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Can I call you back? best alzheimer\'s drugs It’s not as if there haven’t been influential waves of women’s work in the past. Caryl Churchill remains a world-class force to be reckoned with, while the high-impact oeuvre that Sarah Kane left at her death in 1999 continues to be performed widely. The 1970s saw a generational outpouring of responses to women’s liberation and feminism. Next year sees the 50th anniversary of Joan Littlewood’s Oh What a Lovely War. Going further back, academic research suggests that the inter-war period was a relatively golden age for female playwrights: 18.4 per cent of plays on the London stage in 1923 were written by, or involved the co-authorship, of women, rising to 22 per cent by 1945.