A performance from the Vaudeville Theatre run was filmed in front of a live audience. The recording has been released on VHS, DVD[5] and is available for streaming or digital rental on Digital Theatre.[6]
Performed by Atticist theatre company 9 January 2018 at The King's Head Theatre, London. Directed by Jessica Lazar.
Dad - Russell Barnett
Mum - Debra Penny
Sylv - Boadicea Ricketts
Les - Jack Condon
Mike - James Craze
The production was met with critical acclaim, receiving five award nominations and selling out its entire run.
Legacy
Reputation
East was listed as one of 100 of the “best and most influential plays”[8] performed in Britain from 1945 - 2010, by the book and accompanying iPad app Played in Britain: Modern Theatre in 100 Plays.[3]
The critic Aleks Sierz has called the play an "in-yer-face classic"[9] and has named Berkoff as "a pioneer of in-yer-face theatre".[10] The label of in-yer-face theatre, popularised by Sierz, is used to describe a confrontational style and sensibility of drama, which became prominent in new plays performed in Britain during the 1990s.[11] However, Sierz has cited East (along with some other plays) as being "an exception" for fitting the category of in-yer-face theatre prior to the 1990s.[12]
Influence
East has been cited as inspiring some of the work of a variety of playwrights and theatre makers.
The critic Lyn Gardner has stated that the play "foreshadowed the physical-theatre boom of the 80s and 90s. East and Berkoff helped inspire all those companies such as Theatre de Complicite and Frantic Assembly."[13]
Early in his career the playwright Mark Ravenhill wrote the short play Blood Brood, which was performed at the 1987 Edinburgh Fringe Festival.[14] Ravenhill described his play as "the story of the Kray twins in blank verse, inspired by Berkoff's East."[15]
The actor, director, stage manager and writer Harry Gibson mounted "the first revival of East outside London, in 1978" and has cited the play as "the biggest influence" on his stage adaptation of Irvine Welsh's novel Trainspotting.[16]
Actor and playwright Elliot Warren wrote his 2016 verse play Flesh and Bone as a result of being unable to afford the rights to perform East. Warren's Flesh and Bone was strongly influenced by Berkoff's play[17] and went on to win multiple awards, including the 2019 Olivier Award for Outstanding Achievement in Affiliate Theatre.[18]
^ abDorney, Kate; Gray, Frances (14 February 2013). "1969-1979". Played in Britain: Modern Theatre in 100 Plays. Great Britain: Methuen Drama. pp. 92–93. ISBN9781408164808.