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One for the Road (Pinter play)

One for the Road is an overtly political one-act play by Harold Pinter, which premiered at Lyric Studio, Hammersmith, in London, on 13 March 1984, and was first published by Methuen in 1984.

One for the Road
Hardcover ed., Eyre Methuen Ltd, 1985
(Cover photo: Ivan Kyncl)
Written byHarold Pinter
Date premiered13 March 1984
Place premieredThe Lyric Studio, Hammersmith, London
Original languageEnglish
SubjectTorture, rape, and murder of political prisoners; human rights
GenreDrama
SettingA room in a house in an unspecified location.
Official site

Background Edit

One for the Road, considered Pinter's "statement about the human rights abuses of totalitarian governments",[1] was inspired, according to Antonia Fraser,[2] by reading on May 19, 1983, Jacobo Timerman's Prisoner Without a Name, Cell Without a Number, a book about torture on Argentina's military dictatorship; later, in January 1984, he got to write it after an argument with two Turkish girls at a family birthday party on the subject of torture.

The year following the publication, Pinter would visit Turkey with Arthur Miller "to investigate allegations of the torture and persecution of Turkish writers";[3] as he explains further in his interview with Nicholas Hern, "A Play and Its Politics", conducted in February 1985 and published in 1985 in the revised and reset Eyre Methuen hardback[4] and in 1986 in the Grove Evergreen paperback[5] and illustrated with production photographs taken at the premiere by Ivan Kyncl, torture of political prisoners in countries like Turkey "is systematic".[6] Due to the tolerance and even support of such human rights abuses by the governments of Western countries like the United States, Pinter emphasizes (prophetically it turned out given later revelations about extraordinary rendition) in One for the Road how such abuses might happen in or at the direction of these democracies too.

In this play the actual physical violence takes place off stage; Pinter indirectly dramatizes such terror and violence through verbal and non-verbal allusions to off-stage acts of repeated rape of Gila, physical mutilation of Victor, and the ultimate murder of their son, Nicky. The effects of the violence that takes place off stage are, however, portrayed verbally and non-verbally on stage.

Though in the interview, Pinter says that he himself "always find[s] agitprop insulting and objectionable […] now, of course I'm doing the same thing".[7] He observes that "when the play was done in New York, as the second part of a triple-bill [Other Places, directed by Alan Schneider, at the Manhattan Theatre Club (1984)],[1] a goodly percentage of people left the theatre when it was over. They were asked why they were going and invariably they said, 'We know all about this. We don't need to be told.' Now, I believe that they were lying. They did not know about it and did not want to know".[7]

Setting Edit

The play takes place in "A room" in a house during the course of one day ("Morning", "Afternoon", and "Night"), but the location of the room is unspecified. The furniture in the room, a "desk" and a "machine" used as a telephone intercom, and the bars on the windows, as illustrated by the premiere production photographs, suggests that the room in a domestic house has been converted into an office and that the house functions as a prison[8] The use of some common English colloquial expressions (e.g., the titular "One for the Road" repeated by Nicolas regarding having another drink) implies that the action could take place in Great Britain or America, or another English-speaking country among "civilised" people.[9]

Synopsis Edit

Victor and his wife Gila, who have obviously been tortured, as their "clothes" are "torn" and they are "bruised",[10] and their seven-year-old son, Nicky, are imprisoned in separate rooms of a house by a totalitarian or democratic regime represented by an officer named Nicolas. Though in control locally—"I can do absolutely anything I like"[11] —he is not the final arbiter of power, since he refers to outside sources to validate his actions: "Do you know the man who runs this country?";[12] "God speaks through me."[13] But the play reveals that Nicolas is insecure and that he overcompensates by aggressive gestures and words, threatening both Victor and Gila with a peculiar gesture, waving and jabbing his "big finger" and his "little finger […] both at the same time" before their eyes;[14] while he tries to converse with Victor as if they were both "civilised" men, he stresses gratuitously that "Everyone respects me here"[15] and invents depraved fantasies of having sex with a menstruating Gila,[16] even ruminating perversely that she has "fallen in love" with him.[17] Pinter highlighted Nicolas' insecurities in his own performance of the role as directed by Robin Lefèvre in 2001, adding stage business at the start; as Michael Billington describes in his review of a performance at the New Ambassadors Theatre, "In a long, silent prelude we see Nicolas psyching himself up for the ensuing ritual."[18]

