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The Doll Trilogy

Kid Stakes, Other Times, Summer of the Seventeenth Doll: Kid Stakes; Other Times; Summer of...

Ray Lawler

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English
Currency Press Pty Ltd
28 May 2015
No play has been more important to the history of Australian theatre than Summer of the Seventeenth Doll.

When it first hit the stage in 1955, it drew a unanimous response from audiences unused to seeing the Australian character so vividly represented.

'So superbly true to Australian thought and the Australian scene that theatrical conventions disappear', 'untransplantably Australian', 'the Australian spirit springing from the deep heart of the characters': these were some of the accolades.

Since then, the play has taken Australia's name around the world and become part of the education of every schoolchild at home. Twenty years later, Ray Lawler returned to his lovable Carlton household and created two more plays: Kid Stakes, the story of the first doll, and Other Times, about the wartime winter which proved the turning point in the life of the characters.

By:  
Imprint:   Currency Press Pty Ltd
Country of Publication:   Australia
Edition:   3
Dimensions:   Height: 230mm,  Width: 150mm,  Spine: 16mm
Weight:   488g
ISBN:   9781925005523
ISBN 10:   1925005526
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Ray Lawler was thrust into prominence when his play Summer of the Seventeenth Doll, in which he appeared in the role of Barney, became a hit for the Union Theatre Repertory Company in 1955, and subsequently toured with enormous success throughout Australia and to London. The Piccadilly Bushman, written in 1959, toured nationally under the J.C. Williamson banner. Lawler's other plays include Kid Stakes and Other Times (completing The Doll Trilogy in 1975), The Man Who Shot the Albatross (1971) and Godsend (1982). Having lived abroad from 1957, Lawler returned in 1975 to serve as Literary Adviser to Melbourne Theatre Company and direct a number of productions for that company. Nowadays he lives in a bayside Melbourne suburb.

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