Black Comedy (play)
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This article is about the play by Peter Shaffer. For the genre, see Black comedy.
Black Comedy is a one-act farce by Peter Shaffer, first performed in 1965. The premise of the piece is that light and dark are transposed, so that when the stage is lit the cast are supposed to be in darkness and only when the stage is dark are they supposed to be able to see each other and their surroundings.
Quick Facts Black Comedy, Written by ...
Black Comedy | |
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Written by | Peter Shaffer |
Date premiered | 1965 |
Place premiered | National Theatre Chichester, England |
Original language | English |
Genre | Farce |
Setting | 9:30 on a Sunday night Mid 1960s South Kensington, London Brindsley Miller's flat |
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In the play, a young sculptor and his fiancée have borrowed some expensive antique furniture from a neighbour's flat without his permission to impress an elderly millionaire art collector. When the power fails, the neighbour returns early, other people also arrive unexpectedly, and matters descend into near-chaos.