'In
a year of good plays Thomas Kilroy's Double Cross stands out a
mile for its biting and provocative intelligence . . . a rich
profusion of ideas . . . a dense ironic play.'
— Michael Billington, The Guardian
'Identity can be a fiction, and be no less satisfactory on that account.'
In this absorbing drama Thomas Kilroy investigates the validity
of this claim.
He shows, as through a prism, episodes in the lives of Brendan Bracken
and William Joyce, including their relationship with Ireland and
their conceptions of Britain and Germany in World War II. How
these antagonists, given a choice by history, distorted their
personalities to re-invent themselves becomes ultimately a spellbinding
examination of the riddle of nationalism.