Spoiled | |
Genre: | Drama |
Setting: | The home of a schoolmaster |
Premiere: | 24 February 1971 |
Place: | The Close Theatre Club, Glasgow |
Orig Lang: | English |
Web: | http://simongray.org.uk/spoiled.html |
Spoiled is a television and stage play by Simon Gray, first broadcast by the BBC in 1968 as part of The Wednesday Play series and later adapted for the stage.[1] It is set over a single weekend in the house of a schoolmaster, Howarth, who invites one of his O-Level French students to his home to do some last-minute cramming before an exam. Howarth has an almost unnatural enthusiasm, while his student, Donald, is painfully shy. Meanwhile, Howarth's pregnant wife is far from happy about having someone to stay in the midst of her fears about parenting.[2]
Spoiled was originally a play written for the BBC's The Wednesday Play series, broadcast first on 28 August 1968, and again on 9 July 1969.[3] It was directed by Waris Hussein and produced by Graeme MacDonald.[4] Believed to be lost,[5] it had the following cast:[4] The production was wiped after broadcast and no copies are known to exist.
Spoiled was adapted by the author for the stage and first performed at the Close Theatre Club, Glasgow, in 1970, directed by Stephen Hollis.[2] It had the following cast:[6]
The play was then performed at the Haymarket Theatre, London, also directed by Stephen Hollis, from 24 February 1971.[7] It had the following cast:[6]
Spoiled | |
Director: | John Croyston |
Producer: | John Croyston |
Based On: | play by Simon Gray |
Starring: | Peter Carroll Judith Fisher Tony Sheldon |
Studio: | ABC |
Distributor: | ABC |
Runtime: | 110 minutes |
Country: | Australia |
Language: | English |
The film was adapted for Australian TV in 1974. It was one of a number of stage productions filmed by the ABC in the early 1970s. For Spoiled the ABC filmed an adaptation of a production of the play at the Independent Theatre. Others that year included Hamlet, The Misanthrope and A Hard God.[8]
The Age felt it was "a gay play that had nothing to say... incident outweighed insight."[9]