About the Book
A doorway to a new future is ready to open. We are the hinge of that moment. We will let the door swing wide.
On a beautiful spring evening - when both moons are full - two teenagers vow eternal love. It is a moment that will have cataclysmic consequences. Not just for them, but for the world on which they live. A world where Prom Night is a matter of life or death, where weapons are grown and trained like pets, and where a chosen few are hearing a voice. A voice that speaks of ... Karagula. Philip Ridley's extraordinary, form-shattering Karagula is a play of epic proportions. Written in a fractured timescale, it explores our constant need to find meaning. To believe we're here for a reason. To have faith in something. Faith in ... anything. Karagula received its world premiere on 10 June 2016 at a secret London location in one of the largest productions ever staged in the Off-West End.
About the Author:
Philip Ridley was born in the East End of London. He studied painting at St Martin's School of Art and his work has been exhibited widely throughout Europe and Japan. As well as three books for adults (
Crocodilia,
In The Eyes of Mr Fury and
Flamingos in Orbit) - and the highly acclaimed screenplay for the The Krays feature film (winner of the Evening Standard Best Film of the Year Award) - he has written eleven adult stage plays: the seminal
The Pitchfork Disney, the multi award-winning T
he Fastest Clock in the Universe,
Ghost from a Perfect Place,
Vincent River,
Mercury Fur, Leaves of Glass,
Piranha Heights,
Tender Napalm (nominated for the London Fringe Best Play Award), Shivered (nominated Off-West End Best New Play Award),
Dark Vanilla Jungle (winner of an Edinburgh Festival Fringe First Award) and
Radiant Vermin, plus several plays for young people:
Karamazoo,
Fairytaleheart,
Moonfleece (named as one of the 50 Best Works About Cultural Diversity by the National Centre for Children's Books),
Sparkleshark and
Brokenville (collectively known as
The Storyteller Sequence), and a play for the whole family,
Feathers in the Snow (shortlisted for the Brian Way Best Play Award). He has also written books for children, including
Scribbleboy (shortlisted for the Carnegie Medal),
Kasper in the Glitter (nominated for the Whitbread Prize),
Mighty Fizz Chilla (shortlisted for the Blue Peter Book of the Year Award),
ZinderZunder,
Vinegar Street,
Zip's Apollo and the bestseller
Krindlekrax (winner of both the Smarties Prize and WH Smith's Mind-Boggling Books Award), the stage play of which - adapted by Ridley himself - was premiered at the Birmingham Rep Theatre in 2002. He has also directed three feature films from his own screenplays:
The Reflecting Skin - winner of eleven international awards (including the prestigious George Sadoul Prize) -
The Passion of Darkly Noon (winner of the Best Director Prize at the Porto Film Festival) and
Heartless (winner of The Silver Meliers Award for Best Fantasy Film). For the latter two films, Philip Ridley co-wrote a number of original songs, one of which,
Who Will Love Me Know? (performed by P.J. Harvey), was voted BBC Radio 1's Top Film Song of 1998 and has since been covered by the techno-house band Sunscreem (as
Please Save Me), becoming both a club and viral hit. In 2010 Ridley, along with song-writing collaborator Nick Bic?t, formed the music group Dreamskin Cradle and their first album,
Songs from Grimm, is available on iTunes, Amazon and all major download sites. Philip Ridley is also a performance artist in his own right, and his highly charged readings of his ongoing poetry sequence
Lovesongs for Extinct Creatures (first embarked on when he was a student) have proved increasingly popular in recent years. In 2012 What's On Stage named him a Jubilee Playwright (one of the most influential British writers to have emerged in the past six decades). Philip Ridley has won both the Evening Standard's Most Promising Newcomer to British Film and Most Promising Playwright Awards. The only person ever to receive both prizes.