Dětskou operu Brundibár napsali hudební skladatel Hans Krása a spisovatel Adolf Hoffmeister v roce 1938. V Praze se představení hrálo pouze dvakrát a navíc tajně, protože kulturní činnost byla už v té době Židům zakázaná. Operu se následně podařilo nazkoušet v Terezíně, kde se od roku 1943 do podzimu 1944 odehrálo asi 55 repríz. V roce 2003 vyšel Brundibár v převyprávění Tonyho Kushnera s ilustracemi oceňovaného tvůrce knih pro děti Maurice Sendaka, který byl právě na ni ze své tvorby nejvíc hrdý.
Tony Kushner Knihy
Tony Kushner je americký dramatik, jehož díla se často zabývají složitými společenskými a politickými tématy. Jeho psaní vyniká svou ambiciózní škálou, epickým rozsahem a hlubokým lidským vhledem. Kushner se nebojí zkoumat etické dilema a morální nejednoznačnosti, čímž nutí čtenáře i diváky k zamyšlení nad složitostí lidské zkušenosti. Jeho jedinečný hlas a literární zdatnost z něj činí pozoruhodnou postavu v moderním divadle.







Stuck Rubber Baby
- 201 stránek
- 8 hodin čtení
As a young gay man leading a closeted life in the 1960s American South, Toland Polk tries his best to keep a low profile. He’s aware of the racial injustice all around him—the segregationist politicians, the corrupt cops, the violent Klan members—but he feels powerless to make a difference. That all changes when he crosses paths with an impassioned coed named Ginger Raines.Ginger introduces him to a lively and diverse group of civil rights activists, folk singers, and night club performers—men and women who live authentically despite the conformist values of their hometown. Emboldened by this new community, Toland joins the local protests and even finds the courage to venture into a gay bar.No longer content to stay on the sidelines, Toland joins his friends as they fight against bigotry. But in Clayfield, Alabama, that can be dangerous—even deadly.
Dramatizes the effects of AIDS on the United States through the experiences of lawyer Roy Cohn, a Mormon couple, and a young man called Prior Walter
Part One of the two-part Angels in America, Tony Kushner's epic drama set during the Reagan years in America - now recognised as one of the greatest plays of the twentieth century. Prior, visited by ghosts of his ancestors and abandoned by his lover after his diagnosis with AIDS, is wondering if he is still sane when the angels select him to be their prophet. Powerbroker Roy Cohn also has the virus - but he believes that only the powerless can have that particular illness, and so kicks back against his diagnosis. In the 'melting pot where nothing melted' of modern America, the nation's reaction to the sickness - and its sufferers - is laid bare. Millennium Approaches was premiered in May 1991 by the Eureka Theatre Company, San Francisco, directed by David Esbjornson. In London it was premiered in January 1992 in a National Theatre production at the Cottesloe Theatre, directed by Declan Donnellan. The play received many awards, including Best Play at the 1992 Evening Standard Awards, Best New Play at the 1992 Critics' Circle Awards, Best Play at the 1993 Tony Awards and the 1993 Pulitzer Prize for Drama.
The premier American playwright of this decade speaks out about art, sexuality, and social justice
The Pulitzer Prize-winning author of "Angels in America" presents a major collection of short plays written over the past few yeas.
Divadelní hra, která získala v roce 1944 Cenu newyorské kritiky. Spisovatel se v ní vrací do St. Louis - města svého mládí, ke své rodině i k vlastním zážitkům a loučí se se světem marných iluzí.
Journeys from the Abyss
- 368 stránek
- 13 hodin čtení
This is the first study to place Jewish refugee movementsfrom Nazism into a wider framework of global forced migration from the latenineteenth through to the twenty first century.
The Intelligent Homosexual's Guide to Capitalism and Socialism with a Key to the Scriptures
- 192 stránek
- 7 hodin čtení
Gus Marcantonio, a retired longshoreman, summons his adult children home to the family's Brooklyn brownstone to discuss his recent decision to commit suicide. With his trademark mix of soaring intellect, searing emotion, and biting wit, legendary playwright Tony Kushner unfurls an epic tale of revolution, radicalism, family, love, sex, politics, real estate, unions and debts both unpaid and unpayable. With sweeping themes as hefty as its title, "IHo" (as it has been nicknamed) explores the dense and vexing issues that stem from the betrayal of a failed ideology and the challenges of family connectedness. This cerebral mammoth of a play asks what is left when the long-held belief systems that construct and inform one's identity prove to be empty.


