Dramatic Plays

Originating in ancient Greece, the dramatic play is an enduring form of literature intended to be performed in front of an audience. Our Dramatic Plays Collection features a selection of works that exemplify the genre and its wide-ranging interpretations from ancient times to the present, including the dramatic monologue and choreopoem.

Publication year 1996

Genre Play, Fiction

Themes Coming of Age, Apathy, Friendship

Tags Drama

This Is Our Youth is a theatrical play of the realistic fiction genre, written by Kenneth Lonergan. It originally premiered in 1996 off-Broadway. It takes place in the US in 1982, during Ronald Reagan’s presidency, and centers around the lives of privileged youth who lack direction and fear The Disillusionment of Adulthood. Lonergan was inspired by his own experiences of listlessness and feeling lost in his youth in the early 1980s, as well as The... Read This Is Our Youth Summary

Publication year 1901

Genre Play, Fiction

Themes Siblings, Hope, Love, Marriage, Loneliness, Nostalgia, Family, Social Class

Tags Drama, Russian Literature, Gender & Feminism, Education, Education, World History, Classic Fiction

Anton Chekhov wrote the play Three Sisters in 1900 as a commission for the now-famous Moscow Art Theatre (MAT). The production debuted there in 1901 and was directed by the MAT’s two founders, Konstantin Stanislavski and Vladimir Nemirovich-Danchenko. It was the first play that Chekhov penned specifically for production at the MAT. Three Sisters uses the three titular characters—Olga, Masha, and Irina—to examine the decay of the Russian aristocracy. Raised and educated to become the... Read Three Sisters Summary

Publication year 1982

Genre Play, Fiction

Themes Social Class, Mothers, Gender Identity, Economics

Tags Drama, Gender & Feminism, Education, Education, World History, Dramatic Literature, Classic Fiction

British playwright Caryl Churchill’s groundbreaking play Top Girls, which opened in 1982 both at the Royal Court Theatre in London (August) and Off-Broadway at the Public Theatre in New York (December), is Churchill’s second internationally acclaimed play after Cloud Nine (1979). It won the 1983 Obie Award for Best Play of the Year, and it remains one of Churchill’s best-known and most widely produced plays, often anthologized as a canonical contemporary play. Top Girls was... Read Top Girls Summary

Publication year 1954

Genre Play, Fiction

Themes Fathers, Justice, Social Class

Tags Classic Fiction, Drama, Crime & Law, Education, Education, Mystery & Crime Fiction, Dramatic Literature

Reginald Rose was born in Manhattan, New York in 1920. He saw active service during the Second World War and began his writing career in 1950 with the play The Bus to Nowhere. The experience of serving on a jury in 1954 inspired Rose to write his most famous work, Twelve Angry Men. The play was first broadcast as a one-hour television drama that same year. In 1957, the play was adapted for film, starring... Read Twelve Angry Men Summary

Publication year 1993

Genre Play, Fiction

Themes Religion & Spirituality, Equality, Justice, Perseverance, Death

Tags Drama, Historical Drama, Civil Rights & Jim Crow South, African American Literature, Black Arts Movement, Race & Racism, Social Class, Finance, Education, Education, American Literature, Dramatic Literature, Historical Fiction, Classic Fiction

Two Trains Running by August Wilson first opened in 1990 at the Yale Repertory Theatre with Samuel L. Jackson as Wolf and Laurence Fishburne playing Sterling. The play premiered on Broadway in 1992, receiving four Tony nominations in 1992 including Best Play. Two Trains Running is a part of Wilson’s Century Cycle, also known as the Pittsburgh Cycle, which consists of 10 plays: one for each decade of the 20th century, each depicting the changing... Read Two Trains Running Summary

Publication year 1897

Genre Play, Fiction

Themes Grief, Regret, Family

Tags Classic Fiction, Drama, Russian Literature, Education, Education, World History, Dramatic Literature

