115:'s third full-length play, was written in 1970. The play is Expressionist in style, where the theatrical spectacle dominates the plot. It introduces Sally Banner, a picaresque heroine moving without success through a search for love and freedom, while oppressed by authority figures and disappointed by unsatisfactory lovers. She is, in brief succession, a defiant schoolgirl, a promiscuous wartime student, a Communist, a suburban de facto, and a well-known poet. It is recognised as Hewett's best play.
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incorporated “shouts and whispers, songs and chants, choruses and solos, echoes and amplification …and always an attention to rhythm.” It is “an acoustic patchwork of heightened meaning” which has been “assured of a prominent place in the history of recent
Australian drama because it employs almost every technique that seemed new and experimental in the late sixties and early seventies, and ranges widely in its moods from the burlesque historical through the social satirical to the purely lyrical.”
336:, which Hewett's university office overlooked. It made full use of its pit stage and three-tier construction. The open stage allowed the characters and the Chorus to move fluidly around and across each other. The Authority Figure plaster masks were a full two stories tall, giving a giant brooding presence and a gravitas to proceedings, particularly the court judgement scene. On the third tier, Sally was able to rise above these monstrous statues in the finale.
302:. The highlight songs are the satirical “Poor Sally” theme, Hewett's rewrite of Andrew Marvel's “Come live with me and be my love”, the wistful "I passed my love”, the boisterous “Sally go round the moon” and the bawdy “Lets all dance the polka”. Several songs from folk musician Mike Leyden are included, as well as Les Flood's “Overtime Staggers Rock” (which also featured in Hewett's early novel
464:, this genre was over 60 years old in Germany but largely unknown in Australia. In Expressionism, the full performance rather than the flow of dialogue delivers the meaning. An overlooked failure of the societal system usually underpins the action. The protagonist is typically the “New Man”, unafraid to act on their moral beliefs. A later development is
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observed, “For all its incidental but relevant crudity a very subtle and thoughtful play, with an introspective theme brilliantly externalised as theatre by the author and director. A work of art universal in its appeal as the crushing weight of authority in all its forms on the creative personality.
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Hewett's own attitude toward Sally could be dismissive: unsurprising given that the play spends much of its energy lampooning her. Hewett regarded her as a “humbling and irritating doppelganger” who would continue to follow her around forever. Ultimately however she was possessive of "her Sally", as
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The Chorus jitterbug in 1940s outfits. An interviewer talks to parents about Sally's poetry prizes. The Father says he doesn't understand poetry, and Sally is man-mad. Sally says the world tastes like blood in her mouth. She is taken to an unimpressed psychiatrist. The Mother says she smelled semen
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was that many women in the audience identified or sympathised with Sally Banner. Sally is to a fair extent a caricature; humourless, immature and hopelessly demanding what others are not prepared to give. Yet this "incandescent heroine with the element of quest in her sexuality” arrived at exactly
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Observers have sought to define the three
Authority figures (the three Masks with their attendant actor) in different ways. Neeme found the "Mother" class of characters as “the born great”, the "Rosa" class as the opportunists who “seek greatness, while the "Canon" class are the hapless or corrupt
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David finds her asleep in the Men's Common Room and falls in love. He wants to love her intellect, and takes her home, Girl students say Sally is a nympho. David goes off to war, saying he can't take their intellectual romance with her lovers on the side. Sally says she'll marry David and wants to
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A clap of thunder. Sally describes her approach to the Chapel
Perilous through a blackened land of burning forests. The Headmistress unveils a stained glass window in the school chapel, endowed by the older Sally. The Canon and Sister Rosa emerge from behind their masks to extol Sally's fame, with
544:
The end of the play, where in the published version Sally gives a nod as a gesture before her donated stained-glass window is lit, might simply indicate that to obtain recognition by those in power you must at least concede they exist. However, feminists for whom the play was "not radical enough"
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Sally has a tentative lesbian affair, undergoes an abortion, and leaves her husband and child to go off with another man. She has the temerity to ask several men to make love to her, though they cannot comply. At the time, all this was shocking to conservative audiences, and still might raise an
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For many young women, Sally was the first modern liberated woman in literature at a time when women were distancing from the attitudes of their parents and seeking new role models. Sally, "wearing her hair as armour" in a female form of chivalric heroism, and proclaiming “the blood and flesh are
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Sally sits with the
Parents while the loudspeaker announces the outbreak of war. The Mother reads Sally's erotic verse aloud and calls her a dirty little whore. Sally meets a Catholic violin player who feels her breasts. The Parents take her to a magistrate and she is put on probation. She meets
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The original hero was named "Sally
Thunder” and the performance was advertised as such. Preparations were interrupted when a female journalist of that name complained the lurid character was not to her liking, and an alternate name “Sally Banner” was adopted. Immediately, a couple called Banner
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Throughout the play, the dialogue is rapidly, almost inconsequentially exchanged between characters who each have a different world view, while the loudspeakers announce events or secret thoughts, and the Chorus sings and dances. The many songs of Sally and the Chorus, and Sally's introspective
492:
Analysts of the play have considered it moves between many styles, to the point that they have found it to be “an audacious, fantastic awkward beast of a play”, which unprepared audiences may find confusing or hard to enjoy, and which professional theatre companies have found "unstageable". It
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Sister Rosa is transformed into the schoolgirl Judith. Sally lyrically says she loves Judith, who cannot reciprocate. The
Headmistress warns Judith that Sally is gifted but precocious and evil. Judith rejects Sally. In despair, Sally climbs the tower to jump, but instead throws down her hat.
