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Home
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A powerful, inventive play that mixes real testimonials alongside existing and original music to explore homelessness among young people.
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02 September 2014

A powerful, inventive play that mixes real testimonials alongside existing and original music to explore one of the most important social concerns of today: homelessness amongst young people.
Bullet doesn’t want to call a hostel home. Eritrean Girl was smuggled here in a lorry. Singing Boy dreams of seeing his name in lights and Garden Boy just wants to feel safe. In 2013, homelessness amongst young people in the UK is at a record high, so when the big society doesn't work ? where do you go? An inner city high rise hostel, Target East, offers a roof.
Home brings to life the unheard voices of the young residents and staff who live and work behind the anonymous concrete walls. A bold documentary play that asks what it really means to call somewhere home, it is offers ideal material for youth theatres and young performers.
"Raises timely political questions in a fresh and streetwise style." - Evening Standard
"Filled with a fierce eloquence... a boldly theatrical piece." - Guardian
"Extraordinary... leaves you not just moved, but awed and uplifted." - Metro
"Powerful... an honest and reflective piece of theatre." - The Stage
Nadia Fall is a director, whose credits include The Maids (Lyric Hammersmith), Hymn (National Theatre, then Duchess Theatre), The Doctor's Dilemma (National Theatre) and Disgraced (Bush Theatre), as well as working as Associate Director on the Olivier Award-winning The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night Time. She is also Artistic Director of Naach Theatre Company.
Bullet doesn’t want to call a hostel home. Eritrean Girl was smuggled here in a lorry. Singing Boy dreams of seeing his name in lights and Garden Boy just wants to feel safe. In 2013, homelessness amongst young people in the UK is at a record high, so when the big society doesn't work ? where do you go? An inner city high rise hostel, Target East, offers a roof.
Home brings to life the unheard voices of the young residents and staff who live and work behind the anonymous concrete walls. A bold documentary play that asks what it really means to call somewhere home, it is offers ideal material for youth theatres and young performers.
"Raises timely political questions in a fresh and streetwise style." - Evening Standard
"Filled with a fierce eloquence... a boldly theatrical piece." - Guardian
"Extraordinary... leaves you not just moved, but awed and uplifted." - Metro
"Powerful... an honest and reflective piece of theatre." - The Stage
Nadia Fall is a director, whose credits include The Maids (Lyric Hammersmith), Hymn (National Theatre, then Duchess Theatre), The Doctor's Dilemma (National Theatre) and Disgraced (Bush Theatre), as well as working as Associate Director on the Olivier Award-winning The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night Time. She is also Artistic Director of Naach Theatre Company.
Price: $22.95
Pages: 80
Publisher: Theatre Communications Group
Imprint: Nick Hern Books
Publication Date:
02 September 2014
Trim Size: 7.75 X 5.00 in
ISBN: 9781848423558
Format: Paperback
NADIA FALL is one of the UK’s rising stars in British theatre. Her directing credits include the acclaimed revival of Shaw’s The Doctor’s Dilemma for the National Theatre in 2012 as well as Alan Bennett’s Hymn - for the National then West End - and the 2013 Pulitzer Prize winner Disgraced. Home is her first work as a playwright.