Showline!

Grant Malcolm | 24/03/1999 - 20:33

There's been plenty of prompting from the masses (well, hundreds of visitors per week is something not many of us see in our theatres!) for new surveys... in fact, you might say i've been inundated with suggestions. Remember that this a useful way of making your views know to the ITA committee. The underwhelming response to the suggestion of an ITA camp is hardly likely to encourage the committee to undertake one any time soon.So, the latest poll is up! Don't miss out on your opportunity to cast your vote. This time the subject is a question everyone's lips - or if it isn't it should beShowline! Who needs it? Who uses it? WHAT IS IT???Follow the link below to find out more...but above all, don't forget to cast your vote on the ITA home page.CheersGrantPS. Don't forget to undertake the ITA Web Site Feedback Survey

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 30/03/1999 - 12:27 Grant Malcolm Re: Showline!
 30/03/1999 - 14:05 David Spicer (not verified) Re: Showline!
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Featured event
English and Cultural Studies - UWA (Perth) presents
Women Beware Women

Howard Barker/Thomas Middleton

Steve Chinna

Theatre students in English and Cultural Studies at UWA present contemporary English playwright Howard Barker’s rewriting of Thomas Middleton’s early-1620s Jacobean revenge tragedy Women Beware Women. Middleton’s play was last performed at UWA in the Octagon Theatre in 1982, directed by the then director-in-residence Timothy West with a cast comprising English Department staff and members of the UWA Grads and student theatre communities. This radical reworking utilises most of the first four acts and language of Middleton’s play in its first half, with a second half comprised of Barker’s mixture of vividly poetic and robust vernacular language that takes the trajectories of the protagonists towards a denouement which leaves most of the characters surviving, but which shatters the ducal state of greed, misogyny, and moral corruption – a denouement which Middleton saw fit to end with a conventional revenge tragedy massacre of his troublesome protagonists. Suitable for audiences 15+.
Tickets at Dolphin door.