A symbolically nameless couple chart their 50-year relationship by recreating their first encounter on every anniversary. Madame has carefully written the script of their original encounter and they believe they can recreate the intoxicating feeling of falling in love by saying the same lines year after year but always fall short of this goal and are doomed to disappoinment. They yearn to be seduced by the exact words of their original encounter but time and circumstance have changed the meaning of these words. Encore is essentially the same scene replayed six times but paradoxically it is never quite the same–which ironically is the message of the play. The play’s title is a metaphor that life is indeed a stage. Encore is sad, funny, hopelessly romantic and lovingly bittersweet. The play was originally written and performed in French, and has been translated by the author.
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News & Reviews
“A satisfyingly touching portrayal of a love that weathers the damages inflicted by lovers who, through a lifetime together and apart, finally realize the sanctity of it.” —Uptown Magazine
About the Author
Playwright, actor, director, translator, designer, humour columnist and screenwriter, Marc Prescott was born in Sainte-Anne-des-Chênes, Manitoba. Prescott has a B.A. in Latin and philosophy, and a B.Ed from the College Universitaire de St.-Boniface. He is a graduate of the French playwriting program of the National Theatre School of Canada. His plays include L’Annee du Big Mac, Sex, Lies, et les Franco-Manitobains, Poissons, Encore, and Fort Mac. Prescott is a member of the playwrights’ unit at Prairie Theatre Exchange and artistic director of Théâtre Vice Versa, a company dedicated to developing and producing original scripts and plays in translation in either official language.