Christopher Timothy and Tuppence Middleton |
Christopher Timothy and Diane Fletcher |
‘Graham Greene’s first play thrilled
audiences when it premiered [in the UK] in 1953, succeeding because — as one
critic put it — “There seems to be nothing we so much relish nowadays as a
good, brisk chat about Evil,” wrote the London Evening Standard’s reviewer, Henry Hitchings, on 11th March 2013 about the
first major revival of Greene’s The Living Room produced by Primavera in association with Jermyn Street Theatre, London.
THE LIVING ROOM
by Graham Greene
CAST AND CREATIVE TEAM
MICHAEL DENNIS: Christopher Villiers
ROSE PEMBERTON: Tuppence Middleton
MISS TERESA BROWNE: Caroline Blakiston
MISS HELEN BROWNE: Diane Fletcher
FATHER JAMES BROWNE: Christopher Timothy
MRS DENNIS: Emma Davies
Directed by Tom Littler
Set Design by Cherry Truluck
Lighting Design by Tim Bray
Sound Design by George Dennis
Costume Design by Emily Stuart
PERFORMANCES
Monday to Saturday 7.30pm; Saturday
matinees 3.30pm.
The production will run until 30th March
2013.
TICKETS
Tickets: £20.00 (or £16.00 for Concessions)
Box Office telephone: 0044-(0)-207-287-2875
VENUE
16b Jermyn Street
London, SW1Y 6ST
England, UK
Nearest underground railway station:
Piccadilly Circus
SYNOPSIS OF THE PLAY
Two elderly sisters, Theresa and Helen
Browne, live together in their family home with their brother James, a crippled
Catholic priest. James’ paralysis means that he can no longer perform his
priestly duties. The sisters cannot abide the idea of sleeping in a room in
which someone has died. The room in which all four scenes of the play are set
is a bedroom converted into a living room. As the play opens, their niece,
Rose, has just arrived from the funeral of her mother. She is accompanied by
her legal executor, Michael Dennis.
Michael and Rose are lovers. Helen, the
sharper of the sisters, guesses the truth. Rose and Michael plan to go away
together, but Helen blocks this idea by forcing Theresa into a psychosomatic
breakdown, knowing that Rose will agree to stay to look after her. Rose becomes
an established part of this oppressive household. Each afternoon she slips away
to a flat in Regal Court for an adulterous union with Michael, but the life of
deceit takes its toll. Rose loses her bloom.
ROSE: ‘“Since my last confession three
weeks ago I have committed adultery twenty-seven times.” That’s what Aunt Helen
would like me to say, and, Father, it doesn’t mean a thing.’
The Living Room, Act 2, Scene 1, in Graham Greene, Collected Plays. London: Vintage, 2002. 47.
This synopsis draws on programme notes written by Dr Joe Spence for the dramatised reading of The Living Room at the Graham Greene International Festival on Friday 1st October 2010.
The Living Room, Act 2, Scene 1, in Graham Greene, Collected Plays. London: Vintage, 2002. 47.
This synopsis draws on programme notes written by Dr Joe Spence for the dramatised reading of The Living Room at the Graham Greene International Festival on Friday 1st October 2010.
FIRST PRODUCTIONS
The Living Room was first
performed in Stockholm (Sweden) in October 1952. One contemporary critic wrote,
‘The public who went to the play included the whole of literary Stockholm, [and]
appreciated to the full incomparably the most fascinating production of the
autumn season.[...]. When Graham Greene stepped on to the stage, I thought the
applause would never stop. It was, perhaps, rather for one of the greatest
novelists of our time, than for the dramatist, but either way, it was
well-meant.’ (Svenska Dagbladet, 1st
November 1952, quoted in Norman Sherry, The Life of Graham Greene, vol. 2: 1939-55. London: Random House, 1994. 452).
In the UK the play was performed in
Edinburgh, Glasgow and Brighton, before it opened at Wyndham’s Theatre, London,
on Thursday 16th April 1953 with the following cast:
MARY: Dorothy Dewhurst
MICHAEL DENNIS: John Robinson
ROSE PEMBERTON: Dorothy Tutin
MISS TERESA BROWNE: Mary Jerrold
MISS HELEN BROWNE: Violet Farebrother
FATHER JAMES BROWNE: Eric Portman
MRS DENNIS: Valerie Taylor
The production was directed by Peter Glenville with settings by Leslie Hurry.
