Synopsis
Sixties Drama - Roots by Arnold Wesker & Serjeant Musgrave's Dance by John Arden & Loot by Joe Orton & Early Morning by Edward Bond & The Ruling Class by Peter Barnes
Published by Methuen
This volume contains major works by five of the most important playwrights ot emerge during the late fifties and early sixties. Bold, challenging and iconoclastic, these plays are landmarks of post-war British theatre. Roots by Arnold Wesker focuses on the homecoming of young Beatie Bryant who returns to her family of Norfolk farm workers with stories of her boyfriend Ronnie
Roots is about a woman discovering her own voice and identity. Serjeant Musgrave's Dance by John Arden is set in a mining town in the 19th century, with a group of soldiers returned from a colonial war. But when Musgrave is asked to keep the peace with the colliery workers, he decides to do so in a rather unusual way
Loot by Joe Orton is a brilliant parody of the skeleton-in-the-cupboard crime genre, exploding the very notions of English decency, good citizenry and traditional 'positions'. Edward Bond's Early Morning re-imagines the time of Victoria and Albert caught up in a military coup plotted by Disraeli
The play also continas the memorable image of Prince Arthur conversing with the skeleton of his dead Siamese twin on his shoulder. Peter Barnes' Ruling Class describes the fall out in an aristocratic family after the 14th Earl commits suicide and leaves his estate to a schizophrenic Franciscan friar who is under the illusion that he is Jesus
Roots: "The passion of Mr Wesker's theme is matched by the living fire in his writing...its quality is undiminished by the passing years" ~ Bernard Levin
Serjeant Musgrave's Dance: "A spell-binding, mind-challenging drama that touches greatness" ~ Michael Billington, Guardian
Loot: "Orton is the Oscar Wilde of the Welfare State gentility" ~ Observer
The Ruling Class: "A scorching and savage tragedy, yet its jokes are innumerable" ~ Sunday Times