Quartermaine's Terms | |
---|---|
Written by | Simon Gray |
Date premiered | 30 July 1981 |
Place premiered | Queen's Theatre, London |
Original language | English |
Genre | Drama |
Official site |
Quartermaine's Terms is a play by Simon Gray which won The Cheltenham Prize in 1982. [1]
The play takes place over a period of two years in the 1960s in the staffroom at a Cambridge school for teaching English to foreigners. It deals with the interrelationship between seven teachers at the school, in particular that between St John Quartermaine and the others.
The dominant theme is loneliness, and during the course of the play all of the characters experience the trauma of being or feeling alone. Mark’s wife leaves him; Derek, from Hull, finds Cambridge initially unwelcoming; Eddie is ultimately bereaved by the loss of a partner; Anita’s husband is a philanderer; Henry is trapped in a dysfunctional nuclear family and Melanie is similarly trapped caring for a mother whom she despises. Quartermaine is a painfully lonely bachelor, seemingly with no friends other than his colleagues at the school.
Although the play is at times highly comic, it has a very serious theme; and the struggles of each character with their own types of loneliness are moving and sad. Above all, Quartermaine himself is an increasingly pathetic figure lost in his own confused thoughts – and ultimately deserted. His future as the play closes is poignantly bleak.
It was first staged on 30 July 1981 at the Queen’s Theatre, London. [2]
Role | Actor |
---|---|
St. John Quartermaine | Edward Fox |
Anita Manchip | Jenny Quayle |
Mark Sackling | Peter Birch |
Eddie Loomis | Robin Bailey |
Derek Meadle | Glyn Grain |
Henry Windscape | James Grout |
Melanie Garth | Prunella Scales |
The Stage wrote, "Simon Gray has written the best play of his notable career, a delicate, moving and yet consistently funny piece, eloquently directed by Harold Pinter, which depicts the English penchant for quiet suffering with immense skill." [3]
The play was staged on 24 February 1983 at Playhouse 91 Theater, New York in a production by Long Wharf Theatre. [4]
Role | Actor |
---|---|
St. John Quartermaine | Remak Ramsay |
Anita Manchip | Caroline Lagerfelt |
Mark Sackling | Kelsey Grammer |
Eddie Loomis | Roy Poole |
Derek Meadle | Anthony Heald |
Henry Windscape | John Cunningham |
Melanie Garth | Dana Ivey |
The New York Times called it "a play that is at once full of doom and gloom and bristling with wry, even uproarious comedy. The mixture is so artfully balanced that we really don't know where the laughter ends and the tears begin: the playwright is in full possession of that Chekhovian territory where the tragedies and absurdities of life become one and the same." [5]
Quartermaine's Terms | |
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Written by | Simon Gray (play) Simon Gray (adaptation) |
Directed by | Bill Hays |
Starring | John Gielgud Edward Fox Eleanor Bron Clive Francis Tessa Peake-Jones Peter Jeffrey Paul Jesson |
Theme music composer | Jeremy Nicholas |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Original language | English |
Production | |
Cinematography | John McGlashan |
Release | |
Original release | 29 March 1987 |
A film was broadcast on BBC Two in 1987, as part of the Screen Two series. [6] [7]
Role | Actor |
---|---|
Melanie Garth | Eleanor Bron |
St. John (pronounced Sinjin) Quartermaine | Edward Fox |
Mark Sackling | Clive Francis |
Eddie Loomis | John Gielgud |
Henry Windscape | Peter Jeffrey |
Derek Meadle | Paul Jesson |
Anita Manchip | Tessa Peake-Jones |
Oko-Ri | Eiji Kusuhara |
Role | Actor |
---|---|
St. John Quartermaine | Michael Williams |
Henry Windscape | Peter Jeffery |
Eddie Loomis | Robin Bailey |
Melanie Garth | Marcia Warren |
Mark Sackling | Nigel Anthony |
Anita Manchip | Helena Breck |
Derek Meadle | Jon Strickland |
Role | Actor |
---|---|
Quartermaine | Michael Palin |
Anita | Francesca Faridany |
Mark | James Fleet |
Eddie | Clive Francis |
Derek | Andrew Lincoln |
Henry | David Yelland |
Melanie | Harriet Walter |
The play opened at Wyndham's Theatre on 23 January 2013, after brief runs at Theatre Royal, Brighton, and the Theatre Royal, Bath. [3]
Role | Actor |
---|---|
St. John Quartermaine | Rowan Atkinson |
Anita Manchip | Louise Ford |
Mark Sackling | Matthew Cottle |
Eddie Loomis | Malcolm Sinclair |
Derek Meadle | Will Keen |
Henry Windscape | Conleth Hill |
Melanie Garth | Felicity Montagu |
The Guardian noted "a rueful social comedy that stands up well to revival and gives star billing to Rowan Atkinson, who reminds us in his first straight play in 25 years that he is a highly capable actor"; [10] while The Daily Telegraph wrote "there’s a delight in watching a playwright so in control of his craft that he holds you riveted in a world where only the silence seems to scream." [11]
Harold Pinter was a British playwright, screenwriter, director and actor. A Nobel Prize winner, Pinter was one of the most influential modern British dramatists with a writing career that spanned more than 50 years. His best-known plays include The Birthday Party (1957), The Homecoming (1964) and Betrayal (1978), each of which he adapted for the screen. His screenplay adaptations of others' works include The Servant (1963), The Go-Between (1971), The French Lieutenant's Woman (1981), The Trial (1993) and Sleuth (2007). He also directed or acted in radio, stage, television and film productions of his own and others' works.
Simon James Holliday Gray was an English playwright and memoirist who also had a career as a university lecturer in English literature at Queen Mary, University of London, for 20 years. While teaching at Queen Mary, Gray began his writing career as a novelist in 1963 and, during the next 45 years, in addition to five published novels, wrote 40 original stage plays, screenplays, and screen adaptations of his own and others' works for stage, film, and television and became well known for the self-deprecating wit characteristic of several volumes of memoirs or diaries.
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