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John Osborne - PowerPoint Presentation

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John Osborne - PPT Presentation

Look Back in Anger John Osborne biography Born on December 12 1929 in London John Osborne would eventually change the face of British theatre His father an advertising copywriter died in 1941 ID: 275378

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Slide1

John Osborne

Look Back in AngerSlide2

John Osborne: biography

Born on December 12, 1929, in London, John Osborne would eventually change the face of British theatre.

His father, an advertising copywriter, died in 1941, leaving Osborne an insurance settlement which

he used to finance a boarding school education at Belmont College in Devon.

Still heartbroken, however, over his father's death, Osborne could not focus on his studies and left

after striking the headmaster.Slide3

John Osborne: biography

He

returned to London and lived briefly with his mother, a barmaid. He became involved in the theatre when he took a job tutoring a touring company of young actors. Osborne went on to serve as actor-manager for

a string of repertory companies and soon decided to try his hand at playwriting. When

George Devine placed a notice in TheStage in 1956, Osborne decided to submit one

of his plays, Look Back in Anger.Slide4

John Osborne: biography

Not only was his play produced, but it is considered by many critics to be the turning point in postwar British theatre.

Osborne's protagonist, Jimmy Porter, captured the angry and rebellious nature of the postwar generation, a dispossessed lot who were clearly unhappy with things as they

were in the decades following World War II. Jimmy Porter came to represent an entire generation

of "angry young men.”Slide5

John Osborne

: biography

In his next play,

The Entertainers (1957), Osborne continued to examine the state of the country, this time using three generations of a family of entertainers to symbolize the decline of England after the war. Laurence Olivier played Archie Rice, a struggling

comedian, and the role resulted in one of his most famous performances.

An experimental piece, The Entertainer alternated realistic scenes with Vaudeville performances,

and

most

critics agreed that it was an appropriate

follow

-up to the wild success of

Look Back in Anger

. Slide6

John Osborne: biography

After

this, the quality of Osborne's output became erratic. Although he produced a number of hits including Luthor (1961), a play about the leader of the Reformation, and

Inadmissible Evidence (1965), the study of a frustrated solicitor at a law firm, he also produced a string of unimportant works. Critics began to accuse him of not fulfilling his early

potential, and audiences no longer seemed effected by Osborne's rage. Recognizing this, Osborne described himself in his last

play as "a churling, grating note, a spokesman for no one

but

myself, with deadening effect, cruelly abusive,

unable

to be coherent about my despair

.”Slide7

John Osborne: biography

Osborne died as a result of complications from Diabetes on December 24, 1994, in

Shropshire, England. He left behind a large body of works for the stage as well as several autobiographical works.

Several of his plays were also adapted for film including Look Back in Anger and The

Entertainer. In 1963, Osborne won an Academy Award for

his screenplay for Tom Jones. Slide8

Tony Palmer: John Osborne - The Gift of Friendship

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C8D1RHes-

pkSlide9

Look back in anger

LOOK BACK IN ANGER tells the simple but gripping story of Jimmy

Porter, an angry young man with a college education and a dead-end job. Feeling

trapped by his circumstances, his squalid post-war flat, and spurred on by self-pity, Porter lashes out against his wife, Allison, his

lover, Helena, and his business partner,

Cliff. Fierce, compassionate, funny, and ultimately cathartic, John Osborne’s classic “kitchen sink”

drama,

is a masterpiece of ensemble acting.Slide10

Scenes from the play

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=

wKk5gzEhphY trailerhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SOKPDR-

zS04 part 1http://www.youtube.com/

watch?v=epovPWjWY0E Part 2http://www.youtube.com

/watch?v=cKnnNfncpQ4 Part 6This play has passionate and emotional scenes, making it an interesting starting point for the discussion of personal relationships and marriage.

The films of the play are also interesting, since they show England just after World War II – a place of devastation and no hope for the future.