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Closer (play)
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Everything about Closer Play totally explained

Closer is the third play written by Patrick Marber. Set in contemporary London, it tells the story of four people in the "body business" — Dan the obituary writer, Alice the stripper, Anna the photographer, and Larry the dermatologist — who over a period of years meet and fall in love. It has been described as a work that "gets under its audience’s skin, and ... not for the emotionally squeamish", a work in which "Marber is alert to the cruel inequalities of love, as the characters change partners in what sometimes comes over like a modern reworking of Coward’s Private Lives".
   Marber described the play's "construction" in an October 1999 interview: » The idea was always to create something that has a formal beauty into which you could shove all this anger and fury. I hoped the dramatic power of the play would rest on that tension between elegant structure – the underlying plan is that you see the first and last meeting of every couple in the play – and inelegant emotion.. Jokes from the play which proved to be dated were also omitted.
   It moved to the West End in March 1998. The West End cast included Lloyd Owen as Dan, Liza Walker as Alice, Frances Barber as Anna, and Neil Pearson as Larry.
   It received its Paris premiere on December 22, 1998 at the Theatre Fontaine, in a production based on a French translation by Pierre Laville and directed by Patrice Kerbrat. The production starred Anne Brochet as Alice, Caroline Sihol as Anna, Jean-Philippe Ecoffey as Larry and Gad Elmaleh as Dan. Closer won the New York Drama Critics' Circle Award for Best Foreign Play and was nominated for a Tony Award for Best Play in 1999.
   Early productions of Closer on the West Coast of the United States include one featuring Maggie Gyllenhaal as Alice in a Berkeley Repertory Theatre production in May 2000 (directed by Wilson Milam), and another also featuring Gyllenhaal opposite Rebecca De Mornay as Anna in a Mark Taper Forum production in December 2000, directed by Robert Egan.
   As of 2001, the play has been produced in more than a hundred cities in over thirty different languages around the world.

Trivia

  • During a 2004 interview Marber commented on the audience's early reactions to a scene from the play where two of the actors interact via a cybersex chat room: » :It's lovely on the stage. We had an enormous screen that would lower down with the two actors on either side so you saw them typing and the words would just appear on the screen. When the play premiered in May 1997 in London, at least half the audience didn't know what that scene was. You can trace the rise of the Internet really from that night. May '97, I'd watch the audience and I could just tell that the majority, in fact, had no idea what they were watching. Whereas the younger people in the audience absolutely knew, oh my God they're in a chat room. We've never seen this done before. It hadn't been done on stage or in film before and it felt very new and very strange and radical and it played to complete silence, shocked awe. It was at the National Theatre in London which is a respectable, subsidized theater and people were amazed. And it wasn't until the critics came a week after previews had started and said there's this really funny Internet scene that people started laughing.

  • American rock band Panic at the Disco (then Panic! at the Disco) took the title of their song "Lying Is the Most Fun a Girl Can Have Without Taking Her Clothes Off" from a line from the play, as well as "But It's Better If You Do" from another line.
  • Canadian emocore band Silverstein took the title of their song "Fist Wrapped in Blood" from a line where Larry states "Have you ever seen a human heart? It looks like a fist wrapped in blood!"
  • American rock band Fall Out Boy used the line "He tastes like you, only sweeter!" in Thnks fr th Mmrs.Further Information

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