by Jez Bond (Author), Mark Cameron (Author)
There will come a point in every witch's life where the scales are tipped so far to one side that the world, nature, humanity - whatever you want to call it - finally fights back. The demons are expelled and we return to the natural state.
Sleeping Beauty is the fairytale of the beautiful princess Arabella who pricks her finger on a spindle and sleeps for a hundred years. Here adapted for the stage, you can join a host of characters for a night of magic, romance and laughter.
In this quirky and flamboyant new stage version of the traditional story by Jez Bond and Mark Cameron, the battle of good versus evil is given a facelift, bringing this fairytale vividly to life through comedy, drama and original songs.
The songs are included at the back of the edition (melody with chord symbols).
Author Biography
Jez Bond won the Channel Four Theatre Director Bursary, under which he trained at Watford Palace Theatre. In 2010, he founded London's Park Theatre, leading the £3m project and taking the reins as Artistic Director when it opened, to critical acclaim, in 2013. He was recently named in the Evening Standard's Power 1000L a list of the one thousand most influential Londoners. As a director his credits include Adult Supervision (Park Theatre); The Fame Game (Tour of Austria); Sleeping Beauty (Salisbury Playhouse); Oliver! (starring Rowan Atkinson, Oxford); I Have Been Here Before (Watford Palace Theatre); The Twits (Tour of Switzerland); Misconceptions (Hong Kong Arts Centre); Big Boys (Croydon Warehouse); Shot of Genius (Leicester Square); Canaries Sometimes Sing (Kings Head & France); and A Season in South Africa (Old Vic). As a dramaturg, he has worked with writers at Soho Theatre, Theatre Royal Stratford East, Royal Court and Young Vic.
Mark Cameron is and actor and scriptwriter. Television credits include
Waterloo Road;
Eastenders;
The Roman Mysteries;
Vincent;
The Royal;
Fifty Five Degrees North;
Doctors and
Extreme Endurance, plus regular characters in
Coronation Street;
Steel River Blues and
Emmerdale. Film includes D.I. Hackman in
Scar Tissue (UK cinema release 2012); The Boss in
The Boss (2012 Reed Festival short film winner); Norman Hunter in
The Damned United, and John in
Tomo (Sundance Film Festival Winner). Theatre includes the Dame in
Sleeping Beauty (Salisbury Playhouse); Chancer in
Mathematics of the Heart (Theatre 503 and winner of Brighton Fringe Festival 2011 Best Play); Dorante in
The Game of Love and Chance (national tour); Alfredo in
The Breakfast Soldiers (Contact Theatre, Manchester); and Petruchio in
The Taming of the Shrew (Shakespeare in the Park).
Number of Pages: 152
Dimensions: 0.5 x 7.7 x 5 IN
Publication Date: February 11, 2014