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Look Back in Anger | |
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Written by | John Osborne |
Characters | Jimmy Porter Alison Porter Cliff Lewis Helena Charles Colonel Redfern[1] |
Date premiered | 8 May 1956 |
Place premiered | Royal Court Theatre, London |
Original language | English |
Subject | British class system, marriage, misogyny |
Genre | realism |
Setting | A one-room flat, English Midlands, 1950s |
Look Back in Anger (1956) is a realist play written by John Osborne. It focuses on the life and marital struggles of an intelligent and educated but disaffected young man of working-class origin, Jimmy Porter, and his equally competent yet impassive upper-middle-class wife Alison. The supporting characters include Cliff Lewis, an amiable Welsh lodger who attempts to keep the peace; and Helena Charles, Alison's snobbish friend.[2][3][4]
Osborne drew inspiration from his personal life and failing marriage with Pamela Lane while writing Look Back in Anger, which was his first successful outing as a playwright. The play spawned the term 'angry young men' to describe Osborne and those of his generation who employed the harshness of realism in the theatre in contrast to the more escapist theatre that characterised the previous generation.[5] This harsh realism has led to Look Back in Anger being considered one of the first examples of kitchen sink drama in theatre.
The play was received favorably in the theatre community becoming an enormous commercial success, transferring to the West End and Broadway, and even touring to Moscow. It is credited with turning Osborne from a struggling playwright into a wealthy and famous personality, and also won him the Evening Standard Drama Award as the most promising playwright of 1956. The play was adapted into a motion picture of the same name by Tony Richardson, starring Richard Burton and Mary Ure, which was released in 1959. Film production credited circa 1958.[6][7]
- 1Synopsis
- 8In popular culture
- 10References
Synopsis[edit]
Act 1[edit]
Act 1 opens on a dismal April Sunday afternoon in Jimmy and Alison's cramped attic in the Midlands. Jimmy and Cliff are attempting to read the Sunday papers, plus the radical weekly, 'price ninepence, obtainable at any bookstall' as Jimmy snaps, claiming it from Cliff. This is a reference to the New Statesman, and in the context of the period would have instantly signalled the pair's political preference to the audience. Alison is attempting to do the week's ironing and is only half listening as Jimmy and Cliff engage in the expository dialogue.
It becomes apparent that there is a huge social gulf between Jimmy and Alison. Her family is upper-middle-class military, perhaps verging on upper class, while Jimmy is decidedly working class. He had to fight hard against her family's disapproval to win her. 'Alison's mummy and I took one look at each other, and from then on the age of chivalry was dead', he explains. We also learn that the sole family income is derived from a sweet stall in the local market—an enterprise that is surely well beneath Jimmy's education, let alone Alison's 'station in life'.
As Act 1 progresses, Jimmy becomes more and more vituperative, transferring his contempt for Alison's family onto her personally, calling her 'pusillanimous' and generally belittling her to Cliff. (Some actors play this scene as though Jimmy thinks everything is just a joke, while others play it as though he really is excoriating her.) The tirade ends with physical horseplay, resulting in the ironing board overturning and Alison's arm getting burned. Jimmy exits to play his trumpet off stage.
Alison, alone with Cliff, confides that she's accidentally pregnant and can't quite bring herself to tell Jimmy. Cliff urges her to tell him. When Jimmy returns, Alison announces that her actress friend Helena Charles is coming to stay, and Jimmy despises Helena even more than Alison. He flies into a rage.
Act 2[edit]
Act 2 opens on another Sunday afternoon, with Helena and Alison making lunch. In a two-handed scene, Alison says that she decided to marry Jimmy because ofher own minor rebellion against her upbringing and her admiration for Jimmy's campaigns against the dereliction of life in postwar England. She describes Jimmy to Helena as a 'knight in shining armour'. Helena says, firmly, 'You've got to fight him'.
Jimmy enters, and the tirade continues. If his Act 1 material could be played as a joke, there's no doubt about the intentional viciousness of his attacks on Helena. When the women put on hats and declare that they are going to church, Jimmy's sense of betrayal peaks. When he leaves to take an urgent phone call, Helena announces that she has forced the issue. She has sent a telegram to Alison's parents asking them to come and 'rescue' her. Alison is stunned but agrees that she will go.
The next evening, Alison's father, Colonel Redfern, comes to collect her to take her back to her family home. The playwright allows the Colonel to come across as quite a sympathetic character, albeit totally out of touch with the modern world, as he himself admits. 'You're hurt because everything's changed', Alison tells him, 'and Jimmy's hurt because everything's stayed the same'. Helena arrives to say goodbye, intending to leave very soon herself. Alison is surprised that Helena is staying on for another day, but she leaves, giving Cliff a note for Jimmy. Cliff in turn hands it to Helena and leaves, saying 'I hope he rams it up your nostrils'.
Almost immediately, Jimmy bursts in. His contempt at finding a 'goodbye' note makes him turn on Helena again, warning her to keep out of his way until she leaves. Helena tells him that Alison is expecting a baby, and Jimmy admits grudgingly that he's taken aback. However, his tirade continues. They first come to physical blows, and then as the Act 2 curtain falls, Jimmy and Helena are kissing passionately and falling on the bed.
Act 3[edit]
Act 3 opens as a deliberate replay of Act 1, but this time with Helena at the ironing-board wearing Jimmy's Act 1 red shirt. Months have passed. Jimmy is notably more pleasant to Helena than he was to Alison in Act 1. She actually laughs at his jokes, and the three of them (Jimmy, Cliff, and Helena) get into a music hall comedy routine that obviously is not improvised. Cliff announces that he's decided to strike out on his own. As Jimmy leaves the room to get ready for a final night out for the three of them, he opens the door to find Alison, looking like death. He snaps over his shoulder 'Friend of yours to see you' and abruptly leaves.
Alison explains to Helena that she lost the baby (one of Jimmy's cruellest speeches in Act 1 expressed the wish that Alison would conceive a child and lose it). The two women reconcile, but Helena realises that what she's done is immoral and she in turn decides to leave. She summons Jimmy to hear her decision and he lets her go with a sarcastic farewell.
The play ends with a sentimental reconciliation between Jimmy and Alison. They revive an old game they used to play, pretending to be bears and squirrels, and seem to be in a state of truce.
Background[edit]
Written in 17 days in a deck chair on Morecambe Pier,[8][9]Look Back in Anger was a strongly autobiographical piece based on Osborne's unhappy marriage to actress Pamela Lane and their life in cramped accommodation in Derby.[10] While Osborne aspired towards a career in theatre, Lane was more practical and materialistic, not taking Osborne's ambitions seriously while cuckolding him with a local dentist.[citation needed] It also draws from Osborne's earlier life; for example, the wrenching speech of witnessing a loved one's death was a replay of the death of his father, Thomas.
What it is best remembered for, though, are Jimmy's tirades. Some of these are directed against generalised British middle-class smugness in the post-atomic world. Many are directed against the female characters, a very distinct echo of Osborne's uneasiness with women, including his mother, Nellie Beatrice, whom he describes in his autobiography A Better Class of Person as 'hypocritical, self-absorbed, calculating and indifferent'.[11] Madeline, the lost love Jimmy pines for, is based on Stella Linden, the older rep-company actress who first encouraged Osborne to write.[citation needed] After the first production in London, Osborne began a relationship with Mary Ure, who played Alison; he divorced his first wife (of five years) Pamela Lane to marry Ure in 1957. Extract file download.
