Mary Rose: Drama on 3 / 23 October

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • doversoul1
    Ex Member
    • Dec 2010
    • 7132

    Mary Rose: Drama on 3 / 23 October

    JM Barrie's haunting play about a sinister Scottish island and a girl who never grows up.
    [...]


    Most intriguing. However, according to Wiki, the description isn’t correct. Mary Rose did grow up (ed. So it seems on the surface at least).
    JM Barrie's haunting play about a sinister Scottish island and a girl who never grows up.


    This is the fictional story of Mary Rose, a girl who vanishes twice.[1] As a child, Mary Rose was taken by her father to a remote Scottish island. While she is briefly out of her father's sight, Mary Rose vanishes. The entire island is searched exhaustively. Twenty-one days later, Mary Rose reappears as mysteriously as she disappeared…but she shows no effects of having been gone for three weeks, and she has no knowledge of any gap or missing time.
    Years later, as a young wife and mother, the adult Mary Rose persuades her husband to take her to the same island. Again she vanishes: this time for a period of decades. When she is found again, she is not a single day older and has no awareness of the passage of time. In the interim, her son has grown to adulthood and is now physically older than his mother
    .


    Fairly substantial review/comments on the play here.
    Hello, my friends, This is the first of two final posts on what may have felt as a never-ending series on the Unproduced Screenplays of Alfr...
    Last edited by doversoul1; 22-10-16, 18:59.
  • french frank
    Administrator/Moderator
    • Feb 2007
    • 30253

    #2
    Strong cast too - led by Bill Paterson as Barrie.
    It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.

    Comment

    • doversoul1
      Ex Member
      • Dec 2010
      • 7132

      #3
      I assume including the narrator was for the radio adaptation, as I imagine there is no narrator in the original play (do stage dramas have narrators?), and naming the narrator as Barrie seems to me to rather dictate the ‘meaning’ of the story. Other than that, I thought it was a very good, straightforward and well played radio drama. I’d forgotten how involving listening to a radio drama was.

      Comment

      Working...
      X