When Nicolas confronts Gila, he refers to sexual torture of her that has taken and will continue to take place off stage: "Have they [my soldiers] been raping you? […] How many times? How many times have you been raped? Pause. How many times?" [...] "How many times have you been raped?"[19]

Though Nicolas chats in an ostensibly-innocuous manner with Victor's and Gila's seven-year-old son Nicky about whether the child "Would like to be a soldier" when he grows up,[20] he bullies even the little boy: "You like soldiers. Good. But you spat at my soldiers and you kicked them. You attacked them."[20] After Nicky says, "I didn't like those soldiers", Nicolas replies menacingly: "They don't like you either, my darling."[21]

Victor's and Gila's specific "offences" (if there are any) go unnamed. Nicolas accuses Gila of mentioning her father when she responds to a question about where she met her husband by saying that she met him in "a room", in her "father's room"; Nicolas exaggerates this mere mention as if she were "to defame, to debase, the memory of [her dead] father"—"a wonderful man […] a man of honour" whom he claims to have "loved […] as if he were my own father".[22]

In his final exchange with Victor, Nicolas' use of the past tense signifies that the soldiers have killed Nicky and portends his parents' similarly terrifying fate at their hands: "Your son. I wouldn't worry about him. He was a little prick" (italics added),[23] leading to Pinter's final stage directions, as Victor "straightens and stares at" Nicolas, followed by "Silence" and "Blackout."[24]

Characters Edit

  • Nicolas Mid 40s
  • Gila 30
  • Victor 30
  • Nicky 7

Notable productions Edit

The Grove Press edition of the play lists eight foreign countries where the play had been staged by the time it went to press in 1985, with a list of 10 additional countries in which future productions were being planned.[25] Pinter's official website features a calendar of later productions, and the page devoted to One for the Road provides some hyperlinked foreign productions.[26]

Premiere: The Lyric Studio, Hammersmith – 1984 (13 March 1984) Edit

Part of a double bill with Victoria Station. Cast:[27][28]

Production team:

  • Harold Pinter, Director
  • Tim Bickerton, Designer
  • Dave Horn, Lighting

American premiere: Other Places, Manhattan Theatre Club, New York City, April 1984 Edit

Part of triple bill with Victoria Station and A Kind of Alaska. Cast:[1]

Production team:

BBC-TV production, transmitted on 25 July 1985 Edit

Same cast as London premiere, except that Gila was played by Rosie Kerslake and Nicky by Paul Adams. Kenneth Ives directed.[28]

In triple bill Other Places, Duchess Theatre, London, 7 March – 22 June 1985 Edit

Also directed by Kenneth Ives. Cast:[28]

  • Colin Blakely (Nicolas)
  • Roger Davidson (Victor)
  • Rosie Kerslake (Gila)
  • Daniel Kipling or Simon Vyvyan (Nicky)

Gate Theatre, Dublin / Lincoln Center Harold Pinter Festival – Summer 2001 Edit

Cast:[18]

Production team:

  • Robin Lefèvre, Director
  • Liz Ashcroft, Set & Costume Design
  • Mick Hughes, Sound Design

In double bill with Party Time, BAC, London, 2003 Edit

Cast:[29]

  • Jason Barnett (Victor)
  • Kristin Hutchinson (Gila)
  • Colin McCormack (Nicolas)
  • Kadell Herida/Shakir Joseph (Nicky)

Production team:

  • Bijan Sheibani, Director
  • Paul Burgess, Stage design
  • Guy Kornetski, Lighting design
  • Emma Laxton, Sound Design
  • Daisy O'Flynn, Production Manager
  • Abigail Gonda, Producer

References Edit

Note regarding quotes from the 1986 Grove edition: as Pinter uses three spaced periods for pauses in his dialogue, editorial ellipses of three unspaced periods are herein placed within brackets.

