JESSICA HOFFMANN   


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Plays by Jessica Hoffmann

JESSICA HOFFMANN
Love Letters Straight From Your Heart
1st Produced:
17 May 2007
Company:
Uninvited Guests and Fuel
1st Published:
-
ISBN/ASIN
-
To Buy This Play:
I don't think the play has been published but you could try abebooks.com
or the playwright direct where their email is shown at the top of the page
Genre:
-
Piece
Parts:
Male
1
Female
1
Parts Other:
-
Notes:
The script and playlist for every show are unique. The audience are invited to request songs and write dedications to the people they love. All the words in this performance were written by people in the room. Filmed and edited by Hannah Still Devised and performed by Richard Dufty and Jessica Hoffmann Directed by Paul Clarke Produced by Fuel From 05 August 2009
Synopsis:
A glass champagne as you enter the room and a chair around the table. . .then a toast to love! Love Letters is a magical theatre show about our relationships that sits somewhere between a wedding reception, a wake and a radio dedication show. In advance, using the email below, you can make an anonymous dedication to long lost loves and current lovers, to mums, to dads and to absent friends and then these will be included, anonymously of course, during the show. This is one for all you romantics out there! So bring your partners, husbands or wives, or just a friend you want to make a dedication to and enjoy a magical hour at the Corn Exchange. .
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JESSICA HOFFMANN
Schlock
1st Produced:
2005
Company:
-
1st Published:
-
ISBN/ASIN
-
To Buy This Play:
I don't think the play has been published but you could try abebooks.com
or the playwright direct where their email is shown at the top of the page
Genre:
-
Piece
Parts:
Male
3
Female
1
Parts Other:
-
Notes:
Univited Guest: written by Paul Clarke, Richard Dufty, Jessica Hoffmann with Neil Callahanin collaboration with sound artist Duncan Speakman
Synopsis:
Why do we not shout "enough" when we watch the TV news from Iraq or look at a photo of blood seeping from the head of a corpse? Could it be that we have become so used to fetishised images of violent death that we can no longer distinguish between the real death and the staged one; between real blood and tomato ketchup? - Gardner, Guardian
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