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  2. The Homecoming is a two-act play written in 1964 and published in 1965 by Harold Pinter. Its premières in London (1965) and New York (1967) were both directed by Sir Peter Hall. The original Broadway production won the 1967 Tony Award for Best Play.

  3. Setting of The Homecoming. The Homecoming is set in a working-class flat in North London in the 1960s. The play's setting is important for two main reasons: first, it offers a glimpse into the intersection between gender and class issues, and second, it differs completely from Teddy and Ruth's life in the United States, offering Ruth sexual ...

  4. The setting of The Homecoming is portrayed realistically. It features a large room with a window, an archway upstage where a wall has been removed, stairs leading to a second floor, a door to...

  5. The Homecoming Summary. The setting is a working-class London flat in the early 1960s. This is the home of Max, the aging patriarch; his brother Sam; and Max’s two sons Lenny, a small-time pimp, and Joey, an aspiring boxer. Initially, Lenny and Max discuss the paper and how Max wants to find scissors so that he can cut out a coupon for some ...

  6. Often considered one of Harold Pinter’s most ambiguous plays, The Homecoming explores issues of sex, power, and the female role in a cryptic, yet enthralling, manner. The action takes place in an old house in north London.

  7. The Homecoming would open in New York in 1967. The play, in two acts, is deceptively realistic. Its themes of emotional blackmail and manipulation, of seduction and jealousy, are delivered in ...

  8. In “The Homecoming,” Rabindranath Tagore creates a story that leads readers to examine their experiences as adolescents, their treatment of the young people in their lives, their concept of home,...

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