Terence Rattigan
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Sir Terence Mervyn Rattigan (June 10, 1911 – November 30, 1977) was one of England's most important 20th century dramatists. He was born in London, England of Irish Protestant extraction and educated at Harrow and Trinity College, Oxford, and his work to some extent reflects this privileged and intellectual background.
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[edit] Life and career
Success as a playwright came early, with the light comedy French Without Tears in 1936, set in a crammer. Rattigan's determination to write a more serious play produced After the Dance (1939), a fine satirical social drama about the 'Bright Young Things' of the 1920s and their failure of political engagement in the darkening political climate of the 1930s. Unfortunately the war itself scuppered the play's chances of a long run. Rattigan would alternate between comedies and dramas, and after the war, a string of dramas made his name as one of the major playwrights of the day: The Winslow Boy (1946), The Browning Version (1948), The Deep Blue Sea (1952), Adventure story which was written about Alexander the Great and Separate Tables (1954).
Rattigan believed in craftsmanship, structure, and his plays find their emotions in the depths of subtext and formal organisation. This all became very old-fashioned after 1956 when John Osborne's Look Back in Anger announced a new kind of emotional explicitness and intensity. Rattigan, like many other writers of his generation, suffered an almost immediate eclipse, falling into critical disfavour. Rattigan was not a thick-skinned writer and the decline in his reputation hit at his confidence. He retaliated in churlish interviews, and ill-advised comments in the plays, and in doing so he turned himself into his enemies' caricature of him: a conservative, old-fashioned, play-carpenter with no sympathy or understanding of the modern world. In fact, he was none of these things, he publicly supported Joe Orton and the Liberal Party, and some of the better work of the last twenty years of his life, like Ross, Man and Boy, In Praise of Love, and Cause Célèbre, which stand up with the finest of his other work.
He was homosexual, with a string of lovers but no long-term partners. It has been said that most of his work is autobiographical, containing many coded references to his sexuality and the issues it raised in a society in which he was forced to keep this part of himself secret from all but the closest friends. There is certainly some truth in this, but it risks being crudely reductive, in, for example, the repeated (and unfounded) claim that Rattigan originally wrote The Deep Blue Sea as a play about male lovers, turning into a heterosexual play at the last minute. Rattigan's female characters are in fact finely drawn as female and are in no sense 'men in drag'.
He was diagnosed as having leukemia in 1962 and recovered two years later, but again fell ill in 1968. He disliked the Swinging Britain of the 1960s and moved abroad, living for the rest of the sixties in Bermuda, and living off lucrative, but forgettable screenplays (for a time he was the highest-paid screenwriter in the world). He was knighted in the early seventies and moved back to Britain where he experienced a minor revival in his reputation before his death from bone cancer in 1977 at the age of 66.
Fifteen years after his death, largely through a magnificent revival of The Deep Blue Sea, at the Almeida Theatre, London, directed by Karel Reisz, Rattigan came to be seen as one of the century's finest playwrights, an expert choreographer of staged emotion, an anatomist of human emotional pain. A string of successful revivals follows. Most recently, in 2005, Man and Boy was revived at the Duchess Theatre, London, with David Suchet as Gregor Antonescu. The UK's Chichester Festival Theatre revived his last play In Praise Of Love as part of its 2006 summer season, and the Royal Exchange, Manchester, offered a well-received Separate Tables directed by Sarah Frankcom. His play on the last days of Nelson, A Bequest to the Nation was revived on Radio 4 for Trafalgar 200. It starred Janet McTeer as Lady Hamilton, Kenneth Branagh as Nelson, and Amanda Root as Lady Nelson.
[edit] Stage Plays
- 1934 First Episode (written with Philip Heimann)
- 1936 French Without Tears
- 1939 After the Dance
- 1940 Follow My Leader (written with Anthony Maurice [aka, Tony Goldschmidt])
- 1940 Grey Farm (written with Hector Bolitho)
- 1942 Flare Path
- 1943 While the Sun Shines
- 1944 Love in Idleness
- 1946 The Winslow Boy
- 1948 Playbill (comprising Harlequinade and The Browning Version)
- 1949 Adventure Story
- 1950 A Tale of Two Cities (from Dickens, co-adapted with John Gielgud)
- 1950 Who is Sylvia?
- 1952 The Deep Blue Sea
- 1953 The Sleeping Prince
- 1954 Separate Tables (comprising Table By the Window and Table No. 7)
- 1958 Variation on a Theme
- 1960 Ross
- 1960 Joie de Vivre (written with Robert Stolz and Paul Dehn)
- 1963 Man and Boy
- 1970 A Bequest to the Nation
- 1973 In Praise of Love (comprising After Lydia and Before Dawn)
- 1976 Duologue (stage adaptation of All On Her Own, see below)
- 1977 Cause Célèbre
[edit] Television Plays
- 1951 Final Test
- 1962 Heart to Heart
- 1964 Ninety Years On
- 1966 Nelson - A Portrait in Miniature
- 1968 All On Her Own
- 1972 High Summer
Several of his later plays were adapted for film and/or television. The best-known are:
- The Winslow Boy (1948 and 1999)
- The Browning Version (film: 1951 and 1994; TV: 1955 and 1985)
- The Deep Blue Sea (1955)
- Separate Tables (1958)
[edit] Radio Play
Many of Rattigan's stage plays have been produced for radio by the BBC. The first play he wrote directly for radio was Cause Célèbre, broadcast on BBC Radio 4, 27th October 1975, based on the 1935 murder of Francis Rattenbury.
[edit] Trivia
Rattigan lived briefly at The Red House in the Berkshire village of Sonning during 1945–47 and there is a blue plaque recording his stay there, visible from the road.
[edit] External links
- Terence Rattigan at the Internet Broadway Database
- Terence Rattigan at the Internet Movie Database
- Performances of Terence Rattigan's plays listed in University of Bristol Archive
- Terence Rattigan
- The life's work of Terence Rattigan @ Ward's Book of Days
Categories: 1911 births | 1977 deaths | Leukemia deaths | English dramatists and playwrights | English screenwriters | Alumni of Trinity College, Oxford | People from London | People buried in Kensal Green Cemetery | Old Harrovians | British knights | People of Irish descent in Great Britain | LGBT people from England