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It's a boiling hot summer and the pub kitchen's getting maniac. Charley is head cook, well the only cook, and he's as stubborn as the grease on his cooker. Spending his downtime amongst the empties in the kitchen courtyard, he's happy with a quiet life and his classical CDs. But sharing his kitchen with stroppy bar manager, Richard, and his waitress/student girlfriend has its drawbacks - like their shagging in the storeroom between shifts. When Connie comes to help, she stirs up more that just the soup. No matter how much they all try to lose themselves in the routine of everyday life, she awakens painful half-forgotten feelings that just can't be ignored.
Louise and Manni are eighteen, bestest friends since forever and they're going to live up town, go clubbing and get off with boys. Yes, there's only one bed but they can work round that. Louise worries as all she does is club and she'll be alone when her bestest mate goes to uni, Manni can't even get her boyfriend to sleep with her, but nothing is ever going to come between them. Nothing...except for drink, sex, and sleepy wandering hands under the duvet.
"David thinks that life would be much better is he was sent away to one of those young offenders centres where they lock you in a room with a TV and bring you your food - he just needs to figure out how to get there without hurting anyone. His teacher, Mr. Richmond, has given up on David and is concentrating on Lauren. But Lauren is sick of being the good girl, and fed up with being bullied - by other kids, and by her parents, who want to send her to the posh school. In fact, she's somewhat tired of life altogether. Through a seemingly unlikely friendship, David and Lauren discover the 'fun' in dysfunctional, and just might find their own - and each other's - salvation. Bottle Universe was premiered at The Bush Theatre, London, following the success there of Simon Burt's earlier plays, Untouchable and Got To Be Happy."--BOOK JACKET.
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Told Look Younger is a provocative, frank and perceptive comedy about sex, love, friendship and growing old. Three encounters between three gay men in their early sixties in a restaurant where neither the menu nor the decor are ever the same. It premiered at the Jermyn Street Theatre to great critical acclaim in June 2015.
Just A Stranger Small town atmosphere where the weather is continually changing, giving the locals a popular, non-thinking topic to discuss. And how is your day? Just A Stranger depicts life in a slow, comforting village where your neighbor is family, the store clerk is a by-product of immigration, the school system is consolidated, and each day follows the same-old, same-old. Until… Two young ladies coming home for a visit. A small reunion filled with life’s ultimate questions and dying answers. Drawing them to the edge of their own existence, is it Mayville with it’s quaint taste of settling or is it the players this small village has created. Kim and Becky knew this would be no vacation, but once their feet touched the ground of Mayville…I’ll let you explain.