LISETTE LECAT ROSS
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| Literary Agent: *: | n/a |
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Plays by Lisette Lecat Ross
Dark Sun |
| 1st Produced: | - | - | ||||
| Company: | - | |||||
| 1st Published: | Dramatists Play Service, NY, | ISBN/ASIN | - | |||
| To Buy This Play: | If Publisher (above) is underlined then the play may be purchased by direct click, otherwise (below) are AbeBooks for secondhand & 1st eds and other Booksellers for new copies | |||||
| Genre: | - | Play/Drama | Parts: | Male | 4 | Female | 1 |
| Parts Other: | - | |||||
| Notes: | This powerful drama set in the black South Africa township of Soweto, on the edge of change, centers on the fate of a black man and a white woman thrown together by force of circumstance | |||||
| Synopsis: | bus transporting a group of international Red Cross workers through the township of Soweto, on a fact-finding tour, is bombed and many of its passengers killed. In the ensuing chaos one survivor, Lydia De Jager, a white woman in her forties, escapes and is sheltered by Simon Kgoathe (a Sowetan in his late forties, early fifties). This single compassionate act may doom him—a fact he quickly realizes. Any hope of utilizing his meager options are thwarted firstly, by Lydia's fear and her recklessness; then by his discovery that she is a South African, by events outside and, finally by the intrusion of a young black man, Sipho, who may or may not be a government informer and who is also urgently in need of Simon's help. As Simon tries desperately to survive in the increasingly dehumanized environment of a country without hope and a township seething with rage, he strives also to hold onto his humanity. Isolated in what is, for Lydia, both a fragile haven and a frightening cage, these two people, so vastly different in character and experience, struggle through mistrust and prejudice towards a tenuous understanding. As the night progresses, Simon's main hope of survival becomes his secret underground "cubby-hole." But, from Sipho's entrance, events spin out of control and the play is propelled towards a powerful and moving conclusion. | |||||
Scent Of The Roses |
| 1st Produced: | New York | 1999 | ||||
| Company: | - | |||||
| 1st Published: | Dramatists Play Service, NY, | ISBN/ASIN | - | |||
| To Buy This Play: | If Publisher (above) is underlined then the play may be purchased by direct click, otherwise (below) are AbeBooks for secondhand & 1st eds and other Booksellers for new copies | |||||
| Genre: | - | Play/Drama | Parts: | Male | 4 | Female | 6 |
| Parts Other: | - | |||||
| Notes: | - | |||||
| Synopsis: | An international art dealer arrives in South Africa in search of early works by an exiled painter. Annalise Morant, a South African woman, owns just such a work—a landscape, her most cherished possession. For reasons of their own, her children are eager for her to meet with the dealer; but when she does, it sets in motion a swift series of events sending her on an emotional and a physical journey—forcing her to come to terms with a past that has haunted her, to redress a wrong before it's too late. A story of the resilience of memory, the choices framed by circumstance, about love and loss, SCENT OF THE ROSES captures the essence of the new and the old South Africa in all its heart-breaking complexity. | |||||