Cell Mates (play)

Cell Mates is a play by Simon Gray. It opened at the Albery Theatre, London on 17 February 1995, starring Stephen Fry and Rik Mayall, with Gray himself directing. Despite having performed successfully for several weeks during the pre-London warm up dates in Guildford and Watford then at the Richmond Theatre, Fry left the West End production after three days. His understudy stepped in, until Fry was replaced by Simon Ward. Nevertheless, the production closed on 25 March 1995.

Later in 1995, Gray released an autobiographical account of the production, called Fat Chance. It was published by Faber and Faber.

Plot

The play concerns George Blake, who has been convicted for spying for the Russians and sentenced to forty-two years imprisonment, and a fellow prisoner, Sean Bourke. Bourke helps Blake escape to Moscow, after which Blake did not want to let Bourke leave Moscow to return to his native Ireland.

Controversy

In 1995, Stephen Fry famously walked out of the play near the start of its West End run, after his performance received a bad review in the Financial Times. It was reported at the time that he suffered an attack of stage fright, but he has since disclosed that it was bipolar disorder. Fry walked out of the production for good, leaving only an apology, and provoking its early closure.[1]

Simon Gray described Fry's action as "cowardly", and in a statement to the press said: "It is disgraceful that so much media attention has been devoted to this squalid little story . . . I confess my own failure as a director was to have cast Stephen Fry in the first place, and in the second place, not to have acknowledged my error by requesting his departure after his (self-proclaimed) inadequacies were abundantly clear to me." In response to the suggestion his reaction was insensitive to Fry's predicament, Gray added: "I'm a friend of Stephen's. I have great sympathy because he was hurt and stressed, but what he left behind him was the most awful chaos and distress for other people who loved him, including me."[2]

Fry disappeared from the public eye, travelling to Belgium, and contemplating suicide. Referring to himself in the third person, he says that "the experience still haunts him, but the depression has now faded to embarrassment and the anger to forgiveness."[3]

References

  1. Hill, Amelia (21 September 2012). "Stephen Fry returns to London stage 17 years after abandoning Cell Mates". The Guardian. Retrieved 9 June 2014.
  2. MacDonald, Marianne (3 March 1995). "Cell Mates fall out as Gray roasts Fry". The Independent. Retrieved 9 June 2014.
  3. "Personal & Professional - Official site of Stephen Fry". Official site of Stephen Fry.
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