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STEVEN
BERKOFF is an actor and theatre director as well as a playwright.
He studied drama in London and mime in Paris and acted for
several years in traditional British Theatre. His reputation
was founded on his adaptations from Kafka - The Trial,
Metamorphosis, and In the Penal Colony
- after which his first original stage play, East,
won critical acclaim in 1975 for its originality and eclectic
concoction of Elizabethan verse and punk poetry with Cockney
slang. His other work for the stage includes: Greek,
a parody of the Oedipus myth; West, the story of
Beowulf written in the Cockney idiom as a sequel to East;
Decadence; Harry's Christmas; Kvetch;
Acapulco; Sink the Belgrano; and The
Message.
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ISBN: 1 872868 36 3
[This
title is now OUT OF PRINT] |
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Steven
Berkoff
Requiem for Ground Zero [This
title is now OUT OF PRINT]
Requiem
for Ground Zero is a poem written to pay homage to the unknown
victims, such as the window cleaner Roko Camaj, who died in the
9/11 tragedy. It was first performed by Steven Berkoff at the Assembly
Rooms Theatre, Edinburgh Festival on 14 August 2002
"...the
first significant piece of theatre in Britain to respond to 9/11
... a plea for common humanity."
~ Robert
Dawson Scott, The Times
"...the
writing has a beauty and sincerity."
~
Dominic Cavendish, The Daily Telegraph
"...the
stuff of grand drama."
~
Mark Logan, The Guardian
"A
first for Berkoff, and a treat for us."
~
Neil Cooper, The Herald
"...it
exerts a fierce and memorable grip on the attention, from start
to finish."
~
Joyce McMillan, The Scotsman
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Steven
Berkoff
Agamemnon / The Fall of the House of Usher
Adapted
from Aeschylus' great tragedy, Berkoff's version of Agamemnon
evolved over a long period of workshop sessions with the London
Theatre Group and was first performed at the Round House in 1973.
The definitive version was presented at the Greenwich Theatre in
1976. The play is about heat and battle, fatigue, the marathon and
the obscenity of modern and future wars.
In
The Fall of the House of Usher Berkoff takes Edgar Allan
Poe's horrific tale and, as one French critic described it, explodes
the text to create a new form that retains the central core. The
play was first performed at the Edinburgh Festival in 1974 and subsequently
at the Hampstead Theatre Club in 1975.
“Stephen
Berkoff’s characteristically idiosyncratic version strips
the story to the bone [and] reduces the crumbling, monstrous house
of the title to Roderick and Madeleine Usher’s incestuous
bed, and a lavish dinner party to a hilarious episode with a tub
of sorbet.”
~ Jonathan Gibbs, Time Out
“...just
when his exaggerated and often comic expressionism seems to be going
too far, Berkoff will return to the startling imagery of the original,
seamlessly combining Poe’s often purple Gothic prose with
his own spiky punk poetry ... The Fall of the House of Usher
is an intriguing, if slightly removed, experience that continually
excites the senses.”
~ Oliver
Jones, What’s On
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ISBN: 9781872868011
£7.99 £8.99
Buy now!
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ISBN: 9781872868080 - 160
pages
£10.99 £9.99
Buy now!
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Steven
Berkoff
Coriolanus in Deutschland
Steven
Berkoff's journal of directing Coriolanus in Germany makes fascinating
reading as one of Britain's most controversial figures of the theatre
unfolds the agonies and pleasures of creating Shakespeare in German
with a group of German actors. It's a day-by-day account with many
‘asides’ about the structure and traditions of the German
theatrical establishment, contemporary attitudes of its practitioners,
and some wry observations on Bavarian life.
No-one who has seen a Berkoff production, play or performance will
be entirely unmoved by the experience, and the sensation is no less
in reading this very personal diary of events, since it is written
with the candour and forthrightness that characterises so much of
his work. His
productions are best known for their fusing of the many elements
in theatre and strong physical imagery. The production of Coriolanus
is here described in great detail and is a valuable guide to the
mind of Berkoff, which can never be less than interesting.
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Steven
Berkoff
The Trial / Metamorphosis / In the Penal Colony
Three theatre adaptations from Franz Kafka
In
the Penal Colony was Berkoff's first professional production,
performed at London's experimental theatre, the Arts Lab, Drury
Lane, in 1968. It is a strange tale of torture and suffering featuring
a macabre machine so fiendish and diabolical that it could have
been designed in hell. (Cast 4m)
The Trial
was first presented at the Oval House in 1970. It’s the story
of Joseph K. struggling in the abyss of self-doubt. A ludicrous
parable investigating every contingency and nuance of the law. (Cast
8+m, 2+f)
“It
is the nightmarish quality of The Trial that has fascinated
Berkoff for years ... In Berkoff’s hands, the story offers
wonderful opportunities for playfulness and clowning, but he is
also the master manipulator of dark and painful nerves which are
set a-jangling all through the psyche.”
~ Clare
Bayley, What’s On
“[Berkoff]
tackles resiliently many of the problems involved in translating
Kafka’s study of guilt, solitude and nightmarish entrapment
to the stage ... [he] comes up with his own clear vision of Kafka’s
novel: as a study of a man whose external trial embodies his own
internal guilt.”
~
Michael
Billington, The Guardian
His adaptation
of Metamorphosis, in which he originally played the part
of Gregor, was first produced at the Round House in 1969. Gregor,
the Untermensch, is gradually transformed into an insect which his
family reject, then tolerate, then loathe, and finally destroy by
neglect. (Cast 3+m, 2+f)
“Kafka’s
novella Metamorphosis (1913) is a pretty gruelling affair
... In Steven Berkoff’s brilliant stage adaptation ... it
becomes more searing still.”
~ Christopher
Grier, London Standard
“A
powerful, yet vividly funny, version of Kafka’s dark fantasy
pointing out that human beings will inevitably become the thing
they are treated as.”
~ Jack
Tinker, Daily mail |
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ISBN: 9780906399842
£8.99 £9.99
Buy now!
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You
can buy Steven
Berkoff's
books via this site at a discount.
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Amber
Lane Press, 80 Hill Rise, Richmond-Upon-Thames, Surrey, TW10 6UB |
Telephone
:- +44(0)208 948 1427 |
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