Al Creighton

About Al Creighton

Follow

Profile

Articles by Al Creighton

Carpe diem in drama

Popular plays revel in topicality and reap rewards from their engagements with something resembling the carpe diem philosophy relished by Metaphysical poets in the camp of the ‘Cavaliers’ of the seventeenth century. 

Ova Mi Dead Body:

The recent performance of the Jamaican play Ova Mi Dead Body by Paul Beale was a very timely intervention where the state of Caribbean theatre is concerned.

The Indian ethos in Guyanese literature

That part of Guyanese literature that may be described as East Indian literature is indistinguishable from the totality of the nation’s writing in terms of styles, themes, subjects and other concerns of authors today.

Leonardo Da Vinci’s The Last Supper

Easter and its impact on the arts

Easter is one of the most important religious festivals for Christians and the second in magnitude of the two very prominent ones with extensive public appeal (the first of these is Christmas).

Linden ‘Jumbie’ Jones (SN file photo)

Not satire

The theatre of satire in the Caribbean has a very strong history and tradition dating back to the period of slavery. 

A scene from Link Show 27

Satire has moral responsibilities

The annual satirical revue Link Show 27 directed by Ron Robinson and produced by The Theatre Company and GEMS Theatre Productions provoked a number of letters and comments in the press in February 2011. 

Dessalines

Derek Walcott, the dramatist

His victory over a first class field in the 2010 TS Eliot Poetry Prize last month elevated Derek Walcott yet higher in world literature and placed him yet again under the international spotlight. 

Derek Walcott

‘A very great poet’

It was announced on January 24 in London that Caribbean poet Derek Walcott had won the TS Eliot Poetry Prize 2010 for his latest collection White Egrets. 

Today's Paper

The ePaper edition, on the Web & in stores for Android, iPhone & iPad.

Included free with your web subscription. Learn more.