About this item
Highlights
- Edgerton Foundation New Play Award: Morris Panych, The Shoplifters (Winner) In this riotously funny new comedy from Morris Panych, we meet Alma, a seasoned career shoplifter who prefers the five-finger discount over some lousy seniors' day deal.
- About the Author: Playwright, actor, and director Morris Panych has been -described as "a man for all seasons in Canadian theatre.
- 128 Pages
- Drama, Canadian
Description
About the Book
A dark comedy full of surprises that sparks with a surprisingly high-stakes battle of wills over thought-provoking issues.Book Synopsis
Edgerton Foundation New Play Award: Morris Panych, The Shoplifters (Winner)
In this riotously funny new comedy from Morris Panych, we meet Alma, a seasoned career shoplifter who prefers the five-finger discount over some lousy seniors' day deal. But it's not just an empty wallet that leads Alma to a life of petty crime - it's also her strong convictions about social justice and economic inequality. Along for the ride is Phyllis, Alma's frazzled accomplice who lacks her mentor's cool demeanour and snappy comebacks. It's Alma who does the talking when the pair is apprehended at the grocery store by Dom, an overzealous rookie security guard. Guided by the strictness of his born-again Christian belief, Dom is ready to handcuff the culprits and call the police, but his affable senior partner, Otto, intervenes with a more sympathetic view of the crime: "It's just a couple a steaks." As Alma, Phyllis, Dom, and Otto share their wildly different takes on the situation, complex views on morality and ethics begin to emerge. With its cast of oddball characters, Panych's comedy offers biting observations about society's haves and have-nots and how much they might actually have in common. Cast of 2 women and 2 men.Review Quotes
"The play is enormous fun and, through all the laughter, it inspires an interesting conversation about the world we find ourselves in today." - the Prince George Citizen
"Economic inequality isn't funny. Thank God The Shoplifters is ..."
--Washington City Paper
"The Shoplifters is a gem in a minor key, as a work of literature and a play."
--The Georgetowner
"Gripping comedy ... this hilarious battle of wills brings the nature and meaning of shoplifting to new scales of justice and calls of a closer examination of the human condition."
--TheatreBloom.com
"The Shoplifters gives a woman of a certain age the kind of riveting gravitas almost always written for men."
--metroweekly.com
"The Shoplifters packs a comic punch."
--DC Theatre Scene
"Stocked with terrific jokes."
--DC Metro Theater Arts
"The Shoplifters is a hoot ... a hysterically funny play, with biting wit and sharply rendered characters."
--womanaroundtown.com
"Panych can definitely write jokes"
--Calgary Sun
About the Author
Playwright, actor, and director Morris Panych has been -described as "a man for all seasons in Canadian theatre." He has appeared in more than fifty works for the stage and in numerous television and film roles. He has directed more than thirty theater productions and written more than a dozen plays that have been translated and -produced throughout the world. He has twice won the Governor General's Award: for The Ends of the Earth (Talonbooks, 1993) and for Girl in the Goldfish Bowl (Talonbooks, 2003). Panych has won the Jessie Richardson Theatre Award fourteen times, for both acting and directing. He has also been nominated six times for the Dora Mavor Moore Award and three times for the Floyd S. Chalmers Canadian Play Award.