A listg for the 2023 Edburgh Frge show Awake, Gay and Wrg a Play at The Street Bar.
Contents:
- AWAKE, GAY AND WRG A PLAY
- AWAKE, GAY AND WRG A PLAY
- AWAKE, GAY AND WRG A PLAY
- AWAKE, GAY AND WRITING A PLAY
- EDBURGH PREVIEW: 'AWAKE, GAY AND WRG A PLAY '
- AN EPIC NEW BROADWAY PLAY ON MORN GAY LIFE ASKS: N WE LOVE OURSELV?
AWAKE, GAY AND WRG A PLAY
* awake gay and writing a play *
Awake, Gay and Wrg a Play.
Homosexualy and the theatre have not been strangers.
AWAKE, GAY AND WRG A PLAY
Eventbre - Gion Seymour prents Edburgh preview: 'Awake, Gay and Wrg a Play ' - Saturday, 24 June 2023 at Bassd, Juignac, Charente. Fd event and ticket rmatn. * awake gay and writing a play *
Jordan Barbour, Darryl Gene Dghtry Jr., Kyle Soller, Arturo Luís Soria and Kyle Harris ‘The Inherance’ (photo by Matthew Murphy for MurphyMa, 2019)The central theme of plays about ntemporary gay life—a lerature that n be traced back half a century to 1968’s “The Boys the Band”—has not been the trma of g out, the stggle for civil rights or the fight agast H. This quandary is obvly as relevant to straight dienc as to gay on, and fds eloquent if over-dulgent new exprsn “The Inherance, ” an epic two-part play now on s most basic level, Matthew Lopez’s play is a portra of lennial gay male life New York Cy, and is a picture both celebratory and utnary.
Matthew Lopez’s play is a portra of lennial gay male life New York Cy, and is a picture both celebratory and bds them is the ual tangle of affy and mutual need, as well as an impossibly posh Upper Wt Si apartment, which Eric has hered thanks to rent ntrol. Eric beiends Walter (Pl Hilton), a quiet, middle-aged gay man wh matter-of-factly harrowg tal of the closet and the early plague years of AIDS. (For one, Forster himself was a closeted gay man; his 1912 novel Mrice, about two men fdg happs together, was not published until after his ath, 1971.
AWAKE, GAY AND WRG A PLAY
I hate to make the unavoidable parison to Tony Khner’s epochal “Angels Ameri, ” another two-part play on gay them; “The Inherance” fully serv nsiratn on s own terms.
But one thg you n say for Khner: He put gay men at the center of the Amerin narrative, fully and unapologetilly. It is the and Eric’s votn to hearg them out that lk “The Inherance” to a robt legacy of plays about what the gay experience n teach all about the steep st of love and the even steeper st of the failure to love.
Their, and our, only hope would seem to lie the sperate formulatn of another closeted gay English thor, W.