Hints and tips:
...One of the great joys of Caryl Churchill’s 1982 Top Girls is the sheer playfulness of its famous, dreamlike opening scene....
...Caryl Churchill’s recent quartet of mini-plays at the Royal Court explored similar territory, as does Ian Rickson’s haunting revival of Translations by Brian Friel (at the National Theatre)....
...Caryl Panman of Ch Rives-Blanques in Languedoc says: “It’s been awfully hot at times, and then suddenly quite cool, with unexpected sprinklings of snow on the Pyrenees. Altogether rather odd.”...
...As the writer Caryl Phillips recalls in a catalogue essay, he once heard Horace Ové and James Baldwin “conversationally bouncing between Harlem, Trinidad and Brixton....
...Since then agitprop has never really gone away, and it’s back in full force at London’s Royal Court, where a new 10-minute play by Caryl Churchill, Seven Jewish Children: A Play for Gaza, has plenty of prop...
...Caryl Churchill’s play, A Number (BBC2, Wednesday), dipped at times into Pinter-like dialogue, but raised itself for the most part to and above the level of George Bernard Shaw (the Shavian Fabian)....
...Translated for its UK premiere by Caryl Churchill, it is a clever, disturbing piece about the damage done by vicarious living....
International Edition