Seed follows four women as they try to get pregnant, stay
pregnant or become un-pregnant – the dilemmas of modern
reproduction.
Seed follows four women as they try to get pregnant, stay
pregnant or become un-pregnant – the dilemmas of modern
reproduction.
IVF isn’t foolproof and IUDs aren’t failsafe. iPhones come with ovulation apps and
being married doesn’t mean you have to breed.
This is about the horror some woman experience when they learn they’re pregnant,
even while in loving relationships, and about fancy fertility clinics that prey on
people’s primal urge to replicate — in the hope of cementing the bond with their
partner in a way a ring, a house or a promise may not. A truly contemporary,
hilarious and smart look at modern reproduction and female friendship,
Seed is a drama that’ll make you laugh, or a comedy that’ll make you cry. How far would you go to get a life? Find out in the play directed by Kerryn Palmer. With a cast of Hannah Banks, Carrie Green, Sophie Hambleton, Tom Knowles and Emily Regtien, the contemporary and witty play Seed, by Elisabeth Easther, won the 2014 Adam New Zealand play of the year award. Saturday, 28 July, 2018, Uxbridge Arts & Culture, 8pm
The Times has two tickets to giveaway. To enter fill in form below. Enter by noon on Monday, July 23. Winners will be notified by email.
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