Results 1 to 8 of 8

Thread: LOOK BACK IN ANGER: John Osborne

  1. #1
    Mr RonPrice Ron Price's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2004
    Location
    George Town, Tasmania, Australia
    Posts
    283
    Blog Entries
    18

    LOOK BACK IN ANGER: John Osborne

    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
    Ron Price is a Canadian who has been living in Australia for 42 years(in 2013). He is married to a Tasmanian and has been for 37 years after 8 years in a first marriage. At the age of 69 he now spends most of his time as an author and writer, poet and publisher. editor and researcher, online blogger, essayist, journalist and engaging in independent scholarship. He has been associated with the Baha'i Faith for 60 years and a member for 53 years.cool:

  2. #2
    Registered User
    Join Date
    Feb 2010
    Location
    Poland
    Posts
    32
    Plays that appear in "kitchen sink drama" stream aren't just to my liking so much. I remember when I was reading "Look Back in Anger" i was a bit perplexed, I don't know why...I would understand it during reading of Beckett's plays (I wasn't indeed, that's why I have strong prediloction for Beckett's work ). On the other hand, as far as Pinter's plays are concerned I do love it! Taking into consideration that he is attributed to Comedy of Menace that is composed of elements from Kitchen sink drama and the The Theatre of The Absurd, it makes him hold an attraction for me

  3. #3
    Registered User
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
    Posts
    1,380
    To appreciate the extent of Osbourne's revolution, I think you have to look at the kind of plays then popular in British Theatre - try anything by, for example, Terence Rattigan. Also consider British society - this was a country still recovering from the near-bankruptcy of WWII, struggling with spiritual exhaustion as well as financial straights. Immediate post-war society tried to reinstate the status quo but it was not until the mid-fifties, the time Osbourne began to write, that the younger generation began to assert that the old state of the nation could not and should not be recreated and began to chaff against the restrictions imposed on them in their efforts to move the country forward into the second half of the twentieth century and bring about a realisation of the nature of society in a post-Imperialist Britain.

  4. #4
    Registered User kelby_lake's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2008
    Posts
    3,620
    A Taste of Honey is another good example of kitchen-sink drama.

  5. #5
    Seasider
    Join Date
    Apr 2010
    Location
    Eastbourne
    Posts
    525
    Not only in Drama. Novels with working class heroes were also being produced by Alan Sillitoe, Ken Barstow, Kingsley Amis, William Cowper and others. These Angry Young Men were seen as left leaning in their youth but many of them, particularly Osborne and Amis became virulently right wing in middle and late age, And were fiercely hostile to the Women's Movement.

  6. #6
    Registered User Emil Miller's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2008
    Location
    London, England
    Posts
    6,499
    Quote Originally Posted by Seasider View Post
    Not only in Drama. Novels with working class heroes were also being produced by Alan Sillitoe, Ken Barstow, Kingsley Amis, William Cowper and others. These Angry Young Men were seen as left leaning in their youth but many of them, particularly Osborne and Amis became virulently right wing in middle and late age, And were fiercely hostile to the Women's Movement.
    Yes, it makes me laugh when I think of how keen they were to kick away the props of post-war society, only to complain when the roof fell in on them.
    Osborne was particularly obnoxious in this respect and, having played his part in the creation of our current less than civilised society, he had the temerity to write:

    "This is a letter of hate. It is for you, my countrymen… I cannot even address you as 'Dear', for that word alone would sin against my hatred. And this, my hatred for you, and those who tolerate you, is about all I have left and all the petty dignity my death may keep… Till then, damn you, England.”
    Last edited by Emil Miller; 01-23-2011 at 07:41 PM.
    "L'art de la statistique est de tirer des conclusions erronèes a partir de chiffres exacts." Napoléon Bonaparte.

    "Je crois que beaucoup de gens sont dans cet état d’esprit: au fond, ils ne sentent pas concernés par l’Histoire. Mais pourtant, de temps à autre, l’Histoire pose sa main sur eux." Michel Houellebecq.

  7. #7
    Registered User
    Join Date
    Jan 2009
    Posts
    1,206

    Cool I saw several of the Kitchen Sink dramas as movies in the late ....

    50s and early 60s. I enjoyed the movies and where I lived, one had to scour the art theatres to find them. The thing I remember most about Look Back in Anger is the amazing performance of Richard Burton, long before his notoriety with Elizabeth Taylor.

