Cloud Nine

For this revival of the previous year’s Joint Stock production, Gaye Brown was initially announced for the roles played by Anna Nygh. (Sue Mallia, ‘TV Star Makes Court Debut’, Westminster & Pimlico News 15th August 1980, page 11.)

Cast & Crew

Cast

Betty / Gerry
Clive / Edward
Edward / Victoria
Ellen / Mrs S / Betty
Harry Bagley / Martin
Joshua / Cathy
Maud / Lin

Crew

Director
Director
Designer
Lighting Designer
Musical Director
Press Representative

Photographs

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Play description

Cloud Nine (sometimes stylized as Cloud 9) is a two-act play written by British playwright Caryl Churchill. It was workshopped with the Joint Stock Theatre Company in late 1978 and premiered at Dartington College of Arts, Devon, on 14 February 1979.

The two acts of the play form a contrapuntal structure. Act I is set in British colonial Africa in the Victorian era, and Act II is set in a London park in 1979. However, between the acts only twenty-five years pass for the characters. Each actor plays one role in Act I and a different role in Act II – the characters who appear in both acts are played by different actors in the first and second. Act I parodies the conventional comedy genre and satirizes Victorian society and colonialism. Act II shows what could happen when the restrictions of both the comic genre and Victorian ideology are loosened.

The play uses controversial portrayals of sexuality and obscene language, and establishes a parallel between colonial and sexual oppression. Its humour depends on incongruity and the carnivalesque, and helps to convey Churchill’s political message about accepting people who are different and not dominating them or forcing them into particular social roles.

Cloud Nine is one of Churchill’s most renowned works. The play was featured in The Royal National Theatre’s NT2000 poll of the 100 most significant plays of the 20th century and was also selected for Time Out New York’s list of the “best plays of all time”. The New York Production opened at Lucille Lortel’s Theatre de Lys on May 18, 1981 and ran through September 4, 1983 and was directed by Tommy Tune with an original incidental music score by Maury Yeston.

Observations

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