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Life and Beth
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Life and Beth : ウィキペディア英語版
Life and Beth

''Life and Beth'' is a 2008 play by British playwright Alan Ayckbourn. It was written as a third part of a trilogy named ''Things That Go Bump'', uniting the cast of the first two plays: ''Haunting Julia'' (1994) and ''Snake in the Grass'' (2002). It is about a recently bereaved widow, Beth, troubled by her family's misguided support and a late husband who won't leave her alone.
==Background==

The history of this play dates back to 1994, when ''Haunting Julia'' was premièred. The cast was three men, but the play was dominated by Julia, once a gifted musician, now a ghost. In 2002, a female companion piece was premièred, named ''Snake in the Grass'', with a cast of three women in a play dominated by the ghost of the father of two of them (and a much less savoury character than Julia). For some time, Alan Ayckbourn had considered writing a third play with a supernatural that combined the casts of these plays, but it was only after Susie Blake – Miriam in the original ''Snake in the Grass'' – contacted Ayckbourn about reprising her role that he said he would write this third play.〔Interview from ''Life and Beth'' programme, held on (Ayckbourn site )〕〔(''Life and Beth'' history on official Ayckbourn site )〕 This play was considerably lighter than the other two plays, and Ayckbourn considered it his equivalent to Noël Coward's Blithe Spirit.
This the first play to be written since Alan Ayckbourn's stroke in 2006. After the stroke, he doubted if he could return to writing, at some points considering giving it up and just directing.〔(''The Stage'', 22 March 2007 )〕〔(''The Independent'', 24 August 2008 )〕 (''If I Were You'', the first new Ayckbourn play performed after his stroke, was written before the event.) He first revealed he was working on a new play in July 2007〔(''The Guardian'', 6 July 2007 )〕 Originally titled Life ''After'' Beth (it was originally set after when Beth was the dead character), the title changed prior to its completion in that summer, and it was first publicly announced that the play would be performed as part of the 2008 summer season at the Stephen Joseph Theatre December 2007.〔 Two months later it was announced that Ayckbourn's other two "ghost" plays would also be performed in this season as part of the ''Things That Go Bump'' trilogy.〔(''Scarborough Evening News'', 19 February 2008 )〕
The play also coincided with Alan Ayckbourn's announcement that he was stepping down as Artistic Director of the Stephen Joseph Theatre.〔(BBC News, 8 July 2008 )〕 Although Alan Ayckbourn would continue to write and direct for the theatre, and this wasn't quite his last new play whilst artistic director (the last one being a musical ''Awaking Beauty''), ''Life and Beth'' was nonetheless seen as his farewell performance.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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