

Plays Of The 60s
Katharine Brisbane


Why we like it
"'Plays Of The 60s' by Katharine Brisbane encapsulates a decade of dramatic innovation, presenting works that challenge conventions and comment on historical change."
From: Historical DramasThese plays portray a society at the cusp of reform.
The writing reflects a deep sense of the need for change, and awareness of the ground beginning to give way beneath the feet.
The plays are: Alan Hopgood's Private Yuk Objects, a rich portrait of Australia in the mid-60s centred around Australia's participation in the Vietnam war; and This Old Man Comes Rolling Home, Dorothy Hewett's celebration of working-class life and politics in an inner-suburban Sydney during the cold war.
The Lucky Streak by James Searle, a comedy about two young men who share a room in a boarding house, the play is an exploration of the rhythms of the inarticulate and the aggression, rooted in frustration, present in the simplest of domestic conversations; and Norm and Ahmed, Alex Buzo's classic examination of racism and alienation, and the subject of a controversial censorship debate.
Plays Of The 60s is a Australian & New Zealand play written by Katharine Brisbane and published by Currency Press in Sydney (1999).
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UK ed.
Currency Press · 1999 · 272 pp
From £20.80 total
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