<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>First produced and performed at the Traverse Theatre, Scotland, on 3 August 2018.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p><i>Would you mind if I asked you a troubling </i><i>question?</i> <p/>Jay is the Oscar-winning actor taking the lead in a new play that connects with his Irish roots. Leigh is the ambitious director who will do anything to get noticed. Ruth is the Northern Irish playwright whose voice must be heard. <p/>The stage is set for great success, but when the three meet to discuss the play's challenges and provocations, a line is crossed and the heated discussion quickly escalates to a violent climax. Exploring consent, abuses of power and the confusions of cultural identity, <i>Ulster </i><i>American</i> is confrontational, brutally funny and not for the faint of heart. <p/>David Ireland's recent plays include <i>Cyprus Avenue</i> which won the James Tait Black Award 2017 and Best Play at the Irish Times Theatre Awards 2017. This edition is published to coincide with the world premiere at the Traverse Theatre, Edinburgh, in summer 2018.</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><p>"This insightful playwright avoids a neat emotional resolution. He explores the impact of decades of violence and hatred and leaves his characters suspended [Four stars]" --<i>Guardian review of 'Everything Between Us'</i> <p/>"The play is so funny - wickedly, irresponsibly, cruelly funny - you might write it off as juvenile in the first five minutes. By its conclusion, though, it seems like one of the most slyly mature peices about conflict in 'post conflict' Northern Ireland yet written. How can we move forward, after everything between us? Not by exorcising the truth, and our destructive tendencies, but by learning to live with them. [Four stars]" --<i>Irish Times review of 'Everything Between Us'</i></p><br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br><b>David Ireland</b> trained as an actor at the RSAMD (now Royal Conservatoire of Scotland) in Glasgow. He was Playwright-in-Residence at the Lyric Theatre, Belfast from 2011-12. His first play <i>What the Animals Say</i> was produced at Òran Mór in Glasgow and transferred to the Belfast Festival. His other plays include: <i>Everything Between Us, </i> which won the Meyer-Whitworth Award and the Stewart Parker BBC Award; <i>The End of Hope, The End of Desire</i> (Òran Mór), <i>Half a Glass of Water </i>(Field Day) <i>Yes So I Said Yes </i>(Ransom Productions), <i>Can't Forget About You</i> (Lyric, Belfast), <i>Most Favoured</i> (Traverse/ Òran Mór), <i>The Hen Night</i> (Royal Conservatoire of Scotland), <i>Summertime </i>(Tinderbox), <i>I Promise You Sex and Violence</i> (Northern Stage), <i>Blood Wedding</i> (Dundee Rep Ensemble/Graeae) and <i>Cyprus Avenue</i> (Royal Court/Abbey Theatre, Dublin).
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