Difference between revisions of "Dealer's Choice (2001)"

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== Reviews ==
 
== Reviews ==
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== See Also ==
 
== See Also ==
Have there been other SLT productions of this play?  Link to them here.
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[[Dealer's Choice (2012)]]
 
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Or add anything that is related ''within this site''.  The author's page for instance or other plays with a similar theme.
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== References ==
 
== References ==
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*'''[http://www.someplace.com/thisplay This play on the web]
 
*'''[http://www.someplace.com/thisplay This play on the web]
Edit Categories below - Bell ''or'' Prompt''' AND THEN REMOVE THIS MESSAGE!
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[[Category:Productions]]
 
[[Category:Productions]]
 
[[Category:Bell Theatre Productions]]
 
[[Category:Bell Theatre Productions]]
[[Category:Prompt Corner Productions]]
 

Latest revision as of 13:24, 19 November 2013

Poster by Poster Designer

by Patrick Marber

Directed by Sarah E Slater

Performances: Tue 3rd – Sat 7th April 2001, Bell Theatre


Introduction

'Patrick Marber's writing career has been a diverse and a distinguished one, particularly in the context of British radio and television, where he was a member of the creative team behind such influential and popular successes as, 'On the Hour', 'The Day Today' and 'Knowing Me, Knowing You'. His career in the theatre came later but has been equally successful. 'Dealer's Choice' is a bold first play in which Marber's interest in contemporary relationships, social structures and rituals is fully demonstrated. First produced in London in 1995, it is about men - the relationships between them and, particularly, the relationship between fathers and sons. Stephen runs a poker school every Sunday night in the basement of his restaurant. The poker game has become a familiar fixed point in the lives of the players: Mugsy, the good-natured habitual loser; Sweeney, a divorced father struggling to maintain a relationship with his young daughte; and Carl, Stephen's son, deeply in debt to the professional gambler, Ash, who is, in turn, in debt to another player. While carl may be addicted to gambling, and is hugely in debt as a result, Stephen is equaly addicted to the riyual of the card game, its language and its familiarity. The irony is that the stability and order in the men's lives are derived from a game of chance. As with his later plays, Marber quickly shows his ability to demonstrate characters and their histories through bantering and repartee. In 1995, 'Dealer's Choice' earned both the Evening Standard Award for best comedy and the Writers' Guild Award for the best west end play. Gale Research.

Cast

Crew


Reviews

Some review quotes go here


Gallery

Reminiscences and Anecdotes

Members are encouraged to write about their experiences of working on or seeing this production. Please leave your name. Anonymous entries may be deleted.

See Also

Dealer's Choice (2012)

References

<references/>

External Links