Difference between revisions of "Entertaining Mr Sloane (2011)"

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== Gallery ==
 
== Gallery ==
 
[[sloane_twists_daddas_ear.jpg]]
 
[[sloane_twists_daddas_ear.jpg]]
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[[eddie.jpg]]
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[[dadda_toasts.jpg]]
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[[kath_sloane.jpg]]
  
 
== Reminiscences and Anecdotes ==
 
== Reminiscences and Anecdotes ==

Revision as of 18:10, 3 February 2011

Poster by Stevie Hughes

by Joe Orton

Directed & Designed by Stevie Hughes

Performances: , Theatre


Introduction

A few months elapse between Act I and Act II

Plot summary

Middle-aged Kath has amorous designs on her new, young lodger but Ed, her domineering brother, will have none of it until he too succumbs to the charms of the mysterious Mr Sloane. As they compete for the boy’s affections, their lust soon rips open old family wounds as Sloane blithely plays off brother against sister. That is, until their ageing father (the "Dadda") recognises Sloane as the still-at-large perpetrator of a past, violent crime. Threatened with exposure, Sloane takes drastic measures that crank up the absurdity to hysterical levels.

Terence Rattigan (no friend of the ‘new wave’ theatre of the 50s and 60s) called Entertaining Mr Sloane "the best first play" he had seen "in thirty odd years" and to my mind, it’s Orton’s funniest: his targets in it are "ordinary, decent people" rather than the trusted institutions of society (which are not so trusted nowadays) and instead of the verbal machine-gun fire you get in Loot and What the Butler Saw, Orton slowly fattens and ripens his prey before surgically picking them off, like a sniper, piece by piece as the play reaches its hilarious climax.

Cast

Crew

Design

Reviews

Gallery

sloane_twists_daddas_ear.jpg eddie.jpg dadda_toasts.jpg kath_sloane.jpg

Reminiscences and Anecdotes

Members are encouraged to write about their experiences of working on or seeing this production. Please leave your name. Anonymous entries may be deleted.

See Also

References

<references/>

External Links