Dogfall
Dogfall is an Australian play written by South Australian playwright Caleb Lewis, first produced in November 2007. Set in World War I, this absurdist play has an anti-war theme.
Plot and themes
[edit]The play travels through time with the central characters of Will, a soldier, and Jack, a medic, appearing in bunker and trench warfare in multiple historical wars; with the play linking the events as one long drawn out war.[1] The play begins in 1916, during the Somme.[1] The battle shifts continuously, and the sky continues to fall... Dogfall depicts the absurdity of war; outside it is literally raining cats dogs, and other animals.
The two men are joined by "semi-pacifist" Alousha, and scenes from other theatres of war, notably the Vietnam War, Nanking, London,[2] Guernica, Northern Ireland, Rwanda, and Guantanamo Bay detention camp are portrayed.[3] The plot is absurd but the themes complex and multi-layered.[2]
Original production
[edit]The first production of this anti-war play was launched at the Bakehouse Theatre in Adelaide, South Australia from 2 to 17 November 2007. Critic Stephen Davenport described it as a "brilliant play" that was "disturbing and morbidly funny" and "superbly written by Caleb Lewis".[2] US playwright Edward Albee, with whom Lewis had undertaken a two-week workshop, called the play "wonderful".[3]
Cast
[edit]- Brendan Rock
- Martin Hissey
- Joseph Del Re
Crew
[edit]- Director: Justin McGuinness[2][4]
- Composer: Peter Nielsen[4]
- Lighting: Nic Mollison[4]
- Costume & Props: Tsubi Du[3]
- Publicity: Antje Guenther[3]
- Produced by: TheimaGen[3]
2016 U.S. production
[edit]Dogfall was staged by Iron Age Theatre in Philadelphia, in the United States, in February 2016, directed by John Doyle.[1]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c Cofta, Mark (11 February 2016). "Iron Age presents Caleb Lewis's 'Dogfall'". Broad Street Review. Retrieved 9 June 2022.
- ^ a b c d Davenport, Stephen (2007). "Dogfall (review)" (PDF). The Adelaide Theatre Guide. Retrieved 16 February 2008.
- ^ a b c d e f Bollen, Jonathan (December 2007 – January 2008). "War at a distance". RealTime (82): 33. Retrieved 9 June 2022.
- ^ a b c d "Dogfall". AusStage. Retrieved 9 June 2022.
- 2007 plays
- 2000s Australian plays
- Existentialist plays
- Gulf War fiction
- Plays about the military
- Plays set in Iraq
- Plays set in Kuwait
- Plays set in France
- Plays set in Russia
- Plays set in Vietnam
- Plays about the Vietnam War
- Plays about World War I
- Plays about World War II
- Theatre of the Absurd
- Plays set in Rwanda
- Plays set in Cuba
- Plays set in Spain