Join us on a literary world trip!
Add this book to bookshelf
Grey
Write a new comment Default profile 50px
Grey
Subscribe to read the full book or read the first pages for free!
All characters reduced
Polish Joke - And Other Plays - cover

Polish Joke - And Other Plays

David Ives

Publisher: Grove Press

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Summary

A collection of four works from the American playwright known as “wizardly . . . magical and funny . . . a master of language” (The New York Times).   This collection brings together four full-length plays from the same dazzling pen that produced the one-act comic masterpieces of All in the Timing.  Polish Joke is about a young Polish-American’s trip through ethnic stereotypes. Nine-year-old Midwesterner Jan Bogdan Sadlowski, nicknamed Jasiu, is told by his uncle that Poles are thought to be “backward, stupid, inept, and gloomy.” The only way out is for Jasiu “to impersonate someone not Polish.”   In Don Juan in Chicago, a Renaissance innocent makes a deal with the devil, only to become a reluctant Latin lover.  Ancient History is a comedy-drama about the holy war that breaks out when two people from two very different cultures fall in love.  The Red Address paints a searing portrait of a man with a secret who is forced by tragedy into self-revelation.  Praise for David Ives   “A pitcher with a great many tricks up his sleeve. He throws like an all-star . . . mixing comedic moods and styles with a dizzying assortment of changeups.” —The New York Times  Polish Joke   “Ives skillfully climbs the slippery slope of political incorrectness without a single mean-spirited stumble.” —CurtainUp  Don Juan in Chicago   “Ives invents an irresistible premise and has fun making good on its promise.” —Los Angeles Times  Ancient History   “A riveting theatrical experience.” —Show Business  The Red Address “Mix Glengarry Glen Ross with Glen or Glenda . . . A tough-talking drama that mixes business sharks, blackmail, cross-dressing and murder.” —Variety
Available since: 12/01/2007.
Print length: 356 pages.

Other books that might interest you

  • buckets (NHB Modern Plays) - cover

    buckets (NHB Modern Plays)

    Adam Barnard

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    How to fill what's left of your day. How to fill the rest of your days. Sick buckets, bucket rattling, bucket lists, buckets of love.
    Wry, emotive, funny and heartfelt, buckets is a play with a unique perspective on a universal dilemma: how do you deal with the fact that time always runs out?
    Across thirty-three interconnected scenes – some just a few lines, others mini-plays in their own right – buckets swings through a kaleidoscopic world of sadness and happiness, illness and health, youth and experience, kissing and crying, singing and dying.
    Adam Barnard's open-ended text can be performed by any number and composition of actors.
    buckets premiered at the Orange Tree Theatre, Richmond, in May 2015.
    Show book
  • Autumn: A Season In Verse - Also known as fall enjoy the transition of summer to winter in beautiful poems - cover

    Autumn: A Season In Verse - Also...

    Emily Dickinson, Percy Bysshe...

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    For many of us, autumn is the season of mixed emotions. Summer’s long days are replaced by a chill in the air. The colors on the trees and fields ripen to warmer hues and the harvest is brought safely home. Yet with this bounty there is the knowledge that nature is turning her attention to the harder, colder winter months ahead. Our collection of poems amplifies this balance between the loss of summer and the gain of the harvest with wonderful poems by such notables as Percy Bysshe Shelley, W. B. Yeats, John Keats, Emily Dickinson, Henry Longfellow, and others. Please enjoy this volume of the Seasons in Verse series.
    Show book
  • Rudyard Kipling - cover

    Rudyard Kipling

    Rudyard Kipling

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    This anthology contains many of Kipling’s most famous poems, If, Mandalay, Gunga Din. Though sometimes still regarded as a product of the colonial era, Kipling touches a very popular nerve in Britain’s literary tradition, and is regarded more generously now as a master of popular verse. It is often forgotten that he won the Nobel Prize for literature in 1907.
    Show book
  • A Flea in Her Ear: Full Text and Introduction (NHB Drama Classics) - cover

    A Flea in Her Ear: Full Text and...

    Georges Feydeau

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Drama Classics series
    The world's great plays at a great little price.
    Each pocket-sized volume contains:
    a full introduction
    an author biography notes on historical and theatrical context
    a plot synopsis key dates
    a further reading list a glossary of unusual words and phrases (English-language texts)
    A Flea in her Ear is a classic French farce from 1907.
    A suspicious wife sets a trap to expose her supposedly faithless husband. The husband however bears an uncanny resemblance to a drunken porter, and when circumstances bring the two into proximity in the seedy Hotel Casablanca, all hell breaks loose.
    With an introduction by Stephen Mulrine.
    Show book
  • cake (NHB Modern Plays) - cover

    cake (NHB Modern Plays)

    babirye bukilwa

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    It's one of those hot April evenings that feel like summer, and the heat is stifling in Sissy's London flat as she dances, unrestrained, beautiful, alive…
    But when sixteen-year-old Eshe arrives, powerful emotions come to the surface – and the two women are locked in a dance where freedom clashes with duty.
    babriye bukilwa's play …cake is a psychological drama that asks if the cycle of generational trauma can ever be broken. Can queer, Black femmes find love and belonging when the soil beneath them – and the climate around them – is hostile? It was first performed at Theatre Peckham, London, in 2021, directed by the venue's Associate Director, malakaï sargeant.
    Show book
  • Little Baby Jesus (NHB Modern Plays) - cover

    Little Baby Jesus (NHB Modern...

    Arinzé Kene

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Three magnetic personalities and three remarkable stories from the poetic imagination of Arinzé Kene, winner of the Most Promising Playwright Award at the 'Offies' (Off West End Theatre Awards).
    Kehinde is older than his years, a boy with an innocence and a passion for mixed-race girls. Joanne is dipped in rudeness and rolled in attitude. And then there's Rugrat, the class clown, underachiever and playground loudmouth.
    The boy who never leaves, the schoolgirl trying to distance herself from her past, and the schoolboy always on the outer of the inner circle – in this lyrical triptych of interconnected monologues, three inner-city teenagers are about to become adults.
    Little Baby Jesus was first performed at Oval House Theatre, London, in May 2011 in a co-production by Oval House, BEcreative and the English Touring Theatre.
    Little Baby Jesus is also available in the volume Little Baby Jesus and Estate Walls: Two plays.
    'Utterly magnetic... genuinely original' - Time Out
    'It's the writing that makes this and Kene worth watching. It fizzes and froths and sometimes squeaks with pure pleasure at its own delight in words and the poetry and rhythms of the streets. It has grace, too' - Guardian
    'Heart-warming, heart-breaking, poetic, layered, funny' - Whatsonstage.com
    'Kene continues to peel back the cliches surrounding disenfranchised inner-city teenagers to reveal the characters behind the headlines' - The Stage
    Show book