<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><i>If we can just get through the play once tonight for doors and sardines. That's what it's all about. Doors and sardines. Getting on - getting off...that's farce. That's the theatre. That's life.</i><br/><i><br/></i>Michael Frayn's irresistible, multi-award-winning backstage farce <i>Noises Off</i>, enjoyed by millions of people worldwide since it premiered in 1982, has been hailed as one of the greatest British comedies ever written. <br/><br/>Winner of both Olivier and Evening Standard Awards for Best Comedy, this celebrated play-within-a-play serves up a riotous double bill of comedic craft and dramatic skill. Hurtling along at breakneck speed it follows the backstage antics of a touring theatre company as they stumble through the dress-rehearsal at Weston-super-Mare, then on to a disastrous matinee at Ashton-under-Lyne, followed by a total meltdown in Stockton-on-Tees. <br/><br/>Frequently revived around the world, this new edition of the text was published to coincide with the acclaimed 2019 West End revival.<p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br>A classic farce and a fiendishly ingenious homage to the form . . . raucously delightful<br/>New York Times<br><br>A spot on parody..achieves an almost mathematical elegance as Frayn calculates all the many and varied ways in which it can all go wrong.<i> </i><i>Noises Off</i> is cunningly structured.<br/>Telegraph<br><br>As finely worked as a Swiss watch and as funny as the human condition permits..the zigzag brilliance of the text as the clunky lines of the farce-within-a-farce rub against the sharp dialogue of reality.<br/>Guardian<br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br><b>Michael Frayn</b> was born in London in 1933 and read Russian, French and Moral Sciences (Philosophy) at Emmanuel College, Cambridge. He began his career as a journalist on the <i>Manchester Guardian</i> and the <i>Observer</i>. His award-winning plays include <i>Alphabetical Order</i>, <i>Make and Break</i> and <i>Noises Off</i>, all of which received Best Comedy of the Year awards, while <i>Benefactors </i>was named Best Play of the Year. Two of his more recent plays, <i>Copenhagen </i>and <i>Democracy</i>, also won numerous awards (including, for Copenhagen, the Tony in New York and the Prix Molière in Paris). In 2006 <i>Donkeys' Years </i>was revived in the West End thirty years after its premiere and was followed in 2007 by <i>The Crimson Hotel</i>, at the Donmar, and by <i>Afterlife</i>, at the National Theatre, in 2008. Frayn has translated Chekhov's last four plays, dramatised a selection of his one-act plays and short stories under the title <i>The Sneeze</i>, and adapted his first, untitled play, as <i>Wild Honey</i>. Frayn's novels include <i>Towards the End of the Morning</i> (in the USA, <i>Against Entropy</i>), <i>The Trick of It</i>, <i>A Landing on the Sun</i>, <i>Headlong </i>and <i>Spies</i>. His most recent books were a work of philosophy, <i>The Human Touch</i>, and <i>Stage Directions</i>, a collection of his writing on the theatre.
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