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James is a successful entrepreneur living the metropolitan life with a beautiful wife and a swanky London flat. But when the creditors move in and his wife moves out, James suddenly finds he's left with nothing. Nothing but words. James' father is dying - his last connection to his childhood and the language of his birth, Scots Gaelic. With this link gone, James fears he will simply cease to exist. As the words start to slip away, he journeys home to confront his past and search for his true identity - as he desperately struggles to remember the language of his birth and the word for…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
James is a successful entrepreneur living the metropolitan life with a beautiful wife and a swanky London flat. But when the creditors move in and his wife moves out, James suddenly finds he's left with nothing. Nothing but words. James' father is dying - his last connection to his childhood and the language of his birth, Scots Gaelic. With this link gone, James fears he will simply cease to exist. As the words start to slip away, he journeys home to confront his past and search for his true identity - as he desperately struggles to remember the language of his birth and the word for 'somersault'. A stunning new play exploring the role of language and how it defines who we are by the UK's leading Scots Gaelic playwright Iain Finlay Macleod.
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Autorenporträt
Iain Finlay Macleod has written over twenty plays that have been performed professionally, including Somersaults, The Bends, The Pearlfisher, I Was a Beautiful Day, Broke and Homers, as well as St. Kilda - the Opera, a large-scale, multi-discipline theatre piece which was shown simultaneously in five different countries in 2008 and at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe in 2009. Film work includes The Inaccessible Pinnacle, which was nominated for two BAFTA writing awards. He has published four novels in the Gaelic language.