翻訳と辞書
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・ The Engagement at Gommecourt (The Somme WWI)
・ The End of the Aisle
・ The End of the Beginning
・ The End of the Beginning (EP)
・ The End of the Beginning (God Is an Astronaut album)
・ The End of the Beginning (Judie Tzuke album)
・ The End of the Beginning (Like a Storm album)
・ The End of the Beginning (Murs album)
・ The End of the Beginning (play)
・ The End of the Day
・ The End of the Dream/Rouge
・ The End of the Feud
・ The End of the Free Market
・ The End of the Game
・ The End of the Game (film)
The End of the Golden Weather
・ The End of the Innocence
・ The End of the Innocence (album)
・ The End of the Innocence (song)
・ The End of the Line (1957 film)
・ The End of the Matter
・ The End of the Night
・ The End of the Party
・ The End of the Party (short story)
・ The End of the Pier International Film Festival
・ The End of the Red Line
・ The End of the Ring Wars
・ The End of the River
・ The End of the Road
・ The End of the Road (1919 film)


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The End of the Golden Weather : ウィキペディア英語版
The End of the Golden Weather

The End of the Golden Weather is a play by Bruce Mason about a boy's loss of innocence in Depression-era New Zealand. It was written for solo performance by the author but can be performed by an ensemble and was made into an award-winning feature film directed by Ian Mune in 1991.〔(【引用サイトリンク】 title=The End of the Golden Weather (1991) )〕 It was workshopped in 1959 and first performed for the public in 1960. The script was published in 1962 and again in 1970 after Mason had performed it more than 500 times.〔Mason, Bruce ''The End of the Golden Weather A voyage into a New Zealand childhood'', New Zealand University Press and Price Milburn, Wellington, 1962, 95pp, SBN 7055 0010 1〕 In 1963 he performed it at the Edinburgh Festival.
Set in the fictitious beachfront township of Te Parenga on Auckland's North Shore in the 1930s, the main character is a nameless boy of about 12 (called Geoff in the film), based on the young Mason and a man from his childhood.
The play is in four parts:
:''Sunday at Te Parenga''
:''The night of the riots''
:''Christmas at Te Parenga''
:''The made man''
In the first half the boy spies on an abortive riot by his unemployed neighbours, and sees them and the local policeman in a new light. In the second, he befriends and tries to help a mentally challenged young man who has taken the name of a famous boxer, Firpo. Firpo wants to run in the Olympic Games and challenges local youths to a race on the beach, which he loses disastrously. Firpo is institutionalised, and the boy's greater understanding of the world's injustices is symbolized by the decay of the broom flowers at the site of Firpo's demolished bach (shack) at the end of summer.
Mason took the play's title from that of a novel the narrator in Thomas Wolfe's ''The Web and the Rock'' had wanted to write (〔 p 12). It has become a cliche in New Zealand for the end of summer.
== The End of the Golden Weather (1991 film) ==
The 1991 film was directed and co-produced by Ian Mune, who also wrote the screenplay with the cooperation of Bruce Mason, although the film was finally made after Mason’s death. The film, 104 minutes long, was made with a budget of $NZ3 million, and shot on Te Muri Beach, Takapuna beach and Takapuna Grammar School. Helen Martin says that the film keeps to the spirit of the play, although Mune chose to leave out the Depression aspects (e.g. the 1932 Queen Street riots) and concentrate on the Geoff and Firpo story.〔''New Zealand Film 1912-1996'' by Helen Martin & Sam Edwards p156 (1997, Oxford University Press, Auckland) ISBN 019 558336 1〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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