Play by D. H. Lawrence
The Daughter-in-Law Written by D. H. Lawrence Characters Mrs Gascoyne Joe Gascoyne Mrs Purdy Minnie Gascoyne Luther Gascoyne Cabman Date premiered 16 March 1967 (1967-03-16 ) Place premiered Royal Court Theatre , London , EnglandOriginal language English
The Daughter-in-Law is the first play by D. H. Lawrence , completed in January 1913. Lawrence described it as "neither a tragedy nor a comedy - just ordinary". It was neither staged nor published in his lifetime.[ 1]
The first stage production, by Peter Gill at the Royal Court Theatre in 1967, contributed to a reappraisal of Lawrence's dramatic writing.[ 2] In 1968, The Times Literary Supplement said it was "a fine and moving piece of work" that "ought to be as well known as Sons and Lovers and the best Nottinghamshire stories".[ 3] In 2012, the critic Michael Billington described it as "quite extraordinary ... one of the great British dramas of the 20th century".[ 4]
Characters
Mrs Gascoyne
Mrs Purdy
Joe Gascoyne
Minnie Gascoyne
Luther Gascoyne
Cabman
Production history
The play, directed by Peter Gill , premiered on 16 March 1967 at the Royal Court Theatre , London. The cast comprised Gabrielle Daye , Anne Dyson, Victor Henry , Judy Parfitt , and Mike Pratt .[ 5]
Much later, it was revived at The Young Vic in 2002 under Artistic Director David Lan,[ 6] with The Guardian calling it "one of the great British dramas of the 20th century".
A year after, the Mint Theater Company produced the play in 2003 in New York City [ 7] with The New York Times naming it a top ten production of the year.[ 8]
In 2018, Arcola Theatre produced the play directed by Jack Gamble[ 9] [ 10]
Adaptations
In 2015, the National Theater with the Royal Exchange Theater co-produced Husbands and Sons, an adaption that wove together The Daughter-In-Law , A Collier’s Friday Night , and The Widowing of Mrs Holroyd into a single three-hour narrative.[ 11] The three D. H. Lawrence plays were adapted by Ben Power and the production was directed by Marianne Elliott [ 12]
Television
In 1985, the BBC broadcast a production directed by Martyn Friend with Sheila Hancock as Mrs Gascoigne, Cherie Lunghi as Minnie and David Threlfall as Luther.[ 13]
References
^ Lawrence, David Herbert (2001). The Widowing of Mrs. Holroyd and Other Plays . Oxford University Press. p. xxvii.
^ Billington, Michael (4 September 2019). "A shining light: Peter Gill, the unsung hero of British theatre" . The Guardian .
^ Moran, James (2015). The Theatre of D. H. Lawrence . Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 6.
^ "The Daughter-in-Law review, The Guardian" .
^ "The Daughter-in-Law, Peter Gill" .
^ Billington, Michael (13 September 2002). "The Daughter-in-Law, Young Vic, London" . The Guardian .
^ Weber, Bruce (16 June 2003). "THEATER REVIEW; D. H. Lawrence's Young Wisdom" . The New York Times .
^ Weber, Bruce (28 December 2003). "THEATER: THE HIGHS; The Plays And Players Of the Year" . The New York Times .
^ Billington, Michael (29 May 2018). "The Daughter-in-Law review – is this the best British working-class drama?" . The Guardian .
^ "The Daughter-in-Law" . Arcola Theatre . 5 February 2018.
^ "Husbands & Sons" . National Theatre . 23 October 2015.
^ Billington, Michael (28 October 2015). "Husbands and Sons review – Anne-Marie Duff shines through violation of DH Lawrence" . The Guardian .
^ The Daughter-in-Law – BBC – Radio Times
Sources
Worthen, John D.H. Lawrence: The Early Years 1885-1912 Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1991. 458–60.
External links
Novels Short stories and novellas Short story collections Plays Poetry Travel books Non-fiction books and pamphlets Compendiums Related