Showing 1,081-1,092 of 1,365 items.

Singer

6-26f, 16-50m

An epic fable of post-war Britain, told with lurid and exhilarating energy.

A Single Act

2f 2m

A subtle and menacing play about life after a terrorist outrage.

Sink

1f

A play of two voices for one actor, about memory, catastrophe and sacrifice.

Six Acts of Love

3f 2m

A bittersweet play about the rich complexities of life, love and death.

Six Characters in Search of an Author (Headlong version)

4f 7m

Pirandello's classic play, updated for the twenty-first century by Headlong.

The Six-Days World

3f 3m

An emotionally involving family play that evokes the poignancy and the poison of the festive season - from the award-winning writer of The Sugar Wife.

Sixty Five Miles

2f 3m, doubling

A devastating drama about family and the ties that bind us together. Winner of the Under-26 Award at the 2005 Bruntwood Prize for Playwriting.

The Skriker

8f 7m or more

An extraordinary collision of ancient fairytale and fractured urban England.

Skunk

3f 5m plus 5 or more f/m (can be performed by a cast of 10)

A surreal, dreamlike and hilarious play exploring the pressures and transformations that happen to teenagers as they grow up. In the Multiplay Drama series.

Skyscraper Lullaby

2f 1m

A powerful drama about two parents trying to come to terms with the disappearance of their toddler, written and first performed as an audio drama for Audible Original.

Slave Ubu

2f 12m plus extras

The third and final part of The Ubu Plays, Alfred Jarry's surreal and hilarious satire of power, greed, and bourgeois pretension. Slave Ubu concludes the adventures of Pa Ubu.

Published in volume Ubu

    Sleeping Beauty (stage version)

    4f 6m doubling

    The classic tale of Sleeping Beauty's curse – as seen through the eyes of the fairy who curses her.

    Amateur Productions
    On Now & Coming Soon

    Advertise Your Show


    Bill Bryson, Adapted by Tim Whitnall

    Fin Kennedy

    Amanda Whittington

    Alexandra Wood, Adapted from Kate Summerscale

    Amanda Whittington


    Henrik Ibson, Adapted by Richard Eyre

    Tom Wells

    Jeremy Sams, Original authors John Esmonde and Bob Larbey