Thursday, May 19, 2022

1 June: If I Were You

 

This month we will be having something much lighter after last month's difficult/moving The Father.


The play we have chosen is If I Were You by Alan Ayckbourn.  


Two perfect marriages ... until life changes for Jill and Mal Rodale.


Characters

Mal Rodale:  A sales manager in his 40s.

Jill Rodale:  His wife

Chrissie Snaith:  Their daughter in her mid-20s

Dean Snaith: Her husband

Sam Rodale: Mal and Jill's son




Monday, March 7, 2022

4 May: The Father

A change of plan!!

I had planned a different play for this month, but after reading it, it is simply too difficult for our group!  A huge cast with lots of comings and goings, and I think I shall put this on hold for now.

And so we are going to revisit a play that I remember us all enjoying when we last read it in 2016: it is one that I have been thinking we should read again.


Le Père is a 2012 play by the French playwright Florian Zeller which won in 2014 the Molière Award for Best Play. It was made into the film Floride (2015).  Zeller is a young writer who has won many awards including the 2011 Molière Award for Best Play for his earlier work, The Mother.  

The play was made into the French film Floride in 2015, and in 2020 Zeller directed the English version, The Father, starring Anthony Hopkins and Olivia Colman, which won the Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay, while Hopkins won the Academy Award for Best Actor.



Florian Zeller


This is a moving play about a man suffering dementia, and the affect it has on his life and the lives of those around him.  For those of you who have seen relatives suffer this horrible illness it will no doubt strike a nerve and you might find it quite emotional.

I first heard it on the radio, and found that you are drawn in and are unsure whether and when Andre, the father, is living in the here and now or the past. Another discombobulation is the fact that he is a French man, in Paris, speaking in English. Please don't ask me to explain, but for this play it did seem odd.

The Father played in London to rave reviews, starring Kenneth Cranham and Claire Skinner.











Friday, February 11, 2022

March 2nd - Abandonment by Kate Atkinson

 

I have greatly enjoyed many of Kate Atkinson's books, and thought it might be nice to read one of her two plays. In fact, I thought we had already done so, but can't find it on my list!


Abandonment is a play about Elizabeth, 40 something, childless, recently separated and just wanting to be alone.  She has moved to a new house, a converted mansion, alive with history, character, woodworm and dry rot.  And is beseiged by humans: living and not quite so living.


It is a play about love, death, identity and evolution. A complex mixture of social comedy and family drama: The Guardian review says it has subject covered!


I hope you will enjoy it.






Monday, January 17, 2022

February 2nd: Arsenic & Old Lace by Joseph Kesselring

 

I PROMISE that I am not going to make you read comedy murder mysteries all year! I did promise you a Belgian play, but very embarrassingly I seem to have lost the scripts (PLEASE no-one tell my friend about this, she thinks I'm incompetent enough as it is, I know they are here SOMEWHERE!)


And so, at change of plan!  At the end of January's ECC play reading I asked for suggestions and 'a comedy' was requested!  Browsing through the library I came across this, and realised we've never read it - and it is quite funny (I hope!)  It was performed by ATC some years ago, and my memory of it was that it was fun!


Arsenic and Old Lace


This is of course best known as a 1944 film starring Cary Grant and directed by Frank Capra.  However it was based on Joseph Kesselring's 1941 play.   The contract with the play’s producers stipulated that the film would not be released until the Broadway run had ended. The original planned release date was September 30, 1942. The play was a tremendous hit, running for three and a half years, so the film was not released until 1944.


The play is set in 1944 (or as the script says 'The Present') in New York, but accents are not required!  


Main Characters

Mortimer Brewster: a writer who has repeatedly denounced marriage as "an old-fashioned superstition"

Elaine Harper: the minister's daughter who grew up next door to him.

Abby Brewster: One of Mortimer's aunts who raised him in the old family home. 

Martha Brewster:  His other aunt.

Teddy Brewster: Mortimer's brother, who believes he is Theodore Roosevelt

Jonathan Brewster: Mortimer's brother, whose face resembles that of Frankenstein

Dr. Herman Einstein: Plastic Surgeon


There is of course more than this to all of the characters!


