Jump to content

On the Rocks (2008 play)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
On the Rocks
Written byAmy Rosenthal
Directed byClare Lizzimore
Date premiered1 July 2008
Place premieredHampstead Theatre, London
Original languageEnglish

On the Rocks is a 2008 play written by Amy Rosenthal and directed by Clare Lizzimore about real events surrounding novelist, short story writer, poet and playwright D. H. Lawrence[1] in the tiny village of Zennor in Cornwall in 1916 in the middle of World War I.[2] It played at the Hampstead Theatre in London from 1 to 26 July 2008. It was shortlisted for the Susan Smith Blackburn Prize in 2009.

Abstract

[edit]

D. H. Lawrence and his wife Frieda are living a shaky relationship with the overpowering Frieda missing her children, whom she abandoned for the writer, and fighting with Lawrence. The local coastguards, also suspect that Frieda, a cousin of Manfred von Richthofen, the Red Baron air ace, is a German spy and is sending signals from the cliffs to U-boats in the channel. In these turbulent times, the Lawrences invite their best, and by now almost only remaining friends, the critic and editor John Middleton Murry and the short-story writer Katherine Mansfield to come and join them in the cottage.[2] For Lawrence, this was a step on the road to his ideal of Rananim – a utopia where one could be happy with a group of friends.[1] As things develop, Lawrence and Frieda engage in violent fights followed by love-making sessions on the floor. Lawrence suggests that Murry becomes his blood brother, while Mansfield has writer's block, a situation Rosenthal passed through for six years before writing this play. Mansfield, after an enforced intimacy with Frieda, puts an end to the social experiment, leaving Lawrence with a permanent sense of betrayal.[1]

Cast

[edit]

Personnel

[edit]
  • Director: Clare Lizzimore
  • Writer: Amy Rosenthal
  • Designer: Paul Burgess
  • Lighting designer: Jon Clark
  • Sound designer: Edward Lewis

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c Michael Billington (2 July 2008). "On the Rocks at Hamstead, London". The Guardian. Retrieved 13 December 2017.
  2. ^ a b Charles Spencer (3 July 2008). "On the Rocks: the dark delights of DH Lawrence in love – and at war". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 13 December 2017.