Serendipity provided the basis for a most enjoyable session of sheer reflection prompted by the discovery of an off-air video of The Corn is Green (1945), a Hollywood version of Emlyn Williams' 1938 play which became an international success with Sybil Thorndyke as the feisty schoolteacher, Miss Moffat, in a small mining Welsh community who took a promising youngster under her wing and persisted until he won a place at Oxford. The parallel was the young Williams encouraged by his teacher, Miss Cooke, who became his mentor and life-long friend. Dame Sybil reprised her role and as a youth in the mid 40s, I sat enthralled as I heard the play in Saturday Night Theatre - Home Service? At the time, I was beginning to grasp the craft of narrative and construction which came under the heading of the well-made play. The plot also had a beginning, a middle and an end with cleverly plotted curtain lines to end each act.
Circa 1946, I remember the frisson of the curtain line at the end of Act 1, in a pre-London tour of Rattigan's "The Winslow Boy" when the QC, indeed, played by Mr Williams, after a ferocious interrogation of a schoolboy wrongly accused of stealing a postal order (remember those? ) turns to the family solicitor and tells him to send the papers to his Chambers. "You mean you are taking the case?". "Of course, the boy is plainly innocent" - a quick curtain line with such an impact that the audience cheered to the rafters. In the 1948 film version, Robert Donat defined the role of the QC and his resonant declamation of "Let Right Be Done" in the House of Commons also stirred cinema audiences.
JB Priestley was another practioner of the well-made play and his clever manipulation of the time theory is seen at its best in "Dangerous Corner" (1932) which enjoyed regular revivals in
20th century theatre. The play is set in real time and each curtain line is repeated at the beginning of the next act.
Bette Davis also brought star quality and sharp intelligence to her performance of Miss Moffat in the Warner Bros version of "The Corn is Green" and the script was respected with the presence of a fine Welsh actor, Rhys Williams, as Technical Advisor, alongside a role. Perhaps a few minor Hollywood aberrations which amused rather than irritated.
I enjoy contemporary theatre and the changed style of performance demanded by more intimate auditoria (?) but still heartened to see the craftsmanship of an earlier era.
Circa 1946, I remember the frisson of the curtain line at the end of Act 1, in a pre-London tour of Rattigan's "The Winslow Boy" when the QC, indeed, played by Mr Williams, after a ferocious interrogation of a schoolboy wrongly accused of stealing a postal order (remember those? ) turns to the family solicitor and tells him to send the papers to his Chambers. "You mean you are taking the case?". "Of course, the boy is plainly innocent" - a quick curtain line with such an impact that the audience cheered to the rafters. In the 1948 film version, Robert Donat defined the role of the QC and his resonant declamation of "Let Right Be Done" in the House of Commons also stirred cinema audiences.
JB Priestley was another practioner of the well-made play and his clever manipulation of the time theory is seen at its best in "Dangerous Corner" (1932) which enjoyed regular revivals in
20th century theatre. The play is set in real time and each curtain line is repeated at the beginning of the next act.
Bette Davis also brought star quality and sharp intelligence to her performance of Miss Moffat in the Warner Bros version of "The Corn is Green" and the script was respected with the presence of a fine Welsh actor, Rhys Williams, as Technical Advisor, alongside a role. Perhaps a few minor Hollywood aberrations which amused rather than irritated.
I enjoy contemporary theatre and the changed style of performance demanded by more intimate auditoria (?) but still heartened to see the craftsmanship of an earlier era.
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