Give a speech about Parlour
Answers
Answer:
there.
Explanation:
Jez Butterworth's previous plays have taken us from sadistic Soho to remote Dartmoor. Now he forsakes extremes to transport us to one of those new estates, filled with trimly identical houses, on London's outer fringe. But, in the manner of American writers such as John Updike and Richard Ford, he compellingly shows us that suburbia breeds its own madness and melancholia. His central figure, Ned, a demolition expert, constantly reruns videos of his biggest blasts. On top of this the nightmare-haunted Ned is convinced his teeming possessions, from a stuffed badger to a bust of Aldous Huxley, are being nicked. Ned's wife, Joy, views his progressive breakdown with a mockingly sardonic eye. After 11 years of stifling marriage, she also dreams of escape and comes on strong to next-door neighbour Dale, who hates his car-wash business but is terrified of abandoning his comforting suburban prison.