Collaborators | |
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Director | Ann Foreman |
One line synopsis | The work of British dramatist Howard Barker (b.1946), with extracts from performances from the Royal Shakespeare Company’s 1985 season, and comment from actors, directors and critics, |
Description | Howard Barker. His VO saying "I do not believe what I say about my work has any validity. The question is, whether the work itself has validity." Harriet Walter in excerpt from The Castle (1985). Caption: "Howard Barker has written over 40 plays for stage, radio, television and film." Barker. His VO: "I don’t believe in the interview. I believe the artist should not be interviewed. He is only truthful in the moment of creativity." Actor Ian McDiarmid: "The truth lies somewhere between the coarse emotion and the calculation… Don’t keep on about the truth…." McDiarmid in interview. Magazines, posters, McDiarmid talks about The Castle. Caption: "Skinner, a witch, had worked some magic whilst the men were at the Crusades". Harriet Walter in excerpt from The Castle. McDiarmid on Barker’s writing on sexuality, areas rarely brought to the surface in the theatre. Harriet Walter and Penny Downie in excerpt from The Castle. Downie and Walter interviewed about The Castle, Barker’s writing, and the impact working on the play made on them. John Calder of Calder & Boyers gives his reasons for publishing Barker’s work. Caption: "VICTORY. Choices in Reaction. The Royal Court, 1983." Still. Professor Eric Mottram, London University, talks of Barker as being a playwright who breaks the shibboleths and leaves the audience feeling "damaged". McDiarmid. "…Free words from louts and professors." Mottram talking about Barker’s use of language. McDiarmid reading Don’t Exaggerate; A Political Statement in the Form of Hysteria. Cora Kaplan, Lecturer, Sussex University, on Barker’s "language of the self". Excerpt from No End of Blame, written in 1980. Paul Freeman as Bela. Kaplan commenting on No End of Blame and on Scenes from an Excecution. Caption: "SCENES FROM AN EXECUTION won his first major award – the Prix Italia for radio drama. Actors Maggie Steed and Elizabeth Rider seen firstly as shadows, then reading. Steed talking with Kaplan about Barker empowering his female characters. Caption: "The English knight compels an Arab engineer to build his fortress, and a wayward priest to return to his church." Excerpt from The Castle. Stucley, Krak, Nailer and Batter (McDiarmid, Paul Freeman, Tony Mathews, Steve Swinscoe). Parts of the Barbican complex. VO reading "I had a nightmare once. People spent their lives making something they called museum… And the museum grew until it covered England" Caption: "PITY IN HISTORY. One of Barker’s many plays for television. One of the few to have been transmitted. VO "The whole power of art is its disconcerting ability to burst the received wisdom of its own time...." Caption: "Barker’s first play was produced in London in 1970. He has survived as a playwright since that date." Terry Hands, Joint Artistic Director, Royal Shakespeare Company, talking about British theatre going through a period of depression which results in Barker’s sometimes difficult work appealing to a minority not only interested in escapism. McDiarmid "… Trust the digression, not the argument…" Hands likens Barker’s work to that of Genet and Artaud, both in content and popularity. Shot of Barker apparently listening. Nick Hamm, Director, RSC, believes there is a need and a market for "serious theatre", and that Barker’s work has "something important to say about the state of the country". Bill Alexander, Director, RSC, talking about the achievement of the recent RSC season of Barker’s work. |
Production company | Mingflow |
Running time | 52 minutes |
Full credits | Extracts from DON’T EXAGGERATE: Ian McDiarmid. |
Year | 1986 |
Film segment | Refuse to Dance. The theatre of Howard Barker - ACE165.2 |
Refuse to Dance. The theatre of Howard Barker - ACE165.3 | |
Refuse to Dance. The theatre of Howard Barker - ACE165.4 | |
Refuse to Dance. The theatre of Howard Barker - ACE165.5 | |
Refuse to Dance. The theatre of Howard Barker - ACE165.6 | |
Web address (URL) | https://player.bfi.org.uk/free |