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- 7:84 abstract "7:84 was a Scottish left-wing agitprop theatre group. The name comes from a statistic, published in The Economist in 1966, that 7% of the population of the UK owned 84% of the country's wealth (compare the Pareto principle).The group was originally founded by playwright John McGrath, his wife Elizabeth MacLennan and her brother David MacLennan in 1971, and operated throughout Great Britain. In 1973, it split into 7:84 (England) and 7:84 (Scotland). The English group folded in 1984, having lost its grant from the Arts Council of Great Britain. The Scottish group lost its funding from the Scottish Arts Council in 2006, though Artistic Director Lorenzo Mele successfully secured funding for a further year from April 2007. He subsequently commissioned a series of four plays, Wound by Nicola McCartney, Eclipse by Haresh Sharma, A Time To Go by Selma Dimitrijevic, and Doch-An-Doris (A Parting Drink) by Linda McLean. Together, these short plays formed Re:Union, a production which toured Scotland in early 2007. This was followed in September 2007 by Raman Mundair's The Algebra of Freedom, which also toured extensively throughout Scotland. This production was directed by 7:84's Associate Director, Jo Ronan, and designed by David Sneddon.On 31 December 2008, the Scottish company ceased trading, citing "the changing funding structures in Scottish theatre."".
- 7:84 wikiPageID "3661101".
- 7:84 wikiPageLength "9450".
- 7:84 wikiPageOutDegree "92".
- 7:84 wikiPageRevisionID "633068884".
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Agitprop_theatre.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Alex_Norton.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Alexander_Morton.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Angels_in_America.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Angels_in_America:_A_Gay_Fantasia_on_National_Themes.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Ann_Marie_Di_Mambro.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Antigone.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Arts_Council_of_Great_Britain.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Athol_Fugard.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Bertolt_Brecht.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Bill_Paterson.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Category:1971_establishments_in_Scotland.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Category:1971_in_theatre.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Category:Organizations_established_in_1971.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Category:Political_theatre.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Category:Socialism_in_Scotland.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Category:Theatre_companies_in_Scotland.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Catherine-Ann_MacPhee.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Cathy-Ann_McPhee.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Christopher_Brookmyre.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Dario_Fo.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink David_Greig_(dramatist).
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink David_Hayman.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink David_MacLennan_(theatre_practitioner).
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink David_Paisley.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink David_Tennant.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Dermot_Bolger.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Dick_Gaughan.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Dolina_MacLennan.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Douglas_Henshall.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Elizabeth_MacLennan.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink England.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Frank_Galati.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Frank_McGuinness.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Gary_Mitchell.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Great_Britain.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Haresh_Sharma.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Henry_Ian_Cusick.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Hilton_McRae.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Jackie_Kay.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Jim_Cartwright.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Joe_Corrie.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink John_Burrows_(playwright).
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink John_McGrath_(playwright).
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Johnny_Noble.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Laurance_Rudic.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Left-wing.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Left-wing_politics.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Liz_Lochhead.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Men_Should_Weep.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Noel_Greig.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Noël_Greig.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Pareto_principle.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Peter_Mullan.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Political_theatre.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Raman_Mundair.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Raymond_Briggs.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Rona_Munro.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Scotland.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Scottish_Arts_Council.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Sophocles.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Stephen_Greenhorn.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Steve_McNicholas.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink The_Cheviot,_the_Stag,_and_the_Black_Black_Oil.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink The_Economist.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink The_Flying_Pickets.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink The_Grapes_of_Wrath.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink The_Resistible_Rise_of_Arturo_Ui.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Tony_Kushner.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink Valerie_Lilley.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink When_the_Wind_Blows_(comics).
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLink William_Paterson.
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLinkText "7:84 Theatre Company Scotland".
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLinkText "7:84 Theatre Company".
- 7:84 wikiPageWikiLinkText "7:84".
- 7:84 hasPhotoCollection 7:84.
- 7:84 wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Use_British_English.
- 7:84 wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Use_dmy_dates.
- 7:84 subject Category:1971_establishments_in_Scotland.
- 7:84 subject Category:1971_in_theatre.
- 7:84 subject Category:Organizations_established_in_1971.
- 7:84 subject Category:Political_theatre.
- 7:84 subject Category:Socialism_in_Scotland.
- 7:84 subject Category:Theatre_companies_in_Scotland.
- 7:84 hypernym Agitprop.
- 7:84 comment "7:84 was a Scottish left-wing agitprop theatre group. The name comes from a statistic, published in The Economist in 1966, that 7% of the population of the UK owned 84% of the country's wealth (compare the Pareto principle).The group was originally founded by playwright John McGrath, his wife Elizabeth MacLennan and her brother David MacLennan in 1971, and operated throughout Great Britain. In 1973, it split into 7:84 (England) and 7:84 (Scotland).".
- 7:84 label "7:84".
- 7:84 sameAs m.09sz12.
- 7:84 sameAs Q4643770.
- 7:84 sameAs Q4643770.
- 7:84 wasDerivedFrom 7:84?oldid=633068884.
- 7:84 isPrimaryTopicOf 7:84.