Caryl Churchill

Herstory Repeats Itself with Caryl Churchill’s Classic Top Girls

Ana Reeder, Marisa Tomei, Elizabeth Marvel, Martha Plimpton and Jennifer Ikeda in <i>Top Girls</i> at the Biltmore Theatre.
Bennett Raglin/WireImage
Ana Reeder, Marisa Tomei, Elizabeth Marvel, Martha Plimpton and Jennifer Ikeda in Top Girls at the Biltmore Theatre.

When we think of the British playwrights we’re most familiar with, one is a political conservative for the thinking classes (Sir Tom Stoppard), another a safe middlebrow socialist for the carriage trade (Sir David Hare), and another a working-class sentimentalist for Off Broadway (the un-knighted Mike Leigh).

Where does that leave Caryl Churchill—the unrepentant Marxist-feminist poet who’s for nothing less than social, political and theatrical revolution? In my view, she’s England’s greatest living playwright.  read more »

Caryl Churchill’s 45-Minute Screed on Bush and Blair; Remembering the Great Paul Scofield

Scott Cohen and Samuel West in <i>Drunk Enough to Say I Love You?</i> at the Public Theatre.
Public Theater
Scott Cohen and Samuel West in Drunk Enough to Say I Love You? at the Public Theatre.

You might want to think twice about seeing Drunk Enough to Say I Love You? at the Public Theatre. The radical politics of the distinguished feminist playwright aren’t giving me pause; it’s the $50 tickets that trouble me.

I’m no mathematician, but by my reckoning, $50 for an evening lasting 45 minutes amounts to $3,852 a minute. If you ask me—and please do—that’s outrageous. It’s a lot. Facts don’t lie.  read more »

Fifty Stunning Minutes Of Universal Chaos

Caryl Churchill's Far Away at New York Theatre Workshop is a major event that, at a little over 50 m  read more »

What Ith Happineth? Happineth Ith Blue Blue Kettle

As some of you may know, I was born in England. It was an accident.  read more »