Anthony Minghella's wonderfully naturalistic and humorous dialogue in 'Cigarettes and Chocolate' takes a poetic look at the fragmented and cluttered lives of a group of close friends in their late 20s/early 30s. Following along the lines of Plato's rule; the one who feels does not speak and the one who speaks does not feel -- the play centers on Gemma who, suddenly, gives up speaking. One by one her stunned and baffled friends -- boyfriend Rob, best friend Lorna, her not terribly secret admirer Alistair and the eighteen week pregnant Gail -- find themselves ripped from their everyday routine of espresso-drinking and self- involvement to confront their own culpability (real or imagined), and in doing so, truly seeing each other... and themselves, for the first time.
Added by Upcoming Robot on April 28, 2008