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Three rostrums and an altar on a platform. Large masks or statues of the
Headmistress, the Canon and Sister Rosa are on each rostrum. They are large enough to hide an actor. These are the authority figures and judges. Sometimes they step from behind the masks and become other characters.
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A fairground sideshow proceeds, Sally is behind a political rostrum, speaking for the Soviet Union, backed by Party leader Saul and interrupted by sideshow spruikers and interjectors. The Mother enters as a widow, and says Sally is a dirty Commo and won't get any money.
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Thomas enters pushing a baby carriage, and says Saul is inspiring. David turns up drunk, wanting mothering. Incidental characters say Sally has "gone off", or ask would she "like a bit". Michael enters and says "Choose!" while Thomas and Saul stand in judgement.
156:- Sister Rosa, senior member of an Anglican teaching order, implacable and authoritarian - Judith: schoolgirl and later a teaching nun, sardonic, cold and Lesbian - David: aged 20s to 40s, Sally's lover, intellectual - Saul: 30s, Sally's lover, a leader of the
339:
The director Aarne Neeme was an ex-dancer and skilled in directing the movements of the two Chorus troupes. Neeme wrote an insightful introduction to the published version of the play, covering key dimensions that were often neglected in later performances.
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asides as to their real attitudes to Sally, Satirical dialogue comes from the loudspeakers, while the schoolgirl Chorus sings “Poor Sally”, “Jerusalem” and “Come live with me and be my love”. Sister Rosa tries to make the young Sally bow before the altar.
471:, where the music distances the audience from the action, and sympathy for the characters is discouraged. Hewett's play incorporates all these features. It is also influenced by Elizabethan theatre, and owes a debt to Elliot's
321:
Graduate
Dramatic Society, New Fortune Theatre, Perth. Director Arne Neeme. Cast: Helen Macdonald Neeme as Sally Banner, Margaret Ford as Headmistress, Colin Nugent as Michael, Brian Blaine as the Canon, Victor Marsh as Sister
238:. The Parents try to revive her. In hospital, Sally's national ABC prize win is announced. Her father dies, and the Mother cries, "You've killed our Daddy." The actors all repeat earlier lines of blame at Sally.
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The 2007 La Mama production used a very small space and only six actors. The 2015 VCA production used three Sallys and no masks. The 2017 New
Theatre production combined all Sally's lovers in one actor.
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Thomas arrives in uniform carrying a bunch of dandelions. He instructs her in
Communism, and marries her. Thomas becomes drunk because he can't consummate the marriage. The Authority figures pray.
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Michael returns, surprised she would marry anyone but him. They drink and go to the beach, A passing figure writes ETERNITY in chalk. Sally tells Michael she's pregnant. He says she's on her own.
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Thomas comes home from war, and Sally tells him she has aborted Michael's baby. He forgives her, says they have socialism to build. The Chorus sings “The Worker's Flag” and they all march off.
273:. Sally is accused by witnesses in turn: the Mother, the Father, Thomas, Saul, Judith, and Michael. Judith accuses her of destroying her children for a great love – of herself, and to write.
266:“Overtime rock” is sung by the Chorus. Michael is tired, but Sally wants to make love. The Chorus sings “Marry me Sally” and “Come live with me”, while Michael burns her papers and poems.
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eyebrow today. When the play was published in 1972, some education authorities sent a warning message to schools and parents concerning the text. Ten years later, however,
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headline in 1972 declared, "For women, a work that will make things suddenly and blindingly clear", celebrating a play that "will put up Hewett's name in lights along with
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found in a garage: Hewett's diary at age sixteen. She was intrigued by the passionate outpourings of her teenage self and decided to turn them into a work of some kind.
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complained that their four-month-old baby girl had been given the nickname “Sally” and the play might blight her future life-chances, but they withdrew their complaint.
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Michael on a bicycle. The Father hits Michael on the head with a piece of timber. Sally and Michael have sex without love. Judith calls Sally an "awful little whore".
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Martin Luther King is dead (1968), David appears after sex, having finally consummated his affair with Sally. He is married and can't stay despite Sally's pleading.
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Sally tells Thomas about the affair with Saul, leaving him “with nothing” but the baby. The Mother offers Michael cash to "take off". The baby dies of leukemia.
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wiser than the intellect”, captured the Zeitgeist of 1971 and launched a new "mythology of the feminine" in this "founding text" of Australian feminist drama.
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A bell tolls and they all line up. Sally bows or nods to the altar. She stands outlined on the tower, with the Authority figures below her in red light.
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who “have greatness thrust upon them”. Alternately, Whitehead saw a dichotomy of sterility versus authority in the placement of the Authority figures.
148:- “The Canon”: ageing, weak and hypocritical - “The Father”: middle-aged and sad - Thomas: aged 20s to 40s, Sally's husband, idealistic and gullible
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142:- "The Headmistress": an Englishwoman with intellect and dignity - “The Mother”: ages from middle-age to senility. Neurotic and overbearing
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Bennett, Bruce (3 September 2002). "Obituary: Dorothy Hewett; anarchic Communist romantic of 20th-century Australian literature".
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A major statement of the woman artist's quest for freedom and self realisation in a community uncertain of its standards.”
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Sally receives the Gold Medal for English while the Chorus sings “Bring me my bow” and chants, “With time” repeatedly.
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For reasons of theatrical setting and direction, Hewett preferred this first production over all later ones.
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The play's virtuosity ensures its place as a major work of literature. Yet that is not why it is so famous.
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The play has continued to be performed regularly for almost 50 years; often by schools or drama classes.
553:) took this nod to authority as a clear signal that Sally had capitulated and was not a feminist figure.
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October 1972. La Boite Theatre Brisbane Jane Atkins. Extended an extra week due to popular acclaim.
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Czechoslovakia has been invaded (1968). Sally comes home to the Mother, who is in a wheelchair.
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Upstage the outline of a school chapel with a stained glass window. The tower is accessible.
1014:""You're so Full On": A Portrait of Australian Playwright, Poet and Novelist Dorothy Hewett"
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May 2018. Theatre studies, GAPA, University of Waikato, New Zealand. Director Gaye Poole.
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1179:“Dorothy Hewett: The Place of Myth and the Influence of the Avantgarde in her Plays”
176:: singers and dancers: schoolgirls, students, protesters from the 1940s to the 1970s
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June 2018. Federation University Ballarat. Arts Academy Second Year Acting Company.
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The original music was composed by Frank Arndt, who had taught piano to the young
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Joanne Tompkins (1992). Setting the Stage. PhD Thesis, York University Ontario.
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May 1992. Theatre Nepean, University of Western Sydney. Director Col Haddock.
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make love. He walks off awkwardly. Sally yells he's a rotten impotent shit.
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The amplifier intermittently announces events showing the passage of time.
883:"The Chapel Perilous: the paradigm of fertility overshadowed by the Quest"
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Sally Banner paradoxically led to Hewett's fame, at least in Australia. A
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October 1974. Old Tote Theatre. Sydney Opera House. Director George Whaley
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May 1972. Melbourne University Student Theatre: Union Theatre. Director
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1984. University of Newcastle Drama Theatre, NSW. Director Len Boucher.
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White, Patrick (2 November 1974). "The perils of art in Sydney Town".
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The eleven principal characters are played by five actors. They are
973:"The great Australian plays: sex, poetry and The Chapel Perilous"
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The great Australian plays: sex, poetry and the Chapel Perilous
745:"The Chapel Perilous: The Perilous Adventures of Sally Thunder"
724:'All the World's a Stage' - Director and Educator, Aarne Neeme
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1984. La Mama Theatre, Hindmarsh SA. Adelaide Fringe Festival.
235:
1170:
The Chapel Perilous - A Reading Australia Information Trail.
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2015. Victoria College of the Arts. Director Tanya Dickson.
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November 1995. Rusden Theatre, Deakin University, Victoria.
1061:"Golden girls and bad girls: the plays of Dorothy Hewett"
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August 2007. La Mama Melbourne. Director Suzanne Chaundy.
234:
Sally yells she's Sally Banner and nobody, and swallows
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July 1994. New Theatre, NSW. Director Roseane McNamara.
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October 1982. Philip College ACT. Director Jean Arthur.
136:- Her lover, aged 17 to 40s. Rough, demanding and cruel
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had its genesis in an old notebook which Hewett's son
380:
June 1982. Doncaster East High School Hall, Victoria.
130:- A poet, aged 16 to 61, rebellious and self-absorbed
921:"Ordeal by freedom: a carve-up of Sally or society?"
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April 2017. Independent Theatre, New Theatre Sydney.
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December 2009. Young Peoples Theatre, Hamilton NSW.
377:November 1981. Parade Theatre, University of NSW.
227:on Sally's pants. After a fight she leaves home.
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585:. Currency Press. Reprinted 1985, 2007, 2017.
286:Ho Chi Minh is dead (1969). Judith is now a nun.
198:poems, play an integral role in the script.
1103:"Dorothy Hewett's paths to The Chapel Perilous"
410:May 1996. National Theatre, St Kilda Victoria.
1192:Dorothy Hewett's paths to the Chapel Perilous
597:Australian Women's Drama: Texts and Feminisms
395:June 1986. Acted reading, Myers studio, UNSW.
1126:"Ready to face up to a perilous undertaking"
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369:May 1978. Rusden State College, Melbourne.
360:; opening play in Australian Plays season.
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398:June 1987. No Mates, Nunawading Melbourne
1184:Susan Chaundy and Aubrey Mellor (2009).
848:Hewett, Dorothy. "Why does Sally bow?".
269:A court scene takes place, based on the
1186:Dorothy Hewett and the Chapel Perilous.
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460:. At the time of the first staging of
372:October 1980. Arena Theatre, Victoria.
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795:Moulds, Daniel P. (26 October 2015).
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707:Neeme, Aarne. "Director's preface".
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541:was on secondary school syllabuses.
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1124:Longworth, Ken (25 November 2009).
997:Lawson, Sylvia. "The female hero".
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822:"The Chapel Perilous | New Theatre"
504:Where the play parted company with
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389:May 1984. The Open Stage, Carlton.
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771:"The Chapel Perilous | La Mama"
595:Elizabeth Schafer (ed) (1997).
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650:. Currency Press. p. 12.
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528:an immature part of herself.
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70:Sister Rosa/Judith/David/Saul
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945:Janaczewska, Noelle (2014).
749:Museum of Performing Arts WA
158:Communist Party of Australia
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1059:Schafer, Elizabeth (1994).
1018:The Women's Review of Books
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16:1971 play by Dorothy Hewett
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571:The New Australian Plays 5
456:The play that resulted is
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1157:Sheridan (2009), p. 186.
881:Novakovic, Jasna (2009).
590:Collected Plays Volume 1.
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1177:Jasna Novakovic (2006).
919:Whitehead, Jean (1971).
865:The Independent (London)
646:Hewett, Dorothy (1972).
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1242:Plays by Dorothy Hewett
1201:Julian Meyrick (2017).
1190:Susan Sheridan (2009).
588:Dorothy Hewett (1981),
581:Dorothy Hewett (1972).
348:Subsequent performances
1227:1970s Australian plays
674:Moore, Nicole (2017).
1012:Nestle, Joan (2000).
947:"The Chapel Perilous"
906:Sydney Morning Herald
797:"The Chapel Perilous"
676:"The Chapel Perilous"
617:"The Chapel Perilous"
599:. Currency Press.
168:incidental characters
154:Authority Figure III:
442:Influences and style
332:was written for the
319:The Chapel Perilous.
146:Authority Figure II:
1237:Expressionist plays
999:The Chapel Perilous
850:The Chapel Perilous
709:The Chapel Perilous
648:The Chapel Perilous
583:The Chapel Perilous
539:The Chapel Perilous
462:The Chapel Perilous
447:The Chapel Perilous
334:New Fortune Theatre
330:The Chapel Perilous
140:Authority Figure I:
108:The Chapel Perilous
24:The Chapel Perilous
1087:– via Jstor.
1001:. pp. vii–ix.
711:. pp. xi–xiv.
592:Currency Press.
509:the right time.
1207:The Conversation.
1101:Sheridan, Susan.
971:Meyrick, Julian.
951:Reading Australia
751:. 13 October 2013
680:Reading Australia
561:20 January 1976,
312:First performance
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1198:54, pp. 170-88
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577:Publication
557:Adaptations
532:Controversy
1222:1971 plays
1216:Categories
1024:(8): 6–7.
828:14 October
806:14 October
780:14 October
603:References
563:Radio play
433:Variations
119:Characters
65:The Father
56:The Mother
39:Characters
29:Written by
1165:Resources
1138:365221758
1077:0011-1570
1038:0738-1433
545:(such as
451:Joe Flood
305:Bobbin Up
61:The Canon
1196:Westerly
1134:ProQuest
1107:Westerly
1085:41556571
928:Westerly
466:Brecht's
202:Prologue
193:Synopsis
134:Michael:
1046:4023415
934:: 41–4.
181:Setting
97:Setting
67:/Thomas
48:Michael
1143:18 May
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755:17 May
730:18 May
685:16 May
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626:17 May
251:Act II
174:Chorus
73:Chorus
1081:JSTOR
1042:JSTOR
924:(PDF)
522:Greer
294:Music
236:Lysol
222:Act I
89:Genre
1145:2022
1073:ISSN
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