  1. ^ a b c Rich, Frank. "Three by Pinter" (Web). The New York Times. Retrieved 21 March 2013.
  2. ^ Fraser, Antonia (2010). Must you go?. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 978-0-297-85971-0.
  3. ^ Pinter, Harold. "Campaigning against Torture" (Web). HaroldPinter.org. Harold Pinter. Retrieved 21 March 2013.
  4. ^ Pinter 1985, pp. 5–23
  5. ^ Pinter 1986, pp. 7–23
  6. ^ Pinter 1986, p. 13
  7. ^ a b Pinter 1986, p. 18
  8. ^ Pinter 1986, p. 30 ff.
  9. ^ Pinter 1986, p. 31
  10. ^ Pinter 1986, p. 31, 61
  11. ^ Pinter 1986, p. 33
  12. ^ Pinter 1986, p. 47
  13. ^ Pinter 1986, p. 36, 40
  14. ^ Pinter 1986, p. 33, 71
  15. ^ Pinter 1986, p. 36
  16. ^ Pinter 1986, pp. 46–47
  17. ^ Pinter 1986, p. 48–50
  18. ^ a b "One for the Road 2001 ACT Productions & Gate Theatre, Dublin Presents in Association with the Lincoln Center Festival and the Ambassador Theatre Group". HaroldPinter.org. Harold Pinter. Retrieved 7 February 2009. This page reprints the texts of some reviews, including Billington's in the Guardian of 4 July 2001, entitled "Pinter the Actor's Muscular Authority".
  19. ^ Pinter 1986, pp. 70–71
  20. ^ a b Pinter 1986, p. 58
  21. ^ Pinter 1986, p. 59
  22. ^ Pinter 1986, p. 66
  23. ^ Pinter 1986, p. 79
  24. ^ Pinter 1986, p. 80
  25. ^ Pinter 1986, p. 26
  26. ^ One For The Road at www.haroldpinter.org
  27. ^ "One for the Road –Premiere" (Web). HaroldPinter.org. Harold Pinter. Retrieved 7 February 2009.
  28. ^ a b c Pinter 1986, p. 27
  29. ^ "Party Time & One for the Road, BAC, London, 2003" (Web). HaroldPinter.org. Retrieved 7 February 2009.

Works cited Edit

External links Edit

  • ​Other Places​ at the Internet Off-Broadway Database
  • One for the Road at HaroldPinter.org: The Official Website of the International Playwright Harold Pinter