DRAMATISED READING AT THE FESTIVAL 2010
At the Graham Greene International Festival
in Berkhamsted (Hertfordshire, UK) on Friday 1st October 2010 there was a shortened dramatised reading of The Living Room with the following cast:
Eliza Boyd |
Sally Knyvette |
Eve Matheson |
Philip Battley |
Isabel Pollen |
MICHAEL DENNIS: Michael Palmer
ROSE PEMBERTON: Eliza Boyd
MISS TERESA BROWNE: Sally Knyvette
MISS HELEN BROWNE: Eve Matheson
FATHER JAMES BROWNE: Philip Battley
MRS DENNIS: Isabel Pollen
Dr Joe Spence (Master of Dulwich College) |
MICHAEL BILLINGTON ON GREENE THE PLAYWRIGHT
Michael Billington (theatre critic,
The Guardian) gave a talk
titled 'Graham Greene in the Theatre' at the Graham Greene International
Festival on Saturday 3rd October 2009. He developed the talk into his
chapter 'The Plays of Graham Greene' in Dangerous Edges of Graham Greene (editors, Dermot Gilvary and Darren J.N. Middleton. Continuum: London and New York, 2011).
ORIGINAL REVIEWERS' COMMENTS ON THE
LIVING ROOM (1953)
'The best first play of its generation,'
wrote Kenneth Tynan. Dorothy Tutin was 'masterly: the very nakedness of acting. In her greatest sorrow, she blazes like a diamond in a mine.' The critic for The Illustrated London News commented on the character of Rose: 'This is a part for an ingenue that is much ado about something; Miss Tutin sustains it with a beautiful certainty.' In the Daily Mail Cecil Wilson wrote that Dorothy Tutin gave 'a performance of heartrending simplicity which is at once childlike and mature in its emotional force'.
REVIEWS OF THIS PRODUCTION (2013)
Henry Hitchings in the London Evening Standard (11th March 2013)
Philip Fisher in the British Theatre Guide (March 2013)
Michael Billington in The Guardian (13th March 2013)
Michael Billington in The Guardian (13th March 2013)
Paul Taylor in The Independent (12th March 2013)
Charles Spencer in The Daily Telegraph (12th March 2013)
PRIMAVERA
Primavera and director Tom Littler return
to Jermyn Street Theatre after acclaimed sell-out revivals of Bloody Poetry,
Anyone Can Whistle and Saturday Night.
The company has assembled an outstanding
all-star cast for this revival.
Christopher Timothy, well known for his
roles as James Herriot in All Creatures
Great and Small and Mac McGuire in Doctors,
plays Father James Browne, Rose's uncle.
Her aunts Teresa and Helen are played by
distinguished actresses Caroline Blakiston (Brass
and, previously at Jermyn Street Theatre, Black
Bread and Cucumber) and Diane
Fletcher (House of Cards).
Rising star Tuppence Middleton (Tormented, Cleanskin, and the BBC's The Lady Vanishes) makes her theatre debut as Rose.
Mr and Mrs Dennis are played by Christopher Villiers and Emma Davies; both are widely known for their extensive television and stage work.
GREENE’S THE POTTING SHED
Svetlana Dimčović (theatre director) gave a talk titled 'Backstage with Greene' at the Graham Greene International Festival on Saturday 2nd October 2010, when she discussed her production of Greene’s play The Potting Shed at the Finborough Theatre (Earl’s Court, London) in 2010. The show was given an extended run in January 2011.
Cast: Charlie Roe, Zoe Thorne, Cate Debenham-Taylor, Eileen Battye, Malcolm James, Paul Cawley, David Gooderson, Carl Ferguson, Janet Hargreaves, Lorna Jones and Martin Wimbush.
Design: Kate Guinness. Lighting: Jessica Glaisher. Sound: Simon Perkin. Direction: Svetlana Dimčović.
Design: Kate Guinness. Lighting: Jessica Glaisher. Sound: Simon Perkin. Direction: Svetlana Dimčović.
No comments:
Post a Comment