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1-7 of 7
- Amy, aged five, is reading a book about a fairy. Her father and mother are having problems in their marriage. They may even be splitting up. They are angry at each other. And what will become of Amy? There is tension in the air. In the book, the fairy disappears. Amy feels that if only she could be found everything would be back the way it was with her mother and father. She searches for the fairy though everyone knows that fairies only exist in books, that in reality there is no such thing. Or is there?
- The Drama Sessions is an online drama foundation course that includes filmed acting lessons in the form of a mini drama series. Brad (Gregory Scott), and Lyndsay (Emer Mary Morris), are actors whose relationship has been strained ever since Brad betrayed Lyndsay's trust. It was a relatively small matter but Lyndsay's lack of confidence in herself and her abilities allied to a personal life with a boyfriend who is the epitome of chauvinism, has ensured that it has continued to rankle with her. Meanwhile, Brad has problems of his own, not least the fact that he has an agent who seems to be less than 'hands on' and that his last job was playing a peanut. Throughout the course of The Drama Sessions we see Brad and Lyndsay focusing on their hopes for the future, coping with fears of failure and navigating their complicated friends-enemies, on-off relationship. It is a storyline developed against a backdrop that includes a cast of strange, colourful and frequently eccentric characters. Will they find closure in the end? Will they find success? Will Lyndsay discover confidence and a new boyfriend? Will Brad make that all important step from peanut to stardom? The answers are revealed in The Drama Sessions.
- A man walks into a bar. Sounds like the beginning of a joke doesn't it? Except this is no joke. A man walks into a bar. He ends up battered and bleeding in an alley. Is he dying? Maybe. But there's still time to remember all the things he said, all the moves he made, all the moves he might have made. That's more to the point. Say one thing, this happens. Say another thing, that happens. Your life depends on the choices you make at every given moment. Talk to the beautiful girl. Don't talk to her. Speak sharply to the guy in your face. Or shrug. Smile. Or frown. Everything has consequences. Play your hand. You can walk out of the bar at the end of the evening, feel a breeze on your face, turn up your collar, walk home. Or you can feel the cold, hard ground against your back, blood in your throat, your life slowly ebbing away. Low Down Alley Blues. It's the choices you make. It's the choices we all make.
- Mia returns from a fabulous holiday and she bumps into and old friend Peter who is going through a hard time and now is bond to listen to Mia's selfish stories . Mia can't stop talking about herself and she bluntly ignores that Peter is going through something or that he had an accident. Her world revolves around shopping and good times.
- A family attempts to come to terms with the final illness of one of its members. One of the hardest hit is 12 year old Michael. His grandfather had been a friend, someone he could talk to. The confusion that now arises through the loss of that friend is palpable. Like his mother, like all the family, he is helpless in the face of impending loss. There is simply nothing he can do, nothing to ease either his own pain or his grandfather's situation. And yet, perhaps there is one thing, one small thing which, though little enough in itself, can nevertheless act as a sign of warmth and concern and a simple expression of love.
- Rabbit is an artist. But he's also a gambler. He owes Mr. Papadopolus 56,000 Pounds. Rabbit has to come up with the money. Unfortunately, he hasn't got it. He's broke. What's more, he's a fantasist. He hasn't sold a single painting. So when gangsters Bland and Lundt pay Rabbit a visit, Rabbit must hand over the cash or hand over his life. There's only one thing going for him...Bland thinks Rabbit has talent. Bland is impressed, especially by a painting that remains unfinished in the living room. Will Rabbit survive? Will the painting ever be completed? In this sharp drama only one thing is certain: the comedy is always edged with black, the menace forever veering towards the absurd.