Tuesday, July 04, 2023
The Girls of Slender Means coming to the Edinburgh Lyceum Theatre in 2024
Drama adapted by Gabriel Quigley, from the novel by Muriel Spark
Directed by Roxana Silbert
‘As they realised themselves in varying degrees, few people alive at the time were more delightful, more ingenious, more movingly lovely, and, as it might happen, more savage, than the girls of slender means.’
Set in the summer of 1945, in a hostel for the ‘Pecuniary Convenience and Social Protection of Ladies of Slender Means below the age of Thirty Years, who are obliged to reside apart from their Families in order to follow an Occupation in London.’, The Girls of Slender Means follows the adventures of the women who live there. They do their best to act as if the war never happened. They practice elocution, and jostle one another over suitors and a fabulous Schiaparelli gown, which they each use whenever the occasion demands. But behind the girls' giddy literary and amorous explorations hides an exquisite fragility and sinister peril, as they strive to survive 'when all the nice people were poor'.
The Girls of Slender Means is a story of glamour in austerity, women at work, women at play, and women’s wit.
Dates: 13 April to 4 May; ticket details on Lyceum website.
The Muriel Spark Society is planning a group visit for members only.
Muriel Spark at the Edinburgh International Book Festival 2023 ....
THE BOOKER PRIZES EVENT
The Booker Prizes: Book of the Month
Fri 25 Aug 12:30 - 13:30 Baillie Gifford West Court
Attend in person
Baillie Gifford West Court
£15.50 [concessions £13.50/£10.50]
Sponsored by
The Booker Prizes
The Booker Prizes: Book of the Month
‘How wonderful to be an artist and a woman in the twentieth century,’ says Fleur Talbot, Muriel Spark’s heroine in Loitering with Intent. In this Festival edition of the Booker Prizes' Book of the Month series, Sparkophiles, including Jackie Kay, explore this beloved melodrama, and how Sparks’ experiences as a writer in post-war London propelled her to write a novel that takes place ‘on the grubby edge of the literary world'. Chaired by Jo Hamya.
Please note: this event may be recorded for the Booker Prize podcast series.
Categories: Fiction, Words/Reading
Tickets available from the Book Festival.
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