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Human Animals
Stef Smith
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Description for Human Animals
Paperback. In the overcrowded city, nature is getting out of control. The mice are scratching between walls, the pigeons are diseased and the foxes are beginning to rule the streets. The problem is growing. It's contagious. It has to be stopped, before it's too late. Num Pages: 80 pages. BIC Classification: DD. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 131 x 198 x 18. Weight in Grams: 146.
In the overcrowded city, nature is getting out of control. The mice are scratching between walls, the pigeons are diseased and the foxes are beginning to rule the streets. The problem is growing. It's contagious. It has to be stopped, before it's too late.
Stef Smith's play Human Animals premiered at the Royal Court Theatre, London, in May 2016, in a production directed by Hamish Pirie.
Product Details
Publisher
Nick Hern Books
Format
Paperback
Publication date
2016
Condition
New
Number of Pages
128
Place of Publication
London, United Kingdom
ISBN
9781848425286
SKU
V9781848425286
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 4 to 8 working days
Ref
99-2
About Stef Smith
Stef Smith is a playwright whose work includes: Human Animals (Royal Court Theatre, London, 2016); Swallow (Traverse Theatre, Edinburgh, 2015); Remote (NT Connections 2015); And The Beat Goes On (Random Accomplice/Horsecross); Cured (The Arches, Glasgow); Woman of the Year (Òran Mór); Grey Matter (Lemon Tree, Aberdeen); Falling/Flying (Tron, Glasgow); Roadkill (Edinburgh Festival Fringe, 2010 & 2011). Awards ... Read more
Reviews for Human Animals
'Impressive… a chilling vision of dystopian London'
Guardian
'[A] superbly written, wildly imaginative and thought-provoking play'
The Arts Desk
'An attractive blend of black humour and genuinely disturbing ideas... vivid and resonant'
The Stage
'A dark, surrealist parable with shades of JG Ballard'
WhatsOnStage
'The disturbing and the dotty, queasiness and quirkiness ... Read more
Guardian
'[A] superbly written, wildly imaginative and thought-provoking play'
The Arts Desk
'An attractive blend of black humour and genuinely disturbing ideas... vivid and resonant'
The Stage
'A dark, surrealist parable with shades of JG Ballard'
WhatsOnStage
'The disturbing and the dotty, queasiness and quirkiness ... Read more