Audience (play)
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Audience is a 1991 play by British playwright Michael Frayn.[1]
The play works on the idea that the characters in the play are actually watching the audience, expecting them to perform. The playwright of the "play" is also in the audience. The comedy ensues as Frayn holds a mirror up to the audience, and they see their own foibles as audience members.
The characters are Joan, an elderly woman in her sixties, who is not entirely focused on playing with her daughter, Helena, in her forties. Charles pays more attention to his companion than to the play. His companion, Amanda, is terrified of seeing anyone she knows with Charles.
Bobbie is an American lady in her fifties who is with her fellow American husband, Merrill, in his seventies. Quentin is a drama teacher who is with a drama student, Lee, who does not want to be there. Eileen, Reginald, and Wendy are a family. Wendy does not want to be there, but it is her birthday treat.