road, pinter, play, road, overtly, political, play, harold, pinter, which, premiered, lyric, studio, hammersmith, london, march, 1984, first, published, methuen, 1984, roadhardcover, eyre, methuen, 1985, cover, photo, ivan, kyncl, written, byharold, pinterdate. One for the Road is an overtly political one act play by Harold Pinter which premiered at Lyric Studio Hammersmith in London on 13 March 1984 and was first published by Methuen in 1984 One for the RoadHardcover ed Eyre Methuen Ltd 1985 Cover photo Ivan Kyncl Written byHarold PinterDate premiered13 March 1984Place premieredThe Lyric Studio Hammersmith LondonOriginal languageEnglishSubjectTorture rape and murder of political prisoners human rightsGenreDramaSettingA room in a house in an unspecified location Official siteNot to be confused with One for the Road Russell play Contents 1 Background 2 Setting 3 Synopsis 4 Characters 5 Notable productions 5 1 Premiere The Lyric Studio Hammersmith 1984 13 March 1984 5 2 American premiere Other Places Manhattan Theatre Club New York City April 1984 5 3 BBC TV production transmitted on 25 July 1985 5 4 In triple bill Other Places Duchess Theatre London 7 March 22 June 1985 5 5 Gate Theatre Dublin Lincoln Center Harold Pinter Festival Summer 2001 5 6 In double bill with Party Time BAC London 2003 6 References 7 Works cited 8 External linksBackground EditOne for the Road considered Pinter s statement about the human rights abuses of totalitarian governments 1 was inspired according to Antonia Fraser 2 by reading on May 19 1983 Jacobo Timerman s Prisoner Without a Name Cell Without a Number a book about torture on Argentina s military dictatorship later in January 1984 he got to write it after an argument with two Turkish girls at a family birthday party on the subject of torture The year following the publication Pinter would visit Turkey with Arthur Miller to investigate allegations of the torture and persecution of Turkish writers 3 as he explains further in his interview with Nicholas Hern A Play and Its Politics conducted in February 1985 and published in 1985 in the revised and reset Eyre Methuen hardback 4 and in 1986 in the Grove Evergreen paperback 5 and illustrated with production photographs taken at the premiere by Ivan Kyncl torture of political prisoners in countries like Turkey is systematic 6 Due to the tolerance and even support of such human rights abuses by the governments of Western countries like the United States Pinter emphasizes prophetically it turned out given later revelations about extraordinary rendition in One for the Road how such abuses might happen in or at the direction of these democracies too In this play the actual physical violence takes place off stage Pinter indirectly dramatizes such terror and violence through verbal and non verbal allusions to off stage acts of repeated rape of Gila physical mutilation of Victor and the ultimate murder of their son Nicky The effects of the violence that takes place off stage are however portrayed verbally and non verbally on stage Though in the interview Pinter says that he himself always find s agitprop insulting and objectionable now of course I m doing the same thing 7 He observes that when the play was done in New York as the second part of a triple bill Other Places directed by Alan Schneider at the Manhattan Theatre Club 1984 1 a goodly percentage of people left the theatre when it was over They were asked why they were going and invariably they said We know all about this We don t need to be told Now I believe that they were lying They did not know about it and did not want to know 7 Setting EditThe play takes place in A room in a house during the course of one day Morning Afternoon and Night but the location of the room is unspecified The furniture in the room a desk and a machine used as a telephone intercom and the bars on the windows as illustrated by the premiere production photographs suggests that the room in a domestic house has been converted into an office and that the house functions as a prison 8 The use of some common English colloquial expressions e g the titular One for the Road repeated by Nicolas regarding having another drink implies that the action could take place in Great Britain or America or another English speaking country among civilised people 9 Synopsis EditVictor and his wife Gila who have obviously been tortured as their clothes are torn and they are bruised 10 and their seven year old son Nicky are imprisoned in separate rooms of a house by a totalitarian or democratic regime represented by an officer named Nicolas Though in control locally I can do absolutely anything I like 11 he is not the final arbiter of power since he refers to outside sources to validate his actions Do you know the man who runs this country 12 God speaks through me 13 But the play reveals that Nicolas is insecure and that he overcompensates by aggressive gestures and words threatening both Victor and Gila with a peculiar gesture waving and jabbing his big finger and his little finger both at the same time before their eyes 14 while he tries to converse with Victor as if they were both civilised men he stresses gratuitously that Everyone respects me here 15 and invents depraved fantasies of having sex with a menstruating Gila 16 even ruminating perversely that she has fallen in love with him 17 Pinter highlighted Nicolas insecurities in his own performance of the role as directed by Robin Lefevre in 2001 adding stage business at the start as Michael Billington describes in his review of a performance at the New Ambassadors Theatre In a long silent prelude we see Nicolas psyching himself up for the ensuing ritual 18 When Nicolas confronts Gila he refers to sexual torture of her that has taken and will continue to take place off stage Have they my soldiers been raping you How many times How many times have you been raped Pause How many times How many times have you been raped 19 Though Nicolas chats in an ostensibly innocuous manner with Victor s and Gila s seven year old son Nicky about whether the child Would like to be a soldier when he grows up 20 he bullies even the little boy You like soldiers Good But you spat at my soldiers and you kicked them You attacked them 20 After Nicky says I didn t like those soldiers Nicolas replies menacingly They don t like you either my darling 21 Victor s and Gila s specific offences if there are any go unnamed Nicolas accuses Gila of mentioning her father when she responds to a question about where she met her husband by saying that she met him in a room in her father s room Nicolas exaggerates this mere mention as if she were to defame to debase the memory of her dead father a wonderful man a man of honour whom he claims to have loved as if he were my own father 22 In his final exchange with Victor Nicolas use of the past tense signifies that the soldiers have killed Nicky and portends his parents similarly terrifying fate at their hands Your son I wouldn t worry about him He was a little prick italics added 23 leading to Pinter s final stage directions as Victor straightens and stares at Nicolas followed by Silence and Blackout 24 Characters EditNicolas Mid 40s Gila 30 Victor 30 Nicky 7Notable productions EditThe Grove Press edition of the play lists eight foreign countries where the play had been staged by the time it went to press in 1985 with a list of 10 additional countries in which future productions were being planned 25 Pinter s official website features a calendar of later productions and the page devoted to One for the Road provides some hyperlinked foreign productions 26 Premiere The Lyric Studio Hammersmith 1984 13 March 1984 Edit Part of a double bill with Victoria Station Cast 27 28 Alan Bates Nicolas Roger Lloyd Pack Victor Jenny Quayle Gila Stephen Kember or Felix Yates Nicky Production team Harold Pinter Director Tim Bickerton Designer Dave Horn LightingAmerican premiere Other Places Manhattan Theatre Club New York City April 1984 Edit Part of triple bill with Victoria Station and A Kind of Alaska Cast 1 Kevin Conway Nicolas Greg Martin Victor David George Polyak Nicky Caroline Lagerfelt Gila Production team Alan Schneider Director John Lee Beatty Set design Jess Goldstein Costume design Rocky Greenberg Lighting design Lynne Meadow Artistic director Barry Grove Managing directorBBC TV production transmitted on 25 July 1985 Edit Same cast as London premiere except that Gila was played by Rosie Kerslake and Nicky by Paul Adams Kenneth Ives directed 28 In triple bill Other Places Duchess Theatre London 7 March 22 June 1985 Edit Also directed by Kenneth Ives Cast 28 Colin Blakely Nicolas Roger Davidson Victor Rosie Kerslake Gila Daniel Kipling or Simon Vyvyan Nicky Gate Theatre Dublin Lincoln Center Harold Pinter Festival Summer 2001 Edit Cast 18 Harold Pinter Nicolas Lloyd Hutchinson Victor Indira Varma Gila Rory Copus Nicky Production team Robin Lefevre Director Liz Ashcroft Set amp Costume Design Mick Hughes Sound DesignIn double bill with Party Time BAC London 2003 Edit Cast 29 Jason Barnett Victor Kristin Hutchinson Gila Colin McCormack Nicolas Kadell Herida Shakir Joseph Nicky Production team Bijan Sheibani Director Paul Burgess Stage design Guy Kornetski Lighting design Emma Laxton Sound Design Daisy O Flynn Production Manager Abigail Gonda ProducerReferences EditNote regarding quotes from the 1986 Grove edition as Pinter uses three spaced periods for pauses in his dialogue editorial ellipses of three unspaced periods are herein placed within brackets a b c Rich Frank Three by Pinter Web The New York Times Retrieved 21 March 2013 Fraser Antonia 2010 Must you go London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 978 0 297 85971 0 Pinter Harold Campaigning against Torture Web HaroldPinter org Harold Pinter Retrieved 21 March 2013 Pinter 1985 pp 5 23 Pinter 1986 pp 7 23 Pinter 1986 p 13 a b Pinter 1986 p 18 Pinter 1986 p 30 ff Pinter 1986 p 31 Pinter 1986 p 31 61 Pinter 1986 p 33 Pinter 1986 p 47 Pinter 1986 p 36 40 Pinter 1986 p 33 71 Pinter 1986 p 36 Pinter 1986 pp 46 47 Pinter 1986 p 48 50 a b One for the Road 2001 ACT Productions amp Gate Theatre Dublin Presents in Association with the Lincoln Center Festival and the Ambassador Theatre Group HaroldPinter org Harold Pinter Retrieved 7 February 2009 This page reprints the texts of some reviews including Billington s in the Guardian of 4 July 2001 entitled Pinter the Actor s Muscular Authority Pinter 1986 pp 70 71 a b Pinter 1986 p 58 Pinter 1986 p 59 Pinter 1986 p 66 Pinter 1986 p 79 Pinter 1986 p 80 Pinter 1986 p 26 One For The Road at www wbr haroldpinter wbr org One for the Road Premiere Web HaroldPinter org Harold Pinter Retrieved 7 February 2009 a b c Pinter 1986 p 27 Party Time amp One for the Road BAC London 2003 Web HaroldPinter org Retrieved 7 February 2009 Works cited EditMain article Bibliography for Harold Pinter Pinter Harold One for the Road A Play London Methuen 1984 ISBN 0 413 56060 0 10 ISBN 978 0 413 56060 5 13 Hardcover One for the Road With Production Photos by Ivan Kyncl and an Interview on the Play and Its Politics Rev and reset ed London Methuen 1985 ISBN 0 413 58370 8 10 ISBN 978 0 413 58370 3 13 ISBN 0 413 58950 1 10 ISBN 978 0 413 58950 7 13 With illustrations and introduction first published in 1985 p 4 Includes A Play and Its Politics A Conversation between Harold Pinter and Nicholas Hern pp 5 23 One for the Road With Production Photos by Ivan Kyncl and an Interview on the Play and Its Politics New York Grove Press 1986 ISBN 0 394 62363 0 10 ISBN 978 0 394 62363 4 13 ISBN 0 394 54575 3 10 ISBN 978 0 394 54575 2 13 Evergreen paperback ed A Play and Its Politics A Conversation between Harold Pinter and Nicholas Hern pp 7 23 is dated February 1985 Includes Postscript by Harold Pinter p 24 dated May 1995 External links EditMain article Harold Pinter External links Other Places at the Internet Off Broadway Database One for the Road at HaroldPinter org The Official Website of the International Playwright Harold Pinter Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title One for the Road Pinter play amp oldid 1136612757, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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