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Bill Reed Bill Reed i(A23101 works by)
Also writes as: Barbara Adele
Born: Established: 1939 Perth, Western Australia, ;
Gender: Male
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Works By

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1 The Lizard of Oz Bill Reed , single work drama
— Appears in: Shorts : The Short and One-Act Plays of Bill Reed. 2016;
1 y separately published work icon You Want It, Don't You, Billy? Bill Reed , Dandenong : Reed Independent , 2016 9702183 2016 single work drama

'Bill and Billy are having marital problems but these pals when compared to the problems they have to face from their next door neighbour. If that wasn't enough, there is the general alarm put out to be on the alert for a serial murderer thought to be in the district. In the heavy night of the Mornington countryside, their weekender cottage offers scant protection from what is determined to befall them from the outside and what is determined to torment them from the inside.It is not as if they are living in some fiction where the fear comes driving at them intermittently as per the scripted climaxes of a script; this night they have to live with a fear that is constant, unharboured. And so does the audience.It is difficult to tell who is who, or what is what. The only thing Bill and Billy - and anyone else - know is that it is very real dead mad. ...' (Source: TROVE)

1 y separately published work icon Truganinni Inside Out : A Play Bill Reed , Dandenong : Reed Independent , 2016 9702106 2016 single work drama

'Seven years after King Billy's death, Truganinni stood alone, a living relic of her race. She would walk the streets of Hobart Town, resembling Queen Victoria in her voluminous skirts and headdress. She quite enjoyed the curiosity and finger pointing of the townspeople.Towards the end, she appeared to bear no malice towards her race's persecutors. Growing stoutish, she smoked a pipe and enjoyed a daily jug of beer. But she began to grow ill and as her death loomed, so did the memories of what happened to King Billy's body.On May 8th 1876, at the approximate age of 73, Truganinni died.She is said to have cried out, 'Don't let them cut me up. Bury me behind the mountains.'Given her fierce spirit and perception of herself and her people, it would have been said with as much defiance as she could muster as much as being fearful.Only hours after the news, body-snatchers in the Royal Society of Tasmania started to bark for her body. The government tried to fight them off. She was off floating across Australia, raising hell with her beloved Nanna, on their Shag Magnet anyway. By then the mission on Flinders Island of Act 1, and McKay's house in Hobart Town, were the least she wanted to put a bomb under... ...' (Source: TROVE)

1 y separately published work icon Mirror, Mirror Bill Reed , Dandenong : Reed Independent , 2016 9702050 2016 single work drama

'Stranded in his Sydney flat, the journalist John Rinner tries to explain his Dad-dud existence to his daughter by telephone. This is not easy since he hasn’t seen her in 18 years and she is on the other side of the world working in an Amsterdam hotel with little time to listen to an excuse for a Dad. Just as his working life in the field with the UN Childrens Fund now seems only smoke-and-mirrors, so does Rinner’s own life seem as it flashes past him in delusion and illusion, and with more bottoms than tops. This seems especially relevant to his real-or-imagined North Queensland aboriginal roots... almost as much as the witnessing the world’s abuse of its children has scarred him. But, more and more, the cross connections of telephone torment continue, escalating in him into looking down into a sump rather than getting any sort of expiation from reconnecting with his beloved daughter. At least it is a mirror on the wall there, and not the sad sack that is himself. At least, too, the mirror gives back to him a more intelligent conversation than he can get from other human beings these end of days. He is still, though barely, intuitive enough to be able to appreciate being able to tell it: ‘You heard the one about the guy going up to a mirror on the wall and spouting, “Mirror, mirror, on the wall, who is the....? ...' (Source: Amazon website)

1 y separately published work icon Living on Mars : The Play Bill Reed , Dandenong : Reed Independent , 2016 9701986 2016 single work drama humour

'Henry had one good eye until the surgeon lost even that one’s lens down some drain. He had a wife he could call his own until she started to shack up very noisily with some young turk Australian postgraduate in his (Henry’s) own home. He had a housekeeper until she left in built-up disgust claiming Henry continuously confessed to some vague past unspeakable crime. Henry also had this itch which his new housekeeper – his wife’s cousin – could keep in check with her very personal fingernails. Then there was his house-full of irreplaceable objects until his new housekeeper’s husband came along and proceeded to methodically clean him out. ...' (Source: Smashwords website)

1 y separately published work icon Little She Little She : The Play Bill Reed , Dandenong : Reed Independent , 2016 9701882 2016 single work drama

'He hadn’t told his son he was adopted, nor that his son had a twin sister who hadn’t been handed over with him when they traveled from Melbourne to India all that time ago to pick up both infants. Part of his silence was the guilt of being on the end of what was then undoubtedly a child-racketeering scam. Charged by his estranged wife to go back to India to find out more about the recent brutal murder of their son – and, consequentially, what had happened to the infant girl child, Smith found himself having to fight his way through the bland face of locals’ attitudes to death, religious extreme rituals and behavior, and especially towards female infanticide. In order to get relatable explanations, he has to confront the fiercest of Tantric rites through the most grotesque, whack-job so-called wise man, Nandi Baba, through police dismissal, through the ignominy of caste prejudice, and through the motiveless violence of local crime. Smith was never going to succeed in learning much. But, for all the little grace he has left in him, he does find his Little She. And to explain it all to his wife, he could only illuminate it all through himself as third-party – and only a sort of son et lumiere projection could illuminate what is going in even his own mind. But whether he succeeds or not, nothing can stop their damnable karmic wheel from a’turning, a’turning.' (Source: Amazon website)