Production[edit]
The play was premiered at London's Royal Court Theatre, on 8 May 1956 by the English Stage Company under the direction of Tony Richardson, setting by Alan Tagg, and music for songs by Tom Eastwood. The press release called the author an 'angry young man', a phrase that came to represent a new movement in 1950s British theatre. Audiences supposedly gasped at the sight of an ironing board on a London stage.[12]
The cast was as follows: Kenneth Haigh (Jimmy), Alan Bates (Cliff), Mary Ure (Alison), Helena Hughes (Helena Charles) and John Welsh (Colonel Redfern). The following year, the production moved to Broadway under producer David Merrick and director Tony Richardson. Retaining the original cast but starring Vivienne Drummond as Helena, it would receive three Tony Award nominations including for Best Play and 'Best Dramatic Actress' for Ure.
Critical reception[edit]
At the time of production reviews of Look Back in Anger were deeply negative. Kenneth Tynan and Harold Hobson were among the few critics to praise it, and are now regarded among the most influential critics of the time.
For example, on BBC Radio's The Critics, Ivor Brown began his review by describing the play's setting—a one-room flat in the Midlands—as 'unspeakably dirty and squalid' such that it was difficult for him to 'believe that a colonel's daughter, brought up with some standards', would have lived in it. He expressed anger at having watched something that 'wasted [his] time'. The Daily Mail's Cecil Wilson wrote that the beauty of Mary Ure was 'frittered away' on a pathetic wife, who, 'judging by the time she spends ironing, seems to have taken on the nation's laundry'. Indeed, Alison, Ure's character, irons during Act One, makes lunch in Act Two, and leaves the ironing to her rival in Act Three.
On the other hand, Kenneth Tynan wrote that he 'could not love anyone who did not wish to see Look Back in Anger', describing the play as a 'minor miracle' containing 'all the qualities..one had despaired of ever seeing on the stage—the drift towards anarchy, the instinctive leftishness, the automatic rejection of 'official' attitudes, the surrealist sense of humour (e.g., Jimmy describes an effeminate male friend as a 'female Emily Brontë'), the casual promiscuity, the sense of lacking a crusade worth fighting for and, underlying all these, the determination that no one who dies shall go unmourned.' Harold Hobson was also quick to recognize the importance of the play 'as a landmark of British theatre'. He praised Osborne for the play, despite the fact that the 'blinkers still obscure his vision'.
Alan Sillitoe, author of Saturday Night and Sunday Morning and The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner (both of which are also part of the 'angry young men' movement), wrote that Osborne 'didn't contribute to British theatre, he set off a landmine and blew most of it up'.
Other notable productions[edit]
In 1989 Judi Dench directed a production that starred Kenneth Branagh and Emma Thompson.[13][14]
In 1995 Greg Hersov directed a production at the Royal Exchange, Manchester with Michael Sheen as Jimmy Porter, Claire Skinner as Alison Porter, Dominic Rowan as Cliff Lewis and Hermione Norris as Helena Charles.[15][16] Hersov directed a second production in 1999, again starring Michael Sheen, at the Royal National Theatre in London.[13][17]
Sequel[edit]
In 1989 Osborne wrote a sequel to the play entitled Déjàvu, which was first produced in 1992. Déjàvu depicted Jimmy Porter, now known as J.P., in middle age, living with his daughter Alison. He rants about the state of the country to his old friend Cliff, while his Alison irons, just as her mother had done in Look Back. The play was not a commercial success, closing after seven weeks. It was Osborne's last play.[18]
Film adaptations[edit]
- A British film adaptation starring Richard Burton, Claire Bloom, and Mary Ure and directed by Tony Richardson was made in 1958 and released in 1959. The screenplay was written by the play's author, John Osborne, with Nigel Kneale. Interior set design was by Loudon Sainthill. The film was nominated in four categories in the 1959 BAFTA Awards, including a Best Actor nomination for Richard Burton, but it did not win any of them. In the United States, the film failed at the box office.
- A version released in 1980 was directed by Lindsay Anderson and David Hugh Jones.
- The 1989 version was a British videotaped TV drama.
