| |
| The
Wedding Feast (1974) |
| (5w
11m) |
| Based on
Dostoevsky's story 'A Nasty Incident'. Originally a film script commissioned
by Hollywood actor, Anthony Quinn. |
| |
| SYNOPSIS |
LOUIS LITVANOV, a shoe manufacturer
with idealistic notions about the need to treat your employees
as equals, finds himself outside a house from which come the
sounds of a wedding. He recognises the voices and realises
it's the wedding of one of his employees.
LITVANOV persuades himself that if he joins the wedding guests
he will be warmly greeted, and admired for calling in to wish
them well. He doesn't plan to stay but is persuaded to, as
an honoured guest. Slowly he becomes drunk with them.
The proximity of their employer invites the
abuse of his employees. The wedding party ends as a comic,
chilling disaster. |
 |
|
| EXCERPT |
| "Then
I'll leave, with a joke about the wedding bed which'll make them roar
with laughter, and then I'll kiss the bride, gently, on the forehead,
and I know how they'll all look at me because it's a beautiful gesture,
in the right proportion, at the correct moment, everything correct,
most important. For to every action is a time and place and they see
that I know that. And then, in the factory, next week, the efficient
industrialist. Kindly but firm. Not the place to remember weddings
and kisses. Work! The world must turn on. Men must be fed, houses
built, shoes cut out and sewn up. Two sides! They'll see two sides
of me and when they're old they'll tell their children and I'll be
spoken of with affection, honoured, remembered." |
| |
| REVIEWS |
...
as theatrically effective as anything he has written .
John Barber, The Daily Telegraph uneasy
comment on our smug, uncertain society ... one of the most devastating
developments I have experienced in the theatre ...
Gerrard Dempsey: The Daily Express
a naturalistic tour de force unapproached by
any other recent playwright ...
Robert Cushman: The Observer |
| |
| Back
to Synopses index |
|