Uncle Vanya is a play in four acts written by celebrated Russian playwright and author Anton Chekhov (1860-1904). It is set in a provincial Russian estate and focuses on the tensions and disappointments between the disaffected Ivan “Uncle Vanya” Voitski and his circle of family and friends. As the characters navigate their intertwined lives, they grapple with regret, unrequited love, and the search for meaning and hope. The play reflects the uncertainty and change of... Read Uncle Vanya Summary

Publication year 1996

Genre Play, Fiction

Themes Femininity, Race, The Past, Colonialism

Tags Drama, Historical Fiction, African American Literature, Race & Racism, Education, Education, World History, Dramatic Literature

Venus is a play by Suzan-Lori Parks, published in 1996 and first performed the same year. Suzan-Lori Parks is a notable American playwright, known for works such as Topdog/Underdog, as well as screenplays, such as Girl 6 and Their Eyes Were Watching God. Venus reimagines the life of Saartjie Baartman, also known as Sarah Baartman, who was shown in exhibits across Europe as the Hottentot Venus in the early 19th century. The play addresses themes... Read Venus Summary

Publication year 2015

Genre Play, Fiction

Themes Emotions/Behavior: Courage, Perseverance, Hope, Love, Memory, Regret, Language, Race, Future, The Past, Family, Friendship, Self Discovery, Community, Education, Immigration, Nation, War, Fate, Justice, Music, Safety & Danger, Trust & Doubt

Tags Historical Fiction, Romance, Drama, Comedy & Satire, Education, Education, World History, Dramatic Literature, Humor

Publication year 1606

Genre Play, Fiction

Themes Power & Greed, Gender Identity, Aging, Death, Justice, Truth & Lies

Tags British Literature, Classic Fiction, Comedy & Satire, Jacobean Era, Drama, Classical Period

Volpone is a comedic play by English playwright Ben Jonson, written in 1605-06 and first performed by the King’s Men at the Globe Theatre the same year. The play was first published in a quarto in 1607 and then in an official folio, The Workes of Benjamin Jonson, in 1616. Volpone, like Jonson’s other popular works, is a satire that comments on The Corrupting Power of Greed,     The Moral Impact of Performance, and Seeking Justice... Read Volpone Summary

Publication year 1935

Genre Play, Fiction

Themes Justice, Community, Social Class

Tags Drama, Social Class, Social Justice, Education, Education, American Literature, World History, Dramatic Literature, Historical Fiction, Classic Fiction

Waiting for Lefty is a one-act play by Clifford Odets. It initially premiered in January 1935, performed by the Group Theatre, a company started in 1931 by Harold Clurman, Cheryl Crawford, and Lee Strasburg with the goal of revolutionizing American theater as a means for social change. Lefty was Odets’s first produced play, written in response to a call by the New Theatre League for a piece to perform in union halls or meeting spaces... Read Waiting For Lefty Summary

Publication year 1961

Genre Play, Fiction

Themes Teamwork, Nation, Coming of Age

Tags Race & Racism, Love & Sexuality, Drama

When West Side Story opened on Broadway in 1957, it was a new kind of musical. At the time, the phrase “Broadway musical” was synonymous with “musical comedy.” Musical theatre typically took a lighthearted approach, even when broaching serious issues. But West Side Story, perhaps one of the most famous adaptations of William Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet, exposed audiences to gang violence on the streets of New York. If Shakespeare’s lovers are star-crossed and ill-fated... Read West Side Story Summary

Publication year 2017

Genre Play, Fiction

Themes Perseverance, Hope, Nostalgia, Femininity, Gender Identity, Indigenous Identity, Masculinity, Race, Childhood & Youth, Coming of Age, Future, The Past, Family, Grandparents, Mothers, Politics & Government

Tags Drama, Comedy & Satire, Politics & Government, Women`s Studies, Immigration & Refugeeism, Education, Education, World History, Dramatic Literature

Publication year 2007

Genre Play, Fiction

Themes Race, Equality, Art, Immigration

Tags Drama, Comedy & Satire, Life-Inspired Fiction, Race & Racism, Politics & Government, Education, Education, Asian Literature, Dramatic Literature, Humor