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A Taste of Honey

Part of the Modern Plays series
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It's chaotic - a bit of love, a bit of lust and there you are.

We don't ask for life, we have it thrust upon us. Written by Shelagh Delaney when she was nineteen, A Taste of Honey is one of the great defining and taboo-breaking plays of the 1950s.

When her mother, Helen, runs of with a car salesman, feisty teenager Jo takes up with a black sailor who promises to marry her before he heads for the seas, leaving her pregnant and alone.

Art student Geoff moves in and assumes the role of surrogate parent until misguidedly, he sends for Helen and their unconventional setup unravels.

A Taste of Honey offers an explosive celebration of the vulnerabilities and strengths of the female spirit in a deprived and restless world.

Bursting with energy and daring, this exhilarating and angry depiction of harsh, working-class life in post-war Salford is shot through with love and humour, and infused with jazz.

The play was first presented by Theatre Workshop at the Theatre Royal Stratford, London, on 27 May 1958.

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Product Details
Bloomsbury Academic
1472583760 / 9781472583765
Paperback
822.914
10/02/2014
United Kingdom
English
87 pages
20 cm
General (US: Trade) Learn More
Reprint. At head of cover title: National theatre. Originally published: London: Methuen, 1959.