Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Damsels in Distress (plays)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Trilogy of plays by Alan Ayckbourn
This article is about the Alan Ayckbourn stageplays. For other uses, seeDamsel in Distress (disambiguation).

Damsels in Distress (trilogy)
Programme cover from touring version of SJT production
Written byAlan Ayckbourn
CharactersTroy Stephens / Sam Berryman / Justin Lazenby

Sorrel Saxon / Tracy Taylor / Julie-Ann Jobson

Kelly Butcher / Rosie Seymour / Paige Petite

Dan Endicott / Tommy Angel / Micky Rale

Leo Tyler / Maurice Whickett / Derek Jobson

Grace Page / Edna Stricken / Dee Jobson

Lynette Saxon / Annette Sefton-Wilcox / Arabella Lazenby
Date premiered24 May 2001 (GamePlan), 3 July 2001 (FlatSpin), 4 September 2001 (RolePlay)
Place premieredStephen Joseph Theatre,Scarborough
Original languageEnglish
SubjectVarious
GenreVarious
SettingVarious flats,London Docklands, 2001
Official site
Ayckbourn chronology
Whenever
(2000)
Snake in the Grass
(2002)

Damsels in Distress is a trilogy of plays written in 2001 by British playwrightAlan Ayckbourn. The three plays,GamePlan,FlatSpin andRolePlay, were originally performed as a set by theStephen Joseph Theatre Company (SJT). The plays were written to be performed by the same seven actors using the same set. Although the plays loosely shared some common themes, the three stories were independent of each other and unconnected.

This trilogy is considered Alan Ayckbourn's first major success of the 21st century. It also began a dispute between Ayckbourn and the West End.

Background

[edit]

Damsels in Distress began as an experiment to revive theStephen Joseph Theatre's repertory system. Throughout the theatre's time at its first two venues, plays had largely been staged on arepertory basis, with plays being chosen and written around the actors available. After the move to the theatre's current venue in 1996, however, the system largely ended (apart from the10×10 season in 1998), with the theatre relying more on actors hired for single roles. Partly because of this, and partly because of the ongoing financial pressure on the theatre, in 2001 Ayckbourn chose to write a set of plays which could be performed by the same company of seven actors available at the time. This included three long-standing SJT performers (Robert Austin,Jacqueline King and Bill Champion), two recent additions (Alison Pargeter and Saskia Butler) and two newcomers (Beth Tuckey and Tim Faraday).[1][2][3]

It was originally planned forDamsels in Distress to be two plays,GamePlan andFlatSpin. Indeed, this remained the intention whenGamePlan was premiered in May.[4] It was only during rehearsals forFlatSpin when Ayckbourn considered the "company" effect to take hold, and the idea for a third play started to emerge.[1] After getting agreement from the cast to take on a third play, it was written in the week afterFlatSpin began performances, and the summer programme was rescheduled to include this play,RolePlay, late in the season.[2]

As well as sharing the same seven actors, the trilogy was also written to use the same set: a flat in theLondon Docklands, where Ayckbourn himself owns a flat.[3] Beyond that, there was no intentional link between the plays, and the only reason the nameDamsels in Distress was chosen was that the plays all happened to include a female character in some sort of trouble.[1] However, there were nonetheless a number of common themes that arose from the plays' settings: flats owned by well-to-do Londoners who know little of who their neighbours are or what they do; and seedy vices left behind from London's old East End coming back to haunt them.[3] The plays also shared themes common to most Ayckbourn plays.

Characters

[edit]

Each of the three plays has its own cast of seven characters. In the original production, the twenty-one characters were cast as follows:[2][5][6][7]

Actor in original productionActor requiredGamePlanFlatSpinRolePlay
Bill ChampionMale, youngerTroy StephensSam BerrymanJustin Lazenby
Saskia ButlerFemale, youngerSorrel SaxonTracy TaylorJulie-Ann Jobson
Alison PargeterFemale, youngerKelly ButcherRosie SeymourPaige Petite
Tim FaradayMale, olderDan EndicottTommy AngelMicky Rale
Robert AustinMale, olderLeo TylerMaurice WhickettDerek Jobson
Beth TuckleyFemale, olderGrace PageEdna StrickenDee Jobson
Jacqueline KingFemale, olderLynette SaxonAnnette Sefton-WilcoxArabella Lazenby

Setting

[edit]

All three plays are single-scene plays, written to use the same set of a flat in theLondon Docklands, although each play is set in a different flat. The set includes a living area, kitchen and balcony over the river, all of which have different functions in different plays. The plays were performedin the round for their original productions at theStephen Joseph Theatre. However, in subsequent productions elsewhere they were re-staged for theproscenium.

The Plays

[edit]

GamePlan

[edit]
Main article:GamePlan (play)

The first play,GamePlan, is the darkest of the three, and covers the theme of teenage prostitution – a theme far more contemporary than those often expected from Ayckbourn plays. The play centres on Lynette Saxon, a once-successful dotcom businesswoman now reduced to cleaning the offices she once managed, her 16-year-old daughter Sorrel, and Sorrel's friend, Kelly Butcher. Sorrel intends to support herself and her mother by setting herself up as a high-class call girl (inspired by a somewhat romanticised account from a former pupil), and enlists Kelly as her "maid". Sorrel is convinced she has everything worked out and does not see selling sex as a big deal. However, Sorrel's plan starts to unravel when her first client arrives, especially after he dies of a heart attack in her mother's flat.

FlatSpin

[edit]
Main article:FlatSpin (play)

The second play,FlatSpin, is a comedy thriller. Rosie Seymour is an out-of-work actress openly desperate for a job and a man. She is house-sitting for a flat owned by a Joanna Rupelford, when a handsome stranger, Sam Berryman, arrives and eventually tells her she is the most beautiful woman he has ever met and asks her out on a date, even though he appears to have mistaken her for the flat's owner. Rosie, going along with this assumed identity, allows Sam back to the flat that evening to cook her dinner. The date is going extraordinarily well until Sam is suddenly called away, only for a couple of heavies to return with Sam later. It turns out that Sam, the heavies and the flat are all part of an elaborate drugs sting due to take place that evening. With Rosie having shown herself to the drug courier they intend to entrap, Rosie is talked into doing the sting herself.

RolePlay

[edit]
Main article:RolePlay (play)

RolePlay was the play written as the afterthought, but turned out to be the most successful play of the three. The play centres on a dinner party held by Justin Lazenby and Julie-Ann Jobson, where they intend to announce their engagement. Before the dinner begins, there are already signs of tension: Julie-Ann gets overly frantic about making the meal perfect for her parents (her father, it later turns out, is a right-wing bigot), and Justin's alcoholic mother is clearly going to arrive paralytic. However, the biggest complication turns out to be when Paige Petite climbs onto the balcony, on the run from her violent boyfriend. Trapped in the flat by her minder, Justin and Julie-Ann are forced to keep up appearances during the dinner whilst the stand-off is played out.

Productions

[edit]
Programme cover for West End version of trilogy at Duchess Theatre

GamePlan premiered at theStephen Joseph Theatre on 24 May 2001,[5] followed byFlatSpin on 3 July 2001[6] andRolePlay on 4 September 2001.[7] The production team for all three plays was:

  • Director –Alan Ayckbourn
  • Design – Roger Glossop
  • Lighting – Mick Hughes
  • Costumes – Christine Wall
  • Music – Keith Jarrett

The three plays then toured,[8] including a return to the Stephen Joseph Theatre to compensate for the earlier short run ofRolePlay. The trilogy was chosen as the inaugural productions for the newly built Gala Theatre inDurham in January 2002.[9][10]

The plays began a West End run at theDuchess Theatre on 7 September 2002, with the same cast and production team.[5][6][7] However, the success ofRolePlay over led to play's producers, theReally Useful Group, gradually reducing the number of performances of the other two plays.[2] Finally, it was decided to stage onlyRolePlay during the week, with the other two staged only during the day on a Saturday as part of the whole trilogy.[11] This caused considerable upset amongst the cast[2][3] and led to a long-standing rift with the West End in general.

All three plays have received further performances by other theatre companies since, but, so far, no professional theatre has attempted to re-stage the whole trilogy.[8]

Critical Reviews

[edit]

Further details in review sections on individualGamePlan,FlatSpin andRolePlay pages.

GamePlan was reviewed first. The critics reacted positively to the concept of a return to repertory theatre, and the departure to more contemporary themes, although they were split on how goodGamePlan was as a play.FlatSpin received relatively little attention as an individual play, with most critics choosing to review it as part of the set along withRolePlay. WhenRolePlay was reviewed, it received unanimous praise from the critics. The trilogy as a whole then received further praise throughout its tour and West End performances, with Michael Billington ofThe Guardian dubbing the cast "The Magnificent Seven".[12]FlatSpin was generally considered the weakest of the three, andRolePlay the strongest.[13]

Alison Pargeter won Best Newcomer in theCritics' Circle Theatre Awards for her roles of Kelly Butcher, Rosie Seymour and Paige Petite.[14]

West End dispute

[edit]

The upset caused by the sidelining ofGamePlan andFlatSpin in favour ofRolePlay finally came to public attention in October 2002. Shortly after the end of the West End production, at the Orange World lecture at theApollo Theatre,[11]Michael Billington asked Alan Ayckbourn about the state of the West End.[2] Ayckbourn responded by expressing his dissatisfaction with the commercial producers who, in his words, "condemned two of the parts to the dustbin," and said of the West End in general "If all we are looking for these days is one-shot plays with one big name in it, I don't want to be part of it."[15] This was widely reported as Alan Ayckbourn threatening to boycott the West End.[11][15][16]

Ayckbourn also heavily criticised the West End for casting cinema, pop and television stars instead of theatre actors, particularly their lack of voice projection. He singled out his harshest criticism for castingMadonna inDavid Williamson'sUp for Grabs, saying "You might as well have put her on stage eating a plate of spaghetti and put a rope round her chair instead of putting her in a theatre where she wasn't at home and was struggling."[11]

Although a "boycott" was not what Ayckbourn said word-for-word, the effect was broadly the same. The following year, Ayckbourn suggested he might return to the West End on condition that plays were staged on his terms, and this was interpreted as a sign that his latest play,Sugar Daddies, would get a West End performance.[17] But this did not happen, and the closest performance to London was at theYvonne Arnaud Theatre inGuildford.[18] In 2005,Private Fears in Public Places also omitted the West End from its run, instead choosing to perform at the Outer London venue of theOrange Tree Theatre, inRichmond.[19][20] Ayckbourn has continued to criticise the West End frequently, and has said he does not expect to direct at the West End again (except, if asked, at theNational Theatre where he spent a two-year sabbatical).[2]

In 2007, he relaxed the boycott to allow other directors to direct his "classic" plays in the West End again, although his moratorium on the recent plays remained, andAbsurd Person Singular was performed at theGarrick Theatre.[21] The following year, he allowedThe Norman Conquests to be revived atThe Old Vic, which went to the length of re-staging the theatrein the round, as the play was originally intended.[22]

He finally allowed a return to the West End as a director with a revival ofWoman in Mind starringJanie Dee. This revival, first staged at theStephen Joseph Theatre in September 2008, ran in early 2009 at theVaudeville Theatre, where the original London première was performed in 1986.[23]

External links

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcPreface toDamsels in Distress[permanent dead link], Alan Ayckbourn, London: Faber & Faber,ISBN 0-571-21648-X
  2. ^abcdefgDamsels in Distress History on official Ayckbourn site[permanent dead link]
  3. ^abcdAllen, Paul (2004)A Pocket Guide to Alan Ayckbourn's Plays, London: Faber & Faber,ISBN 0-571-21492-4
  4. ^Programme notes fromGamePlan held on official Ayckbourn site[permanent dead link]
  5. ^abcProduction details ofGamePlan on official Ayckbourn site[permanent dead link]
  6. ^abcProduction details ofGamePlan on official Ayckbourn site[permanent dead link]
  7. ^abcProduction details ofGamePlan on official Ayckbourn site[permanent dead link]
  8. ^abArts Archive UK performance listings ofGamePlanFlatSpin andRolePlay
  9. ^BBC News Online, 10 January 2002
  10. ^The Northern Echo, 13 January 2002
  11. ^abcdThe Independent, 25 October 2002[dead link]
  12. ^'The Guardian review, 11 September 2001
  13. ^The Daily Telegraph review, 9 September 2002[dead link]
  14. ^List of 2002 Critics' Circle awards on British Theatre GuideArchived 20 November 2008 at theWayback Machine
  15. ^abBBC News Online, 24 October 2002
  16. ^The Daily Telegraph, 24 October 2002, retrieved fromwww.accessmylibrary.com
  17. ^The Times, 12 August 2003
  18. ^Arts Archive, UK performance listings ofSugar Daddies
  19. ^Plays at a glance (London) on official Ayckbourn website[permanent dead link]
  20. ^Arts Archive, UK performance listings ofPrivate Fears in Public Places
  21. ^Interview with Ayckbourn,The Daily Telegraph, 25 November 2007[dead link]
  22. ^BBC News Online, 25 September 2008
  23. ^The Stage, 8 December 2008.
The plays ofAlan Ayckbourn
Plays
One-act plays
  • Countdown (fromMixed Doubles)
  • Confusions:Mother Figure,Drinking Companion,Between Mouthfuls,Gosforth's Fete,A Talk in the Park
  • A Cut in the Rates
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Damsels_in_Distress_(plays)&oldid=1319480592"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp