Turnly’s strength lies in his ability to tell a fascinating story ... It draws one’s rapt attention to a scandal that long obsessed the people of Japan.

Guardian

[This edition] has useful introductory notes to get started, and annotations throughout the script to explain and detail some of the cultural references and idiosyncrasies.

Drama & Theatre

This Student Edition is ideal for any teacher coming to Francis Turnly's 2018 play for the first time or those who already have some familiarity with it.

Spanning 1979 to 2003, The Great Wave looks at the mysterious disappearance of a Japanese schoolgirl and her mother and sister’s tireless search to find her again. The girl – Hanako – is discovered living in captivity in a compound in North Korea, employed to teach a young woman Japanese language and culture.

Francis Turnly’s gripping play is based on a a true story and it conveys, not only the magnitude of these events globally, but also the beating human heart at the centre of this story.

The commentary in the edition unpacks:

> the author's identity as a "Japanese Ulsterman", owing to his Northern Irish-Japanese heritage
> the play's place within a trilogy
> the significance of Japanese history and culture
> themes of occupation, colonisation, grief, loss and hope
> the use of language in the play (including English and phonetic Japanese and Korean)
> the play's use of objects as cultural markers
> the play's structure and representation of 24 years
> the play's form and genre
> productions of the play so far (including in London and San Francisco)

This edition is invaluable in helping to make sense of this thematically and contextually rich play for students, and to bring it alive through the discussion of its inherent theatricality and production opportunities.

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Chronology

COMMENTARY

Playwright: overview
Context
Themes
Characters
Dramatic Devices, Ethnicity, Culture and Language
Design Opportunities and Choices

THE GREAT WAVE

Notes to the play

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This Student Edition is ideal for any teacher coming to Francis Turnly's 2018 play for the first time or those who have some familiarity with it.
The play is a set text for AQA GCSE Drama and offers teachers a dramatically and thematically rich text for classroom study

"Must-haves for any students exploring these modern classics, or indeed anyone teaching Literature or Drama."Teach Secondary

Methuen Drama Student Editions are expertly annotated texts of modern and classic plays designed for students' study.

Each one offers the complete text of the play as well as contemporary commentary, written by experts in the field, that provides students with an in-depth look into the background, themes and history of the play.

They include:
- An introduction giving a complete background to the play and a discussion of the social, political, cultural and economic context in which the play was originally conceived and created.
- A chronology of the playwright’s life and work, and review of the play’s production history.
- Questions for further study and preparation for examinations along with suggestions for primary and secondary materials for further study.

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Product details

ISBN
9781350402379
Published
2024-11-28
Publisher
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC; Methuen Drama
Weight
151 gr
Height
196 mm
Width
128 mm
Thickness
14 mm
Age
P, 06
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Number of pages
160

Volume editor

Biographical note

Francis Turnly is a playwright, radio dramatist and screenwriter. He has written several plays for Radio 4 and his stage plays have been produced at numerous theatres across the UK and Ireland. He was a winner of a Channel 4 playwright bursary in 2015 and as a result was Playwright in Residence at the Kiln (then Tricycle) Theatre which culminated in him winning the Catherine Johnson Best Play Award in 2016 for his play The Great Wave which premiered at the National Theatre in 2018.

Kevin J. Wetmore, Jr. is Professor of Theatre Arts and Director of the Graduate Program at Loyola Marymount University, US, with areas of expertise in Japanese theatre, African theatre, Shakespeare, horror theatre, Asian cinema, horror cinema, Greek tragedy, stage combat and comedy.