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The Times lit quiz
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It's that time of year again, folks...shall we?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Jobs -3 It think it is Bessie. In chapter 27 (if I read my roman numerals correctly) Dixon rummages in Margaret's drawers for a night-cap, as Bessy had a hankering to be buried in something of Margaret's. Margaret finds one for him.
If you are using a serach function on the etext it is night-cap not nightcap.
If you are using a serach function on the etext it is night-cap not nightcap.
'Noises Off' has been suggested for Theatre 2.
The following, an extract from a synopsis of 'Noises Off',
"Act One: during a rehearsal of the farce, Nothing On. The actors have only had two weeks rehearsal, the stagemanager put the set up back to front ... "
makes me think otherwise . Something by Ayckbourn perhaps?
The following, an extract from a synopsis of 'Noises Off',
"Act One: during a rehearsal of the farce, Nothing On. The actors have only had two weeks rehearsal, the stagemanager put the set up back to front ... "
makes me think otherwise . Something by Ayckbourn perhaps?
Captainandy, I think its more than just an initial plot device of the set being back to front. As:
"act two is the opening night, but seen from backstage"
So in the play we see the farce from the back, and then again from the front in act three.
I think this fits, I actually have a recollection of seeing this 20 odd years ago as a teenager, and the set is from the front in acts 1 and 3 and the back in act 2.
"act two is the opening night, but seen from backstage"
So in the play we see the farce from the back, and then again from the front in act three.
I think this fits, I actually have a recollection of seeing this 20 odd years ago as a teenager, and the set is from the front in acts 1 and 3 and the back in act 2.