1. Monster 2. Lungs 3. 2071 4. Every Brilliant Thing 5. People, Places And Things
The first collection from critically-acclaimed UK playwright Duncan Macmillan.
Duncan Macmillan is an award winning writer and director. Formerly Writer-in-Residence at Paines Plough and the Royal Exchange, he has completed attachments at the National Theatre and the Royal Court/BBC, is a member of the Old Vic New Voices Company and a fellow of the TS Eliot UK/US Exchange. He is the winner of two Bruntwood Playwriting Awards, the Old Vic Big Ambition Award, a Pearson Residency Award, 'The 50' Bursary, and has been nominated in the Best New Play in the MEN Awards.
Duncan Macmillan’s cracking play is a timely and gripping
dissection of parenting and responsibility… This is a play that
tests your liberal instincts to the limits.
*The Guardian, on Monster*
An honest, original and pretty much irresistible tearjerker.
*The New York Times ArtsBeat, on People, Places and Things*
A woundingly intense two-hander. It is the most beautiful, quietly
shattering play of the year.
*The Express, on Lungs*
If we look to theatre to increase our awareness of the human
condition, the evening succeeds on all counts. [...] This talk,
which deserves wide dissemination, is better than good: it is
necessary.
*The Guardian, on 2071*
Heart-wrenching, hilarious... one of the funniest plays you’ll ever
see about depression – and possibly one of the funniest plays
you’ll ever see, full stop.
*The Guardian, on Every Brilliant Thing*
The writing is exquisitely painful. At times it feels like
Macmillan has taken one of those little spoons, the ones with the
serrated edge, for grapefruit, and scooped something out of
you.
*The Stage, on People, Places and Things*
It is a rigorous but impassioned cri de coeur [...] conveyed in a
single voice, founded on a lifetime's experience of the workings of
the planet, it has real power.
*New Scientist, on 2071*
Duncan Macmillans cracking play is a timely and gripping dissection
of parenting and responsibility This is a play that tests your
liberal instincts to the limits.
*The Guardian on Monster*
If we look to theatre to increase our awareness of the human
condition, the evening succeeds on all counts. This talk, which
deserves wide dissemination, is better than good: it is
necessary.
*The Guardian on 2071*
It is a rigorous but impassioned cri de coeur [ ] conveyed in a
single voice, founded on a lifetime's experience of the workings of
the planet, it has real power.
*New Scientist on 2071*
Heart-wrenching, hilarious... one of the funniest plays youll ever
see about depression and possibly one of the funniest plays you'll
ever see, full stop.
*The Guardian on Every Brilliant Thing*
Duncan Macmillan's cracking play is a timely and gripping
dissection of parenting and responsibility. This is a play that
tests your liberal instincts to the limits.
*The Guardian on Monster*
One of the most powerful and painfully funny plays I've ever
seen.
*New York Times on People, Places and Things*
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