Comparison of confusion performance by Alan Ayckbourn We confused by Alan Ayckbourn on November 28, 2002. As it is divided into five interrelated short plays, different groups perform different plays or scenes. My team used the scene called "talk at the park" as a performance clip. Compare this scene with "A Bridge from the Bridge" by Arthur Miller and the TV soap "Eastenders". "Speaking in the park" explains the comedy of human behavior and makes the audience aware of the five contrasting characters sitting on the basic tone, hero, s of solitude and loneliness
Alan Ayckbourn currently has more than 75 plays written. Some of the most popular works are early works such as "relative speaking", "other half of love" and "pastoral of bedroom". As mentioned earlier, these are more traditional comedies and it is one of the reasons why it is definitely popular. However, the genius of Eckburn is another wonderful dark comedy such as "Norman Conquest", "Missing Friend", "Joke", "Women in the Mind", "Time of My Life", "Chaos" It really relates to "It's related to dramas like" invisible friends ".
When this month 's Alan Ayckbourn was 75 years old, his work was more popular than ever in the UK as well as in the UK. His play has also penetrated Japan, China, and Australia. The United States has become one of the most common Eckburn makers in recent years thanks to the exciting production of Norman Conquest, which was held recently at Broadway. Recently, South America, especially Brazil, is attracting great interest. Both are impressive. But further encouraging is that more drama companies seem to work for Aikeburn. "Ironic," Murgatroyd said. "This is a young, new coach, probably because this message has been conveyed, not laughing, but Ayckbourn's most troubling problem to the truth.
Beginning in Broadway in the 1970s, in considerable years compared to the "Equus" of RD Laingian (revived by Daniel Radcliffe) and the "Norman Conquests" trilogy of Alan Ayckbourn imported from Old Vic did. . By the way, if you are really interested in how conscious liberation of that era will change your daily life, "conquest" is a ticket to buy. Looking at "From 9 o'clock to 5 o'clock," Eckbourne's comedy also offers an interesting lesson on the relative nature of the drama. It takes seven hours to execute three "conquest" playings, but it seems that everything is blinking. During "9 o'clock to 5 o'clock", I was watching the clock (9: 30), but I was surprised that I did not hit it in the middle of the night.