1 y separately published work icon Living in Black Holes : Five Plays Bill Reed , Dandenong : Reed Independent , 2016 9377809 2016 selected work drama

'Living in Black Holes is a first-time collection of five of Bill Reed's most popular and/or performed plays. The works collected here are: Mr Siggie Morrison with his Comb and Paper Burke's Company Truganinni Bullsh (including More Bullsh) Cass Butcher Bunting Each play has been 'modernised', in that the playwright has changed the plots as necessary to bring them up-to-date and brought the colloquialisms to be more familiar to the modern ear. Here and there, staging, too, has been altered to reflect modern-theatre's economies of scale. Settings and characterisations, though, have not been changed.' (Publication summary)

1 Mirror, Mirror Talking to a Mirror Bill Reed , 2016 single work drama
— Appears in: Living on Mars : 6 Other Plays 2016;
2 Auntie and the Girl Bill Reed , 2016 single work drama
— Appears in: Living on Mars : 6 Other Plays 2016;
1 Truganinni Inside Out Bill Reed , 2016 single work drama
— Appears in: Living on Mars : 6 Other Plays 2016;
1 y separately published work icon Daddy the 8th A Real Riot Bill Reed , Dandenong : Reed Independent , 2016 9293860 2016 single work drama

'An ensemble of actors who are about to start rehearsing a play about the Moree race riots visit Endeavour Lane in Moree to get a feel of the lie of the land. This is where the young Aboriginal 'Cheeky' McIntosh was shot and killed during the infamous 1982 rumble between local whites and blacks. The leader/director/writer of the ensemble has a more intimate knowledge of the site. Back in 1982 he remembers playing cricket with his school chums using, as a lark, a wicket made up of a piece of the makeshift ‘stockade’ Cheeky and his mates tried to hole up behind. Now, while the actors mill around Endeavour Lane, an old man appears in their midst, sits down and declares he is waiting for a bus (Endeavour Lane is a dead end) to take him to the murder trial of the three Whites charged with Cheeky's death. The old man is Daddy, a local Moree elder. Is he out of his time? Is he trying to interfere with the ensemble's thinking about putting on a play about that night back in 1982? Is he really waiting for a bus to take him to some trial about the riot? They might be the wiser if they could concentrate on what Daddy is saying rather than arguing amongst themselves. They do understand, though, that dabbling with the theatre is dabbling with an illusion that can be more real than reality, and just as killing. Still, they cannot understand why that full-scale riot at Myall Creek Massacre – even further back in 1838 – should keep cropping up in what should have otherwise been their lazy’n’hazy Sunday morning, especially since not a line of script has been written yet. It begs the question about which Daddy down the millennia are they dealing with here?' (Source: Amazon website)

1 Living on Mars Familiar Parts Bill Reed , 2016 single work drama
— Appears in: Living on Mars : 6 Other Plays 2016;
1 y separately published work icon Living on Mars : 6 Other Plays Bill Reed , Dandenong : Reed Independent , 2016 9293805 2016 selected work drama

'A harvesting of six full-length plays by Bill Reed. Unlike most of his other plays, none of these works here have been published in print by leading Australian book publishers or subsequently re-issued in print or ebook formats by Reed Independent. The plays have been extensively rewritten and so comprise revised versions to the versions seen on stage. Each has been involved in various seasons of the Melbourne Theatre Company, the old Nimrod Theatre and the Malthouse Theatre when it was the Playbox.' (Publication summary)

1 The Great Franklin's Blow-up Bottles Bill Reed , 2016 single work drama
— Appears in: Shorts : The Short and One-Act Plays of Bill Reed. 2016;
1 Elegy for a Hanging Carcass Bill Reed , 2016 single work drama
— Appears in: Shorts : The Short and One-Act Plays of Bill Reed. 2016;
1 The Poisoning of Old Messy Bill Reed , 2016 single work drama
— Appears in: Shorts : The Short and One-Act Plays of Bill Reed. 2016;
1 The Monkey and the Half-Goddess Bill Reed , 2016 single work drama
— Appears in: Shorts : The Short and One-Act Plays of Bill Reed. 2016;
1 Requiem for Anzac Days Bill Reed , 2016 single work drama
— Appears in: Shorts : The Short and One-Act Plays of Bill Reed. 2016;
1 New Councillor's Augural Speech Bill Reed , 2016 single work drama
— Appears in: Shorts : The Short and One-Act Plays of Bill Reed. 2016;
1 Meat Axe on the Kitchen Door Bill Reed , 2016 single work drama
— Appears in: Shorts : The Short and One-Act Plays of Bill Reed. 2016;
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