Kesselring does not appear to have been a prolific writer, and indeed Wikipedia describes Arsenic and Old Lace as his 'Masterpiece'.  I think its humour has stood the test of time, although it is definitely not a play for today!









Thursday, December 2, 2021

January 12 2022: Stage Struck by Simon Gray

 

Happy New Year!


Whether we will meet up again in January very much depends on how the spread of Covid is progressing and how the group feels about risking the spread of the infection.


And so I have chosen a play that we can easily do on Zoom, as it's only 4 characters, or in a smaller group.


Stage Struck 


In his younger days Robert Simon was a first-rate stage-manager in provincial rep.  Now he keeps house for his West End actress wife, while amusing himself with a number of sexual adventures: he is a happy man.  But then one evening, through the clumsy intervention of a psychiatrist, his happiness and his marriage are destroyed.  He plans a hideous revenge, on both his wife and the psychiatrist, that will allow him to rediscover all his old talents.


Written in 1979 this might seem a little dated now, but there are lots of twists in the plot which I think will keep us surprised!



December 1: Life and Beth

 Unfortunately there weren't enough of us at Kyung Sook's in November to read The Father, so we will revisit that excellent play another time.


And in December we were again a small group to read Life and Beth, a play we had read in December 2019 but which was well received a second time.  


It was great to be able to meet up and share mince pies and mulled wine, let's hope being together will be permitted still in 2022!


Wishing you all the very best for Christmas and for the coming year.


Janet

Monday, September 6, 2021

6th October: A Doll's House by Ibsen

 

This month we will revisit a play that was very well received when we read it in 2016, and which I am very much looking forward to re-reading.  I think the best thing I can do is reproduce my words from my original posting way back then!


July 2016

I have a large number of scripts at home and one book that I keep picking up and thinking 'Oh, no, we can't do that' is a compilation of plays by Ibsen.

This weekend I decided I'd start reading one of the plays, and having done a Google decided the one to go for was A Doll's House.  I started reading it - and was so entranced by the writing and the story that I continued to read it in one sitting.  I was completely hooked!  And I do hope that you will be to!  

The play, first performed in 1879 in Denmark, is important because it marked a turning point in the theatre with its critical look at 19th Century marriage norms and scandalous ending!  Indeed in 1891 Ibsen very reluctantly wrote an alternate ending, under strong pressure, for the German theatre.  It is just a few lines, and we can read them at the end of the afternoon: they give the play an entirely different meaning and his reluctance is understandable.

I do not want to give away the ending, but Ibsen was inspired by the belief that "a woman cannot be herself in modern society," since it is "an exclusively male society, with laws made by men and with prosecutors and judges who assess feminine conduct from a masculine standpoint." However in 1898 he insisted that his writing was not propaganda for the Women's Rights Movement but for humanity.

Main Characters
  • Nora Helmer – wife of Torvald, mother of three, is living out the ideal of the 19th-century wife.
  • Torvald Helmer – Nora's husband, a newly promoted bank manager, suffocates but professes to be enamoured of his wife.
  • Dr. Rank – a rich family friend, he is secretly in love with Nora. 
  • Kristine Linde – Nora's old school friend, widowed, is seeking employment.
  • Nils Krogstad – an employee at Torvald's bank, single father, he is pushed to desperation. 

I like to find some pictures to give you a flavour of the plays we are reading.  Looking for pictures for this play was fascinating.

Here is a picture of the original German production, which had the ending re-written.



And then were these ...






... and these - the gilded cage a repeated metaphor.





And finally this one, which reminded me of The Yellow Wallpaper, an important feminist text from 1892.




Henrik Johan Ibsen (1828 – 1906)
Born in Norway, Ibsen is a well-known playwright, director and poet, and a founder of the Modernism movement in theatre.  He has many major works which are considered as classics today.
Several of his later dramas were considered scandalous to many of his era, when European theatre was expected to model strict morals of family life and propriety. Ibsen's later work examined the realities that lay behind many façades, revealing much that was disquieting to many contemporaries. It utilized a critical eye and free inquiry into the conditions of life and issues of morality.