In popular culture[edit]
Media[edit]
- An episode of the BBC radio comedy series Hancock's Half Hour paid tribute to Osborne's play in 'The East Cheam Drama Festival' (1958). The episode features the regular cast spoofing a number of theatrical genres, with Look Back in Anger recast as 'Look Back in Hunger—a new play by the Hungry Young Man, Mr. John Eastbourne'. ScriptwritersAlan Simpson and Ray Galton mimic several elements of Osborne's play, from Jimmy's railing against the iniquities of modern life to the values of middle-class bourgeois life. The episode 'Sunday Afternoon at Home' (1958) begins with a striking similarity to the opening of Osborne's play, with Hancock and Sid James sitting reading the papers and complaining there's nothing to do.
- 'Ed Wood: Look Back in Angora', a 1994 documentary about Ed Wood, a B-movie director, released by Rhino Home Video. The cross-dressing Wood often wore an angora sweater and angora fabric is featured in many of his films.
- In Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip, an American dramedytelevision series by Aaron Sorkin, the character Andy Mackinaw translates Look Back in Anger into Dutch.
- 'Look Back in Annoyance' is the title a retrospective episode of Daria, an animatedtelevision series.
Music[edit]
- Jimmy Porter appears as the protagonist - older, increasingly feeble, but still angry - in The Albion Band's 'Ash on an Old Man's Sleeve,' from their 1989 album Give Me a Saddle I'll Trade You a Car. [19]
- 'Look Back in Anger' is a song by British singer David Bowie from his 1979 album Lodger.
- 'Look Back in Anger' is a song by British rock group Television Personalities from their first album ..And Don't the Kids Just Love It (1981).
- 'Don't Look Back in Anger' is a song by the British rock band Oasis on (What's the Story) Morning Glory? (1995).
See also[edit]
References[edit]
Notes[edit]
- ^GradeSaver. 'Look Back in Anger Characters'. www.gradesaver.com.
- ^'An introduction to Look Back in Anger'. The British Library.
- ^'Look Back in Anger Summary - eNotes.com'. eNotes.
- ^Billington, Michael (30 March 2015). 'Look Back in Anger: how John Osborne liberated theatrical language' – via www.theguardian.com.
- ^Prasad, G. J. V. (30 November 2017). 'The Lost Temper: Critical Essays on Look Back in Anger'. Macmillan India Limited – via Google Books.
- ^Prexl, Lydia (17 June 2009). 'The Tragedy of Jimmy Porter: Overview of the critical opinions about 'Look Back in Anger' and development of a thesis'. GRIN Verlag – via Google Books.
- ^Denison, Patricia D. (6 December 2012). 'John Osborne: A Casebook'. Routledge – via Google Books.
- ^Michael Billington. 'Look Back in Anger: how John Osborne liberated theatrical language'. the Guardian. Retrieved 2 April 2016.
- ^'Look Back In Anger « Another Nickel In The Machine'. Retrieved 2 April 2016.
- ^Osborne 1991, pp 1–4
- ^Osborne 1982
- ^Ellis, Samantha (21 May 2003). 'Look Back in Anger, May 1956'. The Guardian. Retrieved 3 October 2017.
- ^ abWolf, Matt (2 August 1999). 'Look Back in Anger'. Variety. Retrieved 30 November 2017.
- ^Sierz 2008, p. 71.
- ^Taylor, Paul (30 January 1995). 'More in sorrow than in anger'. The Independent. Retrieved 30 November 2017.
- ^Sierz 2008, p. 72.
- ^Sierz 2008, p. 73.
- ^Sheila Stowell 'Honey, I Blew up the Ego', Patricia D. Denison, John Osborne: A Casebook, pp.167ff.
- ^Liner notes, said album: 'That great anti-hero Jimmy Porter is alive and drawing his pension in Ash On An Old Mn's Sleeve. Acknowledgements are due to .. John Osbourne who, of course, wrote Look Back in Anger, which propelled Jimmy into legend.'
Sources[edit]
- Sierz, Aleks (2008). John Osborne's Look Back in Anger. Bloomsbury. Retrieved 30 November 2017.
Further reading[edit]
- Osborne, John (1982). A Better Class of Person: An Autobiography, 1929–56 (paperback edition). Penguin Books Ltd. ISBN978-0-14-006288-5.
- Osborne, John (1991). Almost a Gentleman: An Autobiography, 1955–66 (paperback edition). Faber & Faber. ISBN0-571-16635-0.
External links[edit]
- Look Back in Anger at the Internet Broadway Database
Look Back in Anger was published in the post World War II period in England, in 1956. In 1944, The British Mass Education Act had made secondary education free for everyone in the country. This meant that whole new swaths of British society were now equipped to write about their lives. John Osborne was one of these. His play broke into a world of British theater that had previously been a polite, upper class environment, and brought a new angry energy and previously unencountered point-of-view to the stage that startled some theatergoers. We see evidence of that new class mobility, and the new reality it created, in the play. Jimmy Porter comes from a working class background, but has been highly educated. He went to a university (though not one of Britain’s finest— his upper class wife, Alison, notes that it was “not even red brick, but white tile.”) And though Jimmy went to a university, he is still stuck running a sweet stall. He has in some ways left his background behind, but he also doesn’t feel fully comfortable and hasn’t been accepted into the upper classes. He uses big words and reads the newspaper, but he sometimes has to look those words up in a dictionary, and he says that the Sunday papers make him feel ignorant.
Alison and Jimmy’s relationship is the main place where class tension unfolds. Alison comes from an upper class background very different from Jimmy’s. Both portray the struggle between the classes in military terms, focusing on the ways that these two sectors of society fail to blend. Jimmy and his friend Hugh see her as a “hostage,” and they spend time in the early years of Alison and Jimmy’s marriage going to upper class parties to “plunder” food and drink. Though Alison and Jimmy try to make their relationship work in the end, we get the sense that it’s built on shaky ground, and that they might fall back into the cycle of anger and fighting that they enact throughout the play. Alison and Jimmy may make their relationship work for now, but the divisions between them run too deep to ever fully heal. In Look Back in Anger, truces across class boundaries are ultimately brief and inadequate.
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Class and Education Quotes in Look Back in Anger
He is a disconcerting mixture of sincerity and cheerful malice, of tenderness and freebooting cruelty; restless, importunate, full of pride, a combination which alienates the sensitive and insensitive alike. Blistering honesty, or apparent honesty, like his, makes few friends. To many he may seem sensitive to the point of vulgarity. To others, he is simply a loudmouth. To be as vehement as he is is to be almost non-committal.
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Get LitCharts A+Already a LitCharts A+ member? Sign in!Pusillanimous. Adjective. Wanting of firmness of mind, of small courage, having a little mind, mean spirited, cowardly, timid of mind. From the Latin pusillus, very little, and animus, the mind. That’s my wife! That’s her, isn’t it? Behold the Lady Pusillanimous.
Everything about him seemed to burn, his face, the edges of his hair glistened and seemed to spring off his head, and his eyes were so blue and full of sun. He looked so young and frail, in spite of the tired line of his mouth.
One day, when I’m no longer spending my days running a sweet-stall, I may write a book about us all…and it won’t be recollected in tranquility either, picking daffodils with Auntie Wordsworth. It’ll be recollected in fire, and blood. My blood.
Where I come from, we’re used to brawling and excitement. Perhaps I even enjoy being in the thick of it. I love these two people very much. And I pity all of us.
I think you may take after me a little, my dear. You like to sit on the fence because it’s comfortable and more peaceful.
I don’t want to be neutral, I don’t want to be a saint. I want to be a lost cause. I want to be corrupt and futile!