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The Norman Conquests is a trilogy of plays written in 1973 by Alan Ayckbourn. Each of the plays depicts the same six characters over the same weekend in a different part of a house. Table Manners is set in the dining room, Living Together in the living room, and Round and Round the Garden in the garden.
Sir Alan Ayckbourn CBE FRSA (born 12 April 1939) is a prolific British playwright and director. As of 2025, he has written and produced 90 full-length plays in Scarborough and London and was, between 1972 and 2009, the artistic director of the Stephen Joseph Theatre in Scarborough, where all but four of his plays have received their first performance.
The Revengers' Comedies is a play by Alan Ayckbourn.Its title references that of The Revenger's Tragedy.The play is an epic piece running more than five hours and was designed to be presented in two parts.
House and Garden are a diptych (or linked pair) of plays written by the English playwright Alan Ayckbourn, first performed in 1999.They are designed to be staged simultaneously, with the same cast in adjacent auditoria, and were published together as House & Garden.
The first play, GamePlan, is the darkest of the three, and covers the theme of teenage prostitution – a theme far more contemporary than those often expected from Ayckbourn plays. The play centres on Lynette Saxon, a once-successful dotcom businesswoman now reduced to cleaning the offices she once managed, her 16-year-old daughter Sorrel, and ...
Pages in category "Plays by Alan Ayckbourn" The following 61 pages are in this category, out of 61 total. ... Neighbourhood Watch (Ayckbourn play) The Norman ...
Private Fears in Public Places is a 2004 play by British playwright Alan Ayckbourn. The bleakest play written by Ayckbourn for many years, it intimately follows a few days in the lives of six characters, in four tightly interwoven stories through 54 scenes. In 2006, it was made into a film Cœurs, directed by Alain Resnais.
Way Upstream is a play by Alan Ayckbourn.It was first performed, under Ayckbourn's direction, in Scarborough, North Yorkshire, UK, "in the round" at the Stephen Joseph Theatre, on 2 October 1981. [1]