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Words near each other
・ The Emperor's New Groove (video game)
・ The Emperor's New Mind
・ The Emperor's New School
・ The Emperor's New School Musical
・ The Emperor's Nightingale
・ The Emperor's Pearl
・ The Emperor's Riddles
・ The Emperor's Secret
・ The Emperor's Shadow
・ The Emperor's Snuff-Box
・ The Emperor's Soul
・ The Emperor's Tomb
・ The Emperors
・ The Emperors Club
・ The Emperors of Chocolate
The Empire (play)
・ The Empire (Warhammer)
・ The Empire at Broadway
・ The Empire Duet
・ The Empire Hotel (New York City)
・ The Empire Lights
・ The Empire of Business
・ The Empire of Corpses
・ The Empire of Future
・ The Empire of Glass
・ The Empire of Great Kesh
・ The Empire of Karn
・ The Empire of Lights
・ The Empire of the Angels
・ The empire on which the sun never sets


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The Empire (play) : ウィキペディア英語版
The Empire (play)

''The Empire'' is a 2010 play by British playwright DC Moore set during the War in Afghanistan. It was first staged at the Royal Court Theatre in London directed by Mike Bradwell. The production was critically acclaimed. It won the 2010 TMA Award for best touring production and was nominated for a 2010 Olivier Award for Outstanding Achievement in Affiliated Theatre.
==Plot and background==
In the Helmand Province during the War in Afghanistan, British Lance Corporal Gary Harris and his Afghan colleague, Hafizullah, are guarding an injured prisoner who is suspected of an RPG attack that wounded one of Gary's comrades. Their assignment is to wait for the medics to patch up the prisoner and then turn him over to the Afghan National Army, who will most likely kill him.
But when the prisoner, Zia, wakes up, he tells them he is not a Taliban insurgent but is instead a British citizen from Newham, not far from Gary's home in Tottenham. Zia claims he was visiting family in Pakistan and that he reluctantly accompanied his uncle's associate on a business trip to Afghanistan, where he was kidnapped by the Taliban and ended up in the midst of the battle.
Gary and his commanding officer, Captain Simon Mannock, are faced with a dilemma. Simon considers sending Zia by helicopter to Camp Bastion. The situation is further complicated when Gary learns that his friend Phipps is dying of his wounds. Gary seriously injures Zia and threatens to kill him, but Simon stops him. When the helicopter arrives, they still have not decided what to do with Zia.〔Moore, DC (2010). ''The Empire''. Methuen Drama. ISBN 978-1-4081-3056-8.〕
The ending of the play is left unresolved, both in terms of Zia's fate and whether Zia was telling the truth. DC Moore said, "I deliberately wrote the play so that there would be no right answer as to whether Zia is guilty or not." For the premiere production, Moore, director Mike Bradwell and actor Nav Sidhu devised a backstory in which Zia was neither completely guilty nor entirely innocent. They decided that Zia had willingly gotten involved with the Taliban while visiting Pakistan, but had realized his mistake and had not taken part in the attack that killed Phipps. Moore said, "I would actually like different productions to approach it differently (some thinking Zia's completely innocent, some thinking he's absolutely responsible for the death of Gary's mate)."〔("Remember The Empire - Remember the ending?" ), ''ANLO at the Theatre Royal Plymouth'', 15 February 2011. Retrieved 2011-3-15.〕
DC Moore was inspired to write ''The Empire'' by two documentaries by Sean Langan about British soldiers in Afghanistan. The focus of the play is not on the politics of the war, but on average young men who find themselves in a tense situation in a war zone.〔("...There Are No Special Effects and No Scene Changes; Only the Truth" ), ''ANLO at the Theatre Royal Plymouth'', 18 May 2010. Retrieved 2011-3-17.〕

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