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Visitors and Fred and Madge by Joe Orton β€” book cover

Visitors and Fred and Madge

by Joe Orton
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Overview

The Visitors and Fred and Madge, two plays written just before Orton achieved success but not discovered until thirty years after his death, offer a glimpse of a key moment into his early development as a dramatist. Fred and Madge, written in 1959, is an absurdist drama fraught with social critique and sexual innuendo. Fred and Madge, a married couple whose respