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Radio golf / August Wilson ; foreword by Suzan-Lori Parks.

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Van Pelt Library PS3573.I45677 R33 2007
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LIBRA PS3573.I45677 R33 2007
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Wilson, August.
Series:
Wilson, August. Plays
The August Wilson century cycle
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
African Americans--Drama.
African Americans.
African American neighborhoods.
Real estate development.
Nineteen nineties.
Nineteen nineties--Drama.
Hill District (Pittsburgh, Pa.)--Drama.
Hill District (Pittsburgh, Pa.).
Real estate development--Drama.
African American neighborhoods--Drama.
Pennsylvania--Pittsburgh--Hill District.
Local Subjects:
African Americans--Drama.
Nineteen nineties--Drama.
Real estate development--Drama.
African American neighborhoods--Drama.
Hill District (Pittsburgh, Pa.)--Drama.
Genre:
Drama.
Physical Description:
xi, 81 pages ; 23 cm.
Edition:
First edition.
Place of Publication:
New York : Theatre Communications Group ; St. Paul, MN : Distributed to the Book trade by Consortium Book Sales and Distribution, 2007.
Summary:
"August Wilson liked to say that his plays were "fat with substance." And he was right: his ten-play cycle - Wilson wrote one for every roiling decade of the African-American experience in the twentieth century - transforms historical tragedy into imaginative triumph. The blues are catastrophe expressed lyrically; so are Wilson's plays, which swing with the pulse of the African-American people, as they moved, over the decades, from property to personhood. Together, Wilson's plays form a kind of fever chart of the unmooring trauma of slavery." "August Wilson died on October 2, 2005. "I've lived a blessed life," he said. "I'm ready." Between the diagnosis, in mid-June, and his death, he had enough time to finish the rewrites of Radio Golf and set up the usual gestation period of out-of-town productions before the Broadway opening - a unique system that Wilson, Richards and his producing partner, Ben Mordecai, had set up as a kind of quality control. Wilson also lived long enough to learn that he would be the first African-American to have a Broadway theater named after him. No one else - not even Eugene O'Neill, who set out in the mid-thirties to write a nine-play cycle and managed only two - had aimed so high and achieved so much. Wilson's plays brought blacks and whites together under the same roof to share in the profound mysteries of race and class and the bittersweet awareness of how separate yet indivisible we really are."--Jacket.
Notes:
"1997."
Other Format:
Online version: Wilson, August. Radio golf.
ISBN:
9781559363068
1559363061
9781559363075
155936307X
OCLC:
137244768

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