siblings and best friend bitterly arguing about the real Bobby. According to his drug-dealer brother Danny, he was a total wimp who, in civilian life, wouldn't even defend his sister Emily; and Emily herself, although dressed to the nines to pay a TV tribute to Bobby, admits she hasn't the vaguest idea why he died or what he was fighting for. Interwoven with this bilious episode are three scenes, set a few months later, between Bobby's 16-year-old cousin Charlie, and her friend Sammy, suggesting that, if the concept of heroism survives, it is on the personal rather than the public level.' - The stage
The political and time context doesn't appeal to me and I had doubts in the first place to this monologue therefore I've decided not to do it.
Tuesday, 29 April 2014
Debris By Dennis Kelly - The last Chicken
I decided not to do this one because I found I didn't like the context after researching the play.
'A one-act play where a brother and sister try to make sense of their dysfunctional childhood. The pair lie about their past creating new elaborate past stories, the central narrative is of the brother, Michael, who finds a baby who he names Debris trying to keep him a secret and alive from his alcoholic father confiding only in Michelle his sister who is fascinated with their mother's death and gives several contradicting stories of how she died.'
It doesn't appeal to me and therefore I can't act it as well
'A one-act play where a brother and sister try to make sense of their dysfunctional childhood. The pair lie about their past creating new elaborate past stories, the central narrative is of the brother, Michael, who finds a baby who he names Debris trying to keep him a secret and alive from his alcoholic father confiding only in Michelle his sister who is fascinated with their mother's death and gives several contradicting stories of how she died.'
It doesn't appeal to me and therefore I can't act it as well
Precious little Talent
Joey is a young English law graduate, pretty and privileged, who bought into the idea that if she was a good girl who worked hard, went to the right university and got a good degree, the rest of her life would be handed to her on a plate. But the recession has put paid to that. Now, without a job, Joey has fled to New York to be with her academic father George (John McColl) for Christmas. But George's future is crumbling, and he is reliant on the help of Sam (Simon Ginty), a good-natured 19-year-old who is imbued with a sunny American optimism in the wake of Obama's election victory.
Wednesday, 9 April 2014
Annie's charcacter
Annie:
"Annie, the fragile, ladylike new girl who initially retches at the gutting shed’s
smell"
"Annie, the fragile, ladylike new girl who initially retches at the gutting shed’s
smell"
- 16 years old
- Previously worked in Blackheath in 'Service'
- Was raped by the master and mistresses son
- Fell pregnant - resulted in the still birth of her illegitimate baby
- Was fired
- Became the 'new girl' at a meat gutting shed
- Lives in the home for 'friendless girls'
- Friends with the older girl 'Ellen' - a "bookish union sympathizer"
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"The Gut Girls" was first staged in 1988 at the South East London venue: the Albany Empire, Deptford (not a mainstream playhouse- Aston).
Since then it has been performed at numerous venues, most notably the Deptford Dockyards from June 20- July 8, 2002.
Review from 'Impact Magazine', The gut Girls @ NewTheatre'
http://www.impactnottingham.com/2012/03/the-gut-girls-new-theatre/
"A haunted Annie, whose looks often held a thousand words."
Notable things of 'The Gut Girls' in General and therfore Annie's character:
Review from 'Impact Magazine', The gut Girls @ NewTheatre'
http://www.impactnottingham.com/2012/03/the-gut-girls-new-theatre/
"A haunted Annie, whose looks often held a thousand words."
Notable things of 'The Gut Girls' in General and therfore Annie's character:
The way of their speaking. –
They are wearing vulgar clothes. –
Their life style and manners. –
They are working under very hard conditions. –
They are treated like one of the animals they have chopped all day long. –
They have no insurance or no compensation for chopping themselves.
Act 1, Scene 5
Example of Annie's Monologue by Emma Selwood
Monday, 7 April 2014
Review - The Space
http://london.tab.co.uk/2013/02/21/the-gut-girls/
The Other Girls:
"Polly is funny, Maggie is strong and outspoken. Kate is the baby of the group but has the foulest mouth of them all and Ellen is the women’s rights enthusiast and, much to the confusion of the other girls, the only “lettuce eater” (vegetarianism wasn’t a term the Victorians were overly familiar with)." - The Space
"The first sees the girls in all of their boisterous glory, bantering and drinking and whilst working hard under merciless conditions. Behind the bawdy laughs, however, lie serious depictions of the vast gender inequalities of Victorian England."
The Other Girls:
"Polly is funny, Maggie is strong and outspoken. Kate is the baby of the group but has the foulest mouth of them all and Ellen is the women’s rights enthusiast and, much to the confusion of the other girls, the only “lettuce eater” (vegetarianism wasn’t a term the Victorians were overly familiar with)." - The Space
- Important to see how the girls connect with one another as Annie is confessing her thoughts and past in her monologue to 'Ellen', the 'Woman's rights's enthusiast' and also the vegetarian. What are the dynamics of their relationship? Does Annie trust Ellen more than the other girls in order to spill her heart out to her? Knowing these questions will aid me in what reactions to use in reactions to ellen's as if I were really talking to her. For example: 'I was in service, oh, not round here,' - The second part is in reaction to Ellen's reaction.
- Important to understand the journey in which all five girls go through within the play and therefore within their own monologue too, especially that of Annie's. Starting off slightly contained and becoming more and more out of control with emotions, heart ache etc
- Maybe Annie's heart ache is closer to our reality today that first thought?
First Act:

"In the first act, the girls give as good as they get but when they lose their jobs and are forced to train for service, the audience watch as the exquisite vivaciousness of the characters is squeezed right out of them and replaced with mop caps and bad tempers."
Second Act:
The devastation of the second half is intensified by the Lady Helena, an aristocratic woman who truly believes she is training the girls for the good of their lives and their souls. In reality, her training serves only to crush what little spirit society had allowed them to keep hold of. The final monologues, given in quick succession, convey utter defeat and submission.
Deptford and Cattle Market History
History:
Through Deptford began two small communities, one at Ford, and the other fishing village on The Thames. The two grew together and flourished as one big community.

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[Adapted From Wikipedia] Sources from The Stage
Other images from Deptford:
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A cobbled street in a Deptford slum around 1900 |
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Deptford Power Station 1912 |
About Sarah Daniels
- British
- Lesbian
- Feminist
"the only radical lesbian feminist to have made it into mainstream" may help to explain the source of her notoriety. - Carole Woodis (praise for The Bloomsbury Theater Guide)
She has become one of Britain's leading feminist playwrights. However, her success has been tinged by controversy and, often, by extreme critical backlash.
She admits to over ambition and to leaving issure unresolved in her plots, much to the criticisms of others.
"offer audiences complex theatrical experiences that place the female experience center stage.
-In addition to writing for the stage, Daniels also has written for radio and television, including the popular BBC "- "Masterpieces" (1983)
- "Byrthrite" (1986)
- "Neaptide" (1986)
- "Beside Herself" (1990)
- "Head-Rot Holliday" (1992)
- "The Madness of Esme and Shaz" (1994)
- "The Devil's Gateway"(1983)
Venue's her plays have been performed at:
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