
cover photo by Peter Cunningham
this collection contains three full-length plays:
LET'S PLAY TWO
THE LIVING
SHOW AND TELL
"...LET'S PLAY TWO, Anthony
Clarvoe's suprisingly affecting romantic comedy. Mr Clarvoe's
low-key two-hander.... The play, about a young woman made pregnant
by an even younger man whose constancy she doubts has something
to say about the notion of maturity. As demonstrated by the
example of sweet-tempered Phil, that quality is perhaps measured
best not by the hardness of one's calluses but by one's
willingness to acquire new ones.
This may not be the most
revolutionary concept ever considered on the American stage.
Still, it's no shame to have basic human decency reiterated as a
value now and again, especially when it is elucidated as
compassionately as in LET'S PLAY TWO."
Peter Marks, The New York
Times
"Once in a while a play
comes along that is so fresh, so different, so delightful, so
damn charming it defies definition. you can't put your finger on
what it is; but you sit there in the dark with a smile on your
face from beginning to end, and talk about it all the way home.
LET'S PLAY TWO is just such a
play....
It's a simple story, really,
about two totally opposite characters falling in love. That's it.
That's all. But there are more spins on the development of their
romance than there are on a champion pitcher's baseball. And it's
their passionate love of `the country's national pastime' that
brought them together in the first place."
Shirle Gottlieb, Drama-Logue
originally produced by South Coast Rep, Costa Mesa CA
1 M, 1 F
read the first scene or scenes on line
.pdf order form (this full-length play)
"Set in 1665 London as the
Black Plague sweeps the city claiming more than 100,000 lives,
THE LIVING is not about death. Rather this remarkable, riveting
drama is a compelling confirmation of life.
And although it's set more than
three centuries ago, Anthony Clarvoe's two-act parable (in which
the reactions of the people and the government parallel those
surrounding today's A I D S epidemic), maintains...stunning
immediacy....
Often bitterly funny, often
ineffably sad, this is the story of a few brave sometimes
reluctantly so people who stood fast, doing what need to be
done....
Propelled by Clarvoe's masterful
handling of language..."
Sandra Dillard-Rosen, The
Denver Post
"The play THE LIVING is
alive with lessons for tomorrow. Set in London in the bubonic
plague year of 1665, the play is a scary morality tale, a
ghoulish slice of history and an evening shining with hope....
Inevitably, the world wakes up
from nightmares and learns to dance and grumble again. Clarvoe's
play reveals much in its simple retelling of a real horror. The
Londoners of 1665 knew nothing about the causes of the plague. In
the end, it passed, as all things do. The lesson in THE LIVING is
about being tested and not being found wanting."
Jackie Campbell, Rocky
Mountain News
"...Clarvoe's thought-provoking script,
which not only celebrates the strength of courage and compassion in a climate of
overshelming fear, but has a clear parallel in this country's muddled response
to the dire beginning of the AIDS crisis...."
Terri Roberts, Back Stage West
originally produced by The Denver Center Theater Company
8 M, 2 F
read the first scene or scenes on line
.pdf order form (this full-length play)
"All school kids—and their
parents—know about `Show and Tell'. Bringing objects from home
is not only a lesson in history, but also an experience in
contact, of one person reaching for another and the other
reaching back.
Playwright Anthony Clarvoe understands it
too, and his drama is a powerful tale of contact, and of
discovery, and of what it takes to survive.
Corey teaches fourth grade, and her
classroom literally explodes one morning during show-and-tell.
The entire class of twenty-four children dies, but she had left the room
for a moment, and survives. A team of government forensics
experts arrives to re-assemble the bodies for identification and
to seek the cause of the explosion.... They are tough and
experienced, with the sardonic wit that they, and others who work
constantly with death, need to survive.
SHOW AND TELL is a strong, well-written
drama that is both entertaining and thought-provoking."
Joe Pollack, Saint Louis Post Dispatch
originally produced by The Repertory Theater of Saint Louis
2 M, 4 F
read the first scene or scenes on line
.pdf order form (this full-length play)
Plays By Anthony Clarvoe
I S B N: 0-88145-117-7
$19.95