Strawberry Fields (play) explained

Strawberry Fields is a theatre play written by Stephen Poliakoff and staged at the Cottesloe, National Theatre in March 1977. Strawberry Fields was the first ever National Theatre production at the Cottesloe,[1] [2] the NT’s ‘black box’ studio theatre (now Dorfman).

It starred Jane Asher, Stephen Rea and Kenneth Cranham and was directed by the film director Michael Apted.

The play was also presented at the Manhattan Theatre Club in New York in 1978.[3] [4]

Overview

Strawberry Fields brings together a group of distinctive characters who have little in common other than the cause that they support and is set against the question of how seemingly harmless individual characters might, in given socio-historical circumstances, get drawn into extreme beliefs and, indeed, violent action.

Described by Robin Nelson as "journey play" that "has a claustrophobic cauldron atmosphere, adding tension to what at the outset appear to be innocuous events. It is a kind of inverse Easy Rider rather than a play in which the built environment entraps the characters."[5] [6] Nelson referred to the CBC Radio review which described the play, "it’s 'Alice in Wonderland' with guns and sexual nostalgia, sort of a fairy tale cross between Pinter and Easy Rider".[7]

Strawberry Fields has had many productions since, especially across Europe. It was made into a television film version in West Germany, which was transmitted on Channel 4 in 1985.[8]

The playtext was issued in 1977 by Methuen.[9]

References

Notes and References

  1. Billington. Michael. 4 April 1977. Review of Strawberry Fields at Cottesloe, NT. The Guardian, Arts. 8. British Library News Archives.
  2. Book: Rosenthal, Daniel. The National Theatre Story. Oberon Books. 2013. clxvii.
  3. Web site: archives.nypl.org -- Manhattan Theatre Club records. archives.nypl.org. 2017-01-17.
  4. News: ‘Strawberry Fields’. Eder. Richard. 1978-06-05. The New York Times. 0362-4331. 2017-01-19.
  5. Book: Nelson, Robin. Stephen Poliakoff on Stage and Screen. Methuen Drama, Bloomsbury Publishing. 2011. London. 12.
  6. News: The National theatre at 50: Michael Billington's view from the stalls. Billington. Michael. 2013-10-18. The Guardian. en-GB. 0261-3077. 2017-01-17.
  7. 19 November 1979. Review of Stephen Poliakoff’s Strawberry Fields. CBC Radio. Establishing Boundaries, English-Canadian Theatre Criticism. University of Toronto Press.
  8. News: Strawberry Fields (1985). https://web.archive.org/web/20211026124608/https://www2.bfi.org.uk/films-tv-people/4ce2b7738af41. dead. October 26, 2021. BFI. 2017-01-17.
  9. Book: Poliakoff, Stephen . Strawberry fields . 1983 . Methuen . 978-0-413-38470-6 . Repr . A Methuen new theatrescript . London.