
Ball and Other Funny Stories About Cancer Play Collection
by Brian Lobel
Unexpected, quirky and provocative, BALL & Other Funny Stories About Cancer is a unique collection of performances about illness and the changing body over time. Documenting a trilogy of Brian Lobels monologue performances from 2001-2011, this collection challenges the inspirational stories of survivors and martyrs that have come before, infusing the cancer story with an urgency and humour which is sometimes inappropriate, often salacious and always, above all else, honest and open. Published together for the first time, this collection of performances goes beyond the chemotherapy to include reflections on politics, sexuality and gender, providing cancer and cancer narratives with a much-deserved kick in the ball(s).
by Brian Lobel
Unexpected, quirky and provocative, BALL & Other Funny Stories About Cancer is a unique collection of performances about illness and the changing body over time. Documenting a trilogy of Brian Lobels monologue performances from 2001-2011, this collection challenges the inspirational stories of survivors and martyrs that have come before, infusing the cancer story with an urgency and humour which is sometimes inappropriate, often salacious and always, above all else, honest and open. Published together for the first time, this collection of performances goes beyond the chemotherapy to include reflections on politics, sexuality and gender, providing cancer and cancer narratives with a much-deserved kick in the ball(s).
Description
by Brian Lobel
Unexpected, quirky and provocative, BALL & Other Funny Stories About Cancer is a unique collection of performances about illness and the changing body over time. Documenting a trilogy of Brian Lobels monologue performances from 2001-2011, this collection challenges the inspirational stories of survivors and martyrs that have come before, infusing the cancer story with an urgency and humour which is sometimes inappropriate, often salacious and always, above all else, honest and open. Published together for the first time, this collection of performances goes beyond the chemotherapy to include reflections on politics, sexuality and gender, providing cancer and cancer narratives with a much-deserved kick in the ball(s).












