Ron Price
01-23-2011, 02:14 AM
The movie Look Back in Anger was released in New York on 15 September 1959 three weeks before I joined the Baha’i Faith in Ontario. The movie was based on a play written by John Osborne(1929-1994), a play which premiered at London’s Royal Court Theatre on 8 May 1956. It was a strongly autobiographical piece by a man who had five marriages in his lifetime---and it caused a revolution in British theatre, a revolution which Osborne felt was only on the surface. His work was part of “an unparalleled, mid-century period of dramatic brilliance.”1
My interest in Osborne has been due to several factors not the least of which were/are his two volumes of autobiography: A Better Class of Person (1981) and Almost a Gentleman (1991). David Hare, English playwright and theatre and film director, said in his 1995 memorial address: “John Osborne devoted his life to trying to forge some sort of connection between the acuteness of his mind and the extraordinary power of his heart.” This connection between heart and mind is critical for any aspiring writer and poet, indeed, any human being.
I was just finishing grade 6 at the time Look Back in Anger hit the stage in London and looking forward to a summer of baseball as the homerun king in the peewee league of this small town of Burlington in Ontario’s Golden Horseshoe. In the early 1990s, by the time Osborne was finishing his 40 year long career as a playwright, I was setting my eye on finishing my 40 year long working life as a teacher among many other roles. -Ron Price with thanks to 1David Hare, “A lifelong satirist of prigs and puritans,” Memorial Service Speech for John Osborne in June 1995.
I watched this movie this weekend.
I may have been working marquee
at the Roxy theatre in Burlington
when this movie came out in 1959.
I would not have wanted your life,
John, for all your popularity, fame,
and wealth. I had a tough enough
time with those slings and arrows..
That world of false values depicted
in your plays, John, is still with us.
I’m going to look into those two
autobiographies--especially after
watching this weekend that turning-
point in post-war British theatre……
Look Back in Anger and its portrayal
of a generation of angry young men.
I had anger, too, back in the early ‘60s,
John, but it was dissipated, reoriented,
and channelled due to my espousal of a
new religion which had begun to grow in
the heart of a deeply conservative country,
a country which had been my home for 2
decades by the time that anger came to the
surface and needed working in & through.
Ron Price
23 January 2011
My interest in Osborne has been due to several factors not the least of which were/are his two volumes of autobiography: A Better Class of Person (1981) and Almost a Gentleman (1991). David Hare, English playwright and theatre and film director, said in his 1995 memorial address: “John Osborne devoted his life to trying to forge some sort of connection between the acuteness of his mind and the extraordinary power of his heart.” This connection between heart and mind is critical for any aspiring writer and poet, indeed, any human being.
I was just finishing grade 6 at the time Look Back in Anger hit the stage in London and looking forward to a summer of baseball as the homerun king in the peewee league of this small town of Burlington in Ontario’s Golden Horseshoe. In the early 1990s, by the time Osborne was finishing his 40 year long career as a playwright, I was setting my eye on finishing my 40 year long working life as a teacher among many other roles. -Ron Price with thanks to 1David Hare, “A lifelong satirist of prigs and puritans,” Memorial Service Speech for John Osborne in June 1995.
I watched this movie this weekend.
I may have been working marquee
at the Roxy theatre in Burlington
when this movie came out in 1959.
I would not have wanted your life,
John, for all your popularity, fame,
and wealth. I had a tough enough
time with those slings and arrows..
That world of false values depicted
in your plays, John, is still with us.
I’m going to look into those two
autobiographies--especially after
watching this weekend that turning-
point in post-war British theatre……
Look Back in Anger and its portrayal
of a generation of angry young men.
I had anger, too, back in the early ‘60s,
John, but it was dissipated, reoriented,
and channelled due to my espousal of a
new religion which had begun to grow in
the heart of a deeply conservative country,
a country which had been my home for 2
decades by the time that anger came to the
surface and needed working in & through.
Ron Price
23 January 2011