520 posts
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Post by theatreliker on Mar 18, 2020 21:28:00 GMT
Theatreboard has been understandably quiet, so here's something I'd really appreciate you getting your teeth into.
I'm due to get married a few weeks. Ha! With the current situation who knows if it will go ahead but it's BAU for now. I'm looking for a reading to do, preferably from a play.
My fiancee and I both love theatre. In fact we met on theatreforum (!). Well not quite but on Twitter and I think we knew each other from here as well. Our first meeting was to see Alan Bennett's People on tour. We were two of the youngest there and brought the average age of the audience down by a good 20 years probably. Over 6 years later she's my best friend and I can't wait to marry her. I read a lot of plays. I'd love to do a reading from one but nothing from my collection immediately springs to mind.
So over to you. If you have any suggestions I'd be grateful. Doesn't have to be marriage related or even romantic but something appropriate. I've been going through Jez Butterworth but nothing there.
Any advice, sarcastic comments or jokey suggestions welcome. Thanks.
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Post by oxfordsimon on Mar 18, 2020 22:04:02 GMT
Auden's Tell Me The Truth About Love is a witty and wry poem that goes down well
I know it is not from a play. But it is theatrical
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Post by Deleted on Mar 18, 2020 22:14:27 GMT
You could get a few people to perform "Wedding Video" from Caryl Churchill's "Love and Information"
Hope your big day goes ahead! Supposed to be my sister's big day in a couple of months too, no idea what will happen.
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Post by xanady on Mar 19, 2020 20:21:16 GMT
She Walks In Beauty by Lord Byron is wonderful imo
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423 posts
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Post by schuttep on Mar 20, 2020 9:15:14 GMT
Not play related but from the novel "Sunset Song" by Lewis Grassic Gibbon - at the point of the wedding in the story (Chris is the bride):
But then Chae cried "Fill up your glasses, folk, the best man has a toast". And the red Highlander, McIvor, got up to his feet and bowed his red head to Chris, and began to speak; he spoke fine, though funny with that Highland twist, he said he'd never seen a sweeter quean than the bride or known a better friend than the groom; and he wished them long and lovely days, a marriage in the winter had the best of it. For was not the Spring to come and the seed-time springing of their love, and the bonny days of the summer, flowering it, and the autumn with the harvest of days? And when they passed to their other winter together they would know that was not the end of it, it was but a sleep that in another life would burgeon fresh from another earth. He could never believe but that two so young and fair as his friend and his friend's wife, once made one flesh would be one in the spirit as well; and have their days built of happiness and their nights of the music of the stars.
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