Relatively Speaking (Ayckbourn play)

Relatively Speaking
Written by Alan Ayckbourn
Characters Greg
Ginny
Philip
Sheila
Date premiered 1965
Original language English
Setting The bed-sitting room of Ginny’s London flat and on the garden patio of Sheila and Philip’s home in Buckinghamshire, 1965.

Relatively Speaking is a play by British playwright Alan Ayckbourn, originally titled Meet My Father, his first play to be a major success.[1]

Setting

The action of the play takes place during a summer weekend in the bed-sitting room of Ginny’s London flat and on the garden patio of Sheila and Philip’s home in Buckinghamshire, outside London. The time is 1965.

Characters

Synopsis

The play opens in the flat of Greg and Ginny, a young co-habiting couple, Ginny being the more sexually experienced. Greg finds a strange pair of slippers under the bed and is too besotted to believe they might have been left by another man (which would also explain the bunches of flowers and boxes of sweets filling Ginny’s apartment). Ginny goes off for a day in the country, supposedly to visit her parents but actually to break things off with her older married lover, Philip. Greg decides to follow her.

The next scene is on the patio at the home of Philip and his befuddled wife Sheila, whose marriage is clearly under strain. Greg shows up unannounced before Ginny, and wrongly assumes that they are her parents. Greg asks for her hand from Philip, while Philip mistakenly believes that the strange young man is asking permission to marry Sheila. Once Ginny arrives, she convinces Philip to play the role of her father. Meanwhile, Greg still believes that Sheila is Ginny’s mother. The situation becomes increasingly complicated and hilarious.

Although it is basically a comedy of misunderstandings and mistaken identity, as plays of this genre go it has a very well-constructed plot, plus some developed characters and a slightly dark streak.[2]

Production history

Relatively Speaking had its world premiere in Scarborough in 1965. The London production in 1967 at the Duke of York's Theatre was Ayckbourn's first London West End hit. It also helped to launch Richard Briers' career, and featured Michael Hordern and Celia Johnson. It has since been staged a few times by professional and amateur companies, and in 2013 a revival ran for three months at Wyndham's Theatre in London, starring Felicity Kendal as Sheila.

The play has also been produced internationally, in Singapore, Kuala Lumpur and Sri Lanka, in May 2007, by the British Theatre Playhouse.[3]

References

  1. Gabrielle H. Cody, Evert Sprinchorn -The Columbia encyclopedia of modern drama: A-L - Volume 1 - 2007 Page 110 "11O AYCKBOURN, ALAN Its appeal remains permanent, easily transcending its original time. ... It was for the Library Theatre that Ayckbourn wrote Relatively Speaking (1967), his first play to transfer to London, thus beginning a pattern of ..."
  2. Billington, Michael (2013-05-20). "Relatively Speaking – review". The Guardian.
  3. http://www.britishtheatreplayhouse.com/past_products.html
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