Anthem

It was the 7.57 on the Upfield line. The 8.02 on the Mernda line. The 6.22 on the Craigieburn face to face, groin to bum, armpit to armpit. On the morning commute. A single mother struggles with her hyperactive child, a young man exerts control over his girlfriend, a cleaner is begged for help by her former boss, a convenience store worker returns for vengeance, three siblings thrash out racial and ideological battle lines, an elderly couple remember their own war of resistance. All the while busker Charity demands the passengers pay up, pay up.

As the stories intersect, the characters collide with each other and tear apart, or pull towards one another in yearning and loneliness. A simmering conflict keeps us on our toes, and the train moves us inexorably forwards.

Two decades after their seminal work, Who's Afraid of the Working Class?, Andrew Bovell, Patricia Cornelius, Melissa Reeves, Christos Tsiolkas and Irine Vela reunite for a new take on class and the politics of marginalisation. Anthem registers the pulse of the nation in a country unable to reconcile its past and uncertain of its future. With no easy answers, it asks the urgent question of who we are now: does Australia really sing with one voice?

'An ambitious, energetic and remarkable play' - The Guardian

'Gripping and intoxicating' - Time Out

'Anthem is powerful and important theatre that should inspire reflection on how Australia became so polarised.' - The Age

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Anthem

It was the 7.57 on the Upfield line. The 8.02 on the Mernda line. The 6.22 on the Craigieburn face to face, groin to bum, armpit to armpit. On the morning commute. A single mother struggles with her hyperactive child, a young man exerts control over his girlfriend, a cleaner is begged for help by her former boss, a convenience store worker returns for vengeance, three siblings thrash out racial and ideological battle lines, an elderly couple remember their own war of resistance. All the while busker Charity demands the passengers pay up, pay up.

As the stories intersect, the characters collide with each other and tear apart, or pull towards one another in yearning and loneliness. A simmering conflict keeps us on our toes, and the train moves us inexorably forwards.

Two decades after their seminal work, Who's Afraid of the Working Class?, Andrew Bovell, Patricia Cornelius, Melissa Reeves, Christos Tsiolkas and Irine Vela reunite for a new take on class and the politics of marginalisation. Anthem registers the pulse of the nation in a country unable to reconcile its past and uncertain of its future. With no easy answers, it asks the urgent question of who we are now: does Australia really sing with one voice?

'An ambitious, energetic and remarkable play' - The Guardian

'Gripping and intoxicating' - Time Out

'Anthem is powerful and important theatre that should inspire reflection on how Australia became so polarised.' - The Age

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Overview

It was the 7.57 on the Upfield line. The 8.02 on the Mernda line. The 6.22 on the Craigieburn face to face, groin to bum, armpit to armpit. On the morning commute. A single mother struggles with her hyperactive child, a young man exerts control over his girlfriend, a cleaner is begged for help by her former boss, a convenience store worker returns for vengeance, three siblings thrash out racial and ideological battle lines, an elderly couple remember their own war of resistance. All the while busker Charity demands the passengers pay up, pay up.

As the stories intersect, the characters collide with each other and tear apart, or pull towards one another in yearning and loneliness. A simmering conflict keeps us on our toes, and the train moves us inexorably forwards.

Two decades after their seminal work, Who's Afraid of the Working Class?, Andrew Bovell, Patricia Cornelius, Melissa Reeves, Christos Tsiolkas and Irine Vela reunite for a new take on class and the politics of marginalisation. Anthem registers the pulse of the nation in a country unable to reconcile its past and uncertain of its future. With no easy answers, it asks the urgent question of who we are now: does Australia really sing with one voice?

'An ambitious, energetic and remarkable play' - The Guardian

'Gripping and intoxicating' - Time Out

'Anthem is powerful and important theatre that should inspire reflection on how Australia became so polarised.' - The Age


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781760628260
Publisher: Currency Press
Publication date: 06/01/2023
Pages: 128
Product dimensions: 5.39(w) x 8.27(h) x 0.35(d)

About the Author

ANDREW BOVELL is a playwright and screenwriter. His plays include: Things I Know To Be True, The Secret River, When the Rain Stops Falling, Holy Day, Who's Afraid of the Working Class?, Speaking in Tongues, Scenes From a Separation, Shades of Blue, Ship of Fools, After Dinner, The Ballad of Lois Ryan and State of Defense. His work has been performed extensively both in Australia and internationally and won many awards. His screen writing credits include the French language Iris, directed by Jalil Lespert. A Most Wanted Man, an adaptation of the John Le Carr novel, directed by Anton Corbijn and starring Phillip Seymour Hoffman, premiered at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival and was released internationally in July, 2014. Other films include Edge of Darkness, Blessed, The Book of Revelation, Head On, Lust, The Fisherman's Wake, Piccolo Mondo, Strictly Ballroom and the multi-award-winning Lantana.
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