  8. #8
    Mr RonPrice Ron Price's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2004
    Location
    George Town, Tasmania, Australia
    Posts
    283
    Blog Entries
    18

    Thanks For These Replies Folks

    I am no connoisseur of the world of theatre, although I taught English Literature for years and took an interest in aspects of the theatre to help me in my classroom work. I've always been an academic generalist knowing a little about many things of which the theatre is but one. I did find 'the theatre of the absurd' and its major writers fascinating and I will post some thoughts from one of its great playwrights and a personal piece I wrote on this subject below.-Ron Price, Australia
    ---------------------------
    Samuel Beckett said that in the end only two things decisively shaped his life: memory and self. As I turned the corner into late adulthood at the age of 60, I put both memory and self on paper as best I could. I felt the autobiographical imperative intensely.
    ------------------------------
    What I have tried to do in my autobiography with its poetry, notes, journal and essays is to do what Samuel Beckett did with his plays. He specified, not just the words, but the rhythms and tones, the sets and the lighting plots, and these specifications are preserved in his remarkable series of notebooks published by Faber and Faber. Where most great playwrights were content to write the text of a play, Beckett wrote the entire theatrical event. In some ways my autobiography is an entire theatrical event. As this theatrical event approaches some 2500 pages of narrative and 1000s of pages in other genres, this comparison of my approach to Beckett’s is, I think, apt.
    -------------------------
    THE HOUR HAD COME

    Twenty days after the Centenary of the Founder of the Baha'i Faith, Baha’u’llah’s, release(15/12/52) from oppressive imprisonment in the Siyah-Chal, Tihran, and synchronizing with the termination of the epoch-making, two month period associated with the Birth of His Revelation, unsurpassed, with the sole exception of the Declaration of His mission, by any episode in the world’s spiritual history—Waiting For Godot, Samuel Beckett’s tragi-comedy in two-acts, opened in Paris. Three months later, in April-May 1953, the Mother Temple of the West was dedicated and a World Spiritual Crusade was launched. The world premier of Waiting For Godot was timely, prophetic.-Ron Price with appreciation to Shoghi Effendi, Messages to the Baha’i World, Wilmette, 1958, p.46.

    You’d(1) been writing for the entire
    Formative Age with your war on
    words and the silence behind them,
    the last of those second-generation
    modernists who arrived in the 20s
    and 30s, turning toward a dark, acrid
    and mocking world with its forelorn
    hope, bitter regret, emptiness, need
    unresolved and everywhere obscurity,
    inexorable decline--with your desolate
    monologues---realizing how little one
    could really understand or explain,
    on the edge of that last whimper
    with your portrait of boredom, sorrow,
    nothingness and futility—the jig was up
    with solitude resonating all around you.

    We’ve been waiting: He came and went
    and a great festival was taking place
    in the Realm above.(2) The Day of great
    rejoicing had arrived to deliver them all
    from the fire of remoteness, but so few
    knew and fewer understood that the verses
    had been sent down and the hour had come.

    1 Samuel Beckett
    2 Baha’u’llah, The Perspicuous Verses
    -Ron Price March 8th 2006
    Last edited by Ron Price; 02-24-2011 at 09:16 PM. Reason: to add some words
    Ron Price is a Canadian who has been living in Australia for 42 years(in 2013). He is married to a Tasmanian and has been for 37 years after 8 years in a first marriage. At the age of 69 he now spends most of his time as an author and writer, poet and publisher. editor and researcher, online blogger, essayist, journalist and engaging in independent scholarship. He has been associated with the Baha'i Faith for 60 years and a member for 53 years.cool:

Similar Threads

  1. Some Love
    By SilentLove in forum Short Story Sharing
    Replies: 7
    Last Post: 04-07-2010, 12:25 PM
  2. Akara's Story
    By Oannes in forum Short Story Sharing
    Replies: 0
    Last Post: 02-25-2010, 05:17 PM
  3. Anguish In London, spelling errors and all
    By andy3bru in forum Short Story Sharing
    Replies: 7
    Last Post: 09-14-2008, 02:51 PM
  4. John Osborne
    By Demona in forum Book & Author Requests
    Replies: 0
    Last Post: 05-31-2003, 05:37 AM

Tags for this Thread

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •