Burnt by the Sun by Peter Flannery - ISBN: 9781848420441
Paperback
Adapted from the 1994 Oscar-winning Russian film, Burnt by the Sunshows the reality of daily life among the middle classes at the very beginning of Stalin’s Great Terror. Even a decorated hero of the Russian Revolution and his family are not safe from the full, horrifying reach of Stalin’s secret agents.

Burnt by the Sun

$24.00

  • Paperback

    96 pages

  • Release Date

    26 February 2009

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Summary

A rich evocation of a world poised on the brink of Stalin’s Great Terror, based on the 1994 Oscar-winning film written by Nikita Mikhalkov and Rustam Ibragimbekov.

General Kotov, decorated hero of the Russian Revolution, is spending an idyllic summer in the country with his beloved young wife and family. But on one glorious sunny morning in 1936, his wife’s former lover returns from a long and unexplained absence. Amidst a tangle of sexual jealousy, retribution and remorseless politi…

Book Details

ISBN-13:9781848420441
ISBN-10:1848420447
Author:Peter Flannery
Publisher:Nick Hern Books
Imprint:Nick Hern Books
Format:Paperback
Number of Pages:96
Release Date:26 February 2009
Weight:109g
Dimensions:7mm x 129mm x 198mm
Series:NHB Modern Plays
A-Format
B-Format
Burnt by the Sun by Peter Flannery - ISBN: 9781848420441
129 × 198 mm
C-Format
A4
mm / in
What They're Saying

Critics Review

‘A cracker… starts out like something by Chekhov and ends up as a gripping Stalinist thriller… Funny, affecting and taut with suspense, Burnt by the Sun is a new play that already feels like a classic’

* Telegraph *

‘A brilliant playwriting achievement… a wonderful panoramic view of a family and its misfortune with an inexorable, gruesome dramatic tread’

* Independent *

About The Author

Peter Flannery

Peter Flannery was writer in residence at the Royal Shakespeare Company in 1979-1980. His plays first staged by the RSC include Singer, which originally starred Antony Sher, and won the Time Out Best Play Award in 1989, and was subsequently revived by the Oxford Stage Company in 2004, starring Ron Cook; Our Friends in the North, winner of the 1982 John Whiting Award; Savage Amusement, which won the Best Play Award at the National Student Drama Festival, 1978. Other theatre includes The Bodies, adapted from Émile Zola’s Thérèse Raquin for Live Theatre, Newcastle, in 2005. Television and film work includes The Devil’s Whore (Channel 4, 2008); George Gently, adapted from the novels by Alan Hunter (BBC One, 2007); The One and Only (Pathé, 2003); Our Friends in the North (BBC Two, 1996), based on his original stage play, winner of the Writers’ Guild Award for Best Original Drama Serial, the Broadcasting Press Guild Award for Writer of the Year, the BAFTA for Best Drama Serial and the Royal Television Society Writers’ Award; Funny Bones with Peter Chelsom (Hollywood Pictures, 1995); Shoot the Revolution (BBC Two, 1990); and Blind Justice (BBC Two, 1988), winner of the Royal Television Society Award for Best Series and the Samuel Beckett Award.

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