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The
Wesker Trilogy
Chicken Soup with Barley (1958)
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6m) |
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| SYNOPSIS |
| The play spans twenty years
- 1936 to 1956 - in the life of the communist Kahn family: SARAH
and HARRY, and their children, ADA and RONNIE.
Beginning with the anti-fascist demonstrations
in 1936 in London's East End and ending with the Hungarian
uprising in 1956, the play explores the disintegration of
political ideology parallel with the disintegration of a family.
It is the son, RONNIE, who is the most deeply affected and
turns on his mother who insists on remaining a communist.
Her reply ends the play on a note of desperate optimism.
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| EXCERPT |
| "
All
my life I worked with a party that meant glory and freedom and brotherhood.
You want me to give it up now? You want me to move to Hendon and forget
who I am? If the electrician who comes to mend my fuse blows it instead,
so I should stop having electricity? I should cut off my light? Socialism
is my light, can you understand that? A way of life. A man can be
beautiful. I hate ugly people - I can't bear meanness and fighting
and jealousy - I've got to have light. I'm a simple person, Ronnie,
and I've got to have light and love." |
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| REVIEWS |
confronts
us as sanely as the theatre has ever done
a fair, accurate, and
intensely exciting play
Kenneth Tynan, The Observer
The passion of Mr Wesker's theme is matched by
the living fire in his writing
its quality is undiminished
by the passing years
Bernard Levin, The Times
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