![]() |
|
|
Mystery
novelist and womaniser Brian is obsessed with the murder games he
writes. Wife Pam and three other couples turn up to his latest epic
"The Winter of Discontent" with varying degrees of enthusiasm.
Cynical Steve, Brian's publisher, simply does not want to go, whilst
wife Ros seems quite keen, despite Brian's reputation. Hard-up Andy is
convinced that Brian fancies his attractive wife Zoe. Apparently
happily-married Colin and Marie are the least reluctant. Finally Pam has
been cast as the dowdy cook one time too often. We witness the couples'
preparations for the game, and see their worst sides displayed. Then we
attend the game itself, set in Brian's much-modified house (complete
with thunderclaps, dead phones, secret panels and plenty of hidden
cameras and microphones). Nobody is surprised when Brian is poisoned
during the meal - but is this part of the game or has one of the guests
enacted revenge? Brian's fondness for special effects means they are
locked in the isolated house with no outside communication, so they must
solve the crime - if indeed it is a crime - for real.
Author's Notes For
a few years a group of eight of us met every so often to do one of those
buy-in-a-box murder games. I actually wrote three of them too, but most
were bought. I started thinking about what could happen if someone got
so addicted to them that they were prepared to make modifications to
their house to make the game more profound, and you can't think about
that kind of thing for too long before you remember "Ten Little
Indians" and the like. This play explores that theme, hopefully
making the audience wonder whether there has been a real murder or is it
just another twist in the game? Past Productions I have recently started adding production photos, posters, etc. If your group has done this play and have any I can use, please contact me.
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||