Alan Bennett: A Critical IntroductionPsychology Press, 2001 - 169 էջ Alan Bennett is one of England's best-loved playwrights. He is perhaps best known there for the BBC production of his Talking Heads TV plays, while the rest of the world may recognize him for the film adaptation of his play The Madness of King George. Over the last thirty years, Bennett has written ten stage plays, three screenplays, eight television documentaries, and over thirty plays for television. Yet Bennett's work has resisted "serious" reviews in academic publications, as his reputation as a comedic player during the early '60s has saddled him with the label "lovable". Joseph O'Mealy demonstrates that Bennett is a social critic strongly influenced by Beckett and Swift, interested in depicting and analyzing the role playing of everyday life. After providing a general introduction to Bennett as multifaceted playwright and actor, O'Mealy looks in depth at Bennett's oeuvre, starting with A Visit from Miss Prothero and concluding with his most recent production, Waiting for the Telegram. |
Այլ խմբագրություններ - View all
Common terms and phrases
absurdist Aftermyth Alan Bennett Albion House Alec Guinness audience Beckett's behavior Blunt British broadcast Burgess Buruma characters comedy comic critic Daphne Turner death diary Doreen Doris Dudley Moore Dunderdale Edinburgh Festival embarrassment English Englishman Abroad Erving Goffman face farce father film Forty Fringe funny George Habeas Corpus Halliwell Hilary irony Joe Orton John Lahr Jonathan Miller Jongh Kafka Kafka's Dick Kenneth Lady Lahr Leeds look Madjesty Mam and Dad Marjory Miss Fozzard Miss Shepherd monologue mother Muriel never Orton Oxford parodies Patricia Routledge performance perhaps Peter Cook playwright Proust Review of Books revue Richard Eyre role Ronald Bergan Rosemary satirical scene screenplay seems sexual social Soviet stage play story Suggestions Book Talking Heads television plays tells Theatre theatrical thing tion Toad Tory TV play wife Wilfred Winnie woman writing York Yorkshire