 |
Playwright Arnold Wesker (1932-2016) at the Durham Book Festival in 2008. (Photo: Simon James) |
The angry young man movement, which attacked England’s obstinacy about holding onto its vision of itself as an empire after the Second World War and
quarreled with the bourgeois gentility of the mid-century English drama, detonated the British theatre in the mid-1950s. But except for John Osborne, whose
Look Back in Anger and
The Entertainer are still performed as Tony Richardson’s film versions continue to represent the exciting early years
of the English New Wave, the playwrights who came out of that movement have mostly been forgotten. One of them, Arnold Wesker, died last week at the age of
eighty-three. His output included fifty plays as well as fiction, poetry, essays and memoirs, but only in the first five years of his theatrical career did
he write plays – five of them – that made both critics and audiences sit up and take notice – though unlike Osborne’s plays or Shelagh Delaney’s
A Taste of Honey, they never developed lives beyond English shores. They were
The Kitchen (1957), which the National Theatre revived in 2011,
Chips with Everything (1962), and – book-ended by these two – the plays known as “the Wesker trilogy,”
Chicken Soup with Barley (1958),
Roots (1959) and
I’m Talking About Jerusalem (1960).
The trilogy – in particular the first and third plays – is about the golden promise of socialism and how its true believers handle the fallout when,
inevitably, it smashes up against the realities of the world. Political idealism is a great subject, yet only a handful of playwrights have chosen to
dramatize it since Sophocles in
Antigone. Clifford Odets took up the challenge in
Awake and Sing! and
Paradise Lost, both written in
1935, and John Guare in his
Lydie Breeze plays in 1982, and more recently it’s provided one of the themes for
Richard Nelson’s
Apple family plays
(which were written to coincide with significant American political moments) and
Temple by the talented young English playwright Steve Waters. The
Wesker trilogy is a kind of British equivalent to the Odets plays, and just as Odets found his home with the Group Theatre, the Wesker plays were produced
at the Royal Court, the heart and soul of the angry young man movement.