‘Seems we've always been fighting over this place’
Babylon Burning (Another Lovely War)
Adil Ali, Dick Barbour-Might, Grace Barnes, Andrew Dellmeyer, Brett Herriot, Rob Hoon, Ghazi Hussein, Andy Mackie, Robert Rae, Alex Telford, Calre Wingfireld, Nathan Young.
Robert Rae
Nazli Tabatabai
Sarah Paulley & Christeen Ross
John Sampson
Mike Cameron
George Tarbuck
Daniel Williams
The Theatre Workshop Community Company
"slight"
Abby Jane Warrilow
June '06
Synopsis
The recent war on terror has become a key theme for politically-engaged theatre companies. Babylon Burning narrates the origins and consequences of the war in Iraq. It looks at the decisions made by the politicians, the everyday life of an Iraqi family and the actions of the invading soldiers. The play becomes progressively more brutal as the wounded are brought to the hospital, the daughter of the family (a gifted doctor) is murdered, the historical artefacts of the museums are destroyed and prisoners are tortured and humiliated. Perhaps the most striking of the interweaved stories is about the son of the family, Sadoon who is transformed from a karaoke-loving young man who looks to the West as a place of opportunity and freedom to a bitter, gun-wielding fighter against the occupiers. This truly reveals the consequences of such an illegal action. Looking back to Joan Littlewood's Oh What a Lovely War, a play produced by Theatre Workshop in 2002, this play updates the documentary-drama for the modern world. This play can place its origins in Oh What a Lovely War which Theatre Workshop in 2002.
