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Do You Like Banana, Comrades?

In Csaba Szekely's first play, Robert is a young man growing up in Romania under Ceausescu's regime. Adolescence is different there. And bananas have an important role to play.

by Csaba Szekely
It's difficult being young and in love when your Dad is a high ranking official in Ceausescu's communist machine, your mother weeps all the time and your brother is trying to kill you.

This wild and sideways look at life behind the Iron Curtain during Ceausescu's regime is a first play by a young Hungarian writer living in Romania and was shortlisted for the 大象传媒 World Service/British Council's International Playwriting Competition.

Director: Marion Nancarrow

The play has just won the prestigious Richard Imison Award for best original script by a writer new to radio in 2012. The judges said of it: 'Do You Like Banana, Comrade? is a deft, witty, and often very moving picture of life under a totalitarian regime. Right from the start we fell in love with the charming, wide-eyed and irrepressible narrator. Growing up in Ceausescu's Romania, Robert only gradually realises the power his father wields as one of the dictator's henchmen. The adroit use of irony allows us to see through his naive logic and imaginative explanations, and through the chinks comes a real and growing sense of horror.... Sz茅kely packs a whole world and its politics into his play, whilst retaining a lightness of touch. Do You Like Banana, Comrade? is Csaba Sz茅kely's first ever play, written in his second language: a formidable achievement.'

Csaba Sz茅kely was born in Targu Mures, Romania. He's a writer, editor and assistant lecturer at his hometown's University of Arts. He writes mostly in his native Hungarian language, and his works frequently deal with social issues, such as unemployment, nationalism, alcoholism and corruption. His first play (Do You Like Banana, Comrades?) has won the regional prize for Europe in the 大象传媒's International Radio Playwriting Competition in 2009. Since then, his dramas and their staged performances have received numerous awards both in Romania and Hungary. His play Mineflowers
has been voted Best Drama of the Year by the Hungarian Theatre Critics' Association.

45 minutes

Last on

Wed 20 Feb 2013 14:15

Credits

Role Contributor
Tibor Michael Begley
Silvia Jane Whittenshaw
Repairman Brian Bowles
Titi Luke Newberry
Dani Daniel Rabin
Director Marion Nancarrow

Broadcasts

  • Fri 2 Sep 2011 14:15
  • Wed 20 Feb 2013 14:15

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