🎭 Top Girls by Caryl Churchill
📘 In-Depth Study Guide by @TheatreConversationsZA
🔹 Overview
Playwright: Caryl Churchill
Written: 1982
Setting: Britain during the Thatcher era
Genre: Feminist drama, Political theatre
Form: Non-linear, episodic structure
Themes: Feminism, power, class, sacrifice, motherhood, capitalism
Style: Brechtian elements, surrealism (Act 1), realism (Act 3), overlapping dialogue
🔹 Plot Summary
Top Girls centers on Marlene, a successful businesswoman who has just been promoted at the
Top Girls Employment Agency. The play opens with a surreal celebratory dinner where
Marlene hosts historical and fictional women from different eras. Each woman recounts her
life, highlighting different types of gender oppression, sacrifice, and resilience.
The narrative then shifts to scenes from Marlene’s professional life, showcasing her ambition
and hard-edged Thatcherite feminism. The final act (which takes place chronologically before
the others) reveals Marlene’s estranged relationship with her sister Joyce and her niece Angie
—who is actually Marlene's biological daughter. This act underscores class conflict, familial
duty, and the cost of “having it all.”
🔹 Context
1. Historical & Political
Set during Margaret Thatcher’s conservative leadership in 1980s Britain.
Reflects the rise of neoliberal capitalism and individualist success.
Challenges the notion of women “breaking the glass ceiling” at any cost.
2. Feminist Perspective
Churchill critiques both liberal (individualistic) and radical (systemic) feminism.
Explores how feminism intersects with class, motherhood, and capitalism.
Suggests that some women’s empowerment is built on others’ suffering.
📘 In-Depth Study Guide by @TheatreConversationsZA
🔹 Overview
Playwright: Caryl Churchill
Written: 1982
Setting: Britain during the Thatcher era
Genre: Feminist drama, Political theatre
Form: Non-linear, episodic structure
Themes: Feminism, power, class, sacrifice, motherhood, capitalism
Style: Brechtian elements, surrealism (Act 1), realism (Act 3), overlapping dialogue
🔹 Plot Summary
Top Girls centers on Marlene, a successful businesswoman who has just been promoted at the
Top Girls Employment Agency. The play opens with a surreal celebratory dinner where
Marlene hosts historical and fictional women from different eras. Each woman recounts her
life, highlighting different types of gender oppression, sacrifice, and resilience.
The narrative then shifts to scenes from Marlene’s professional life, showcasing her ambition
and hard-edged Thatcherite feminism. The final act (which takes place chronologically before
the others) reveals Marlene’s estranged relationship with her sister Joyce and her niece Angie
—who is actually Marlene's biological daughter. This act underscores class conflict, familial
duty, and the cost of “having it all.”
🔹 Context
1. Historical & Political
Set during Margaret Thatcher’s conservative leadership in 1980s Britain.
Reflects the rise of neoliberal capitalism and individualist success.
Challenges the notion of women “breaking the glass ceiling” at any cost.
2. Feminist Perspective
Churchill critiques both liberal (individualistic) and radical (systemic) feminism.
Explores how feminism intersects with class, motherhood, and capitalism.
Suggests that some women’s empowerment is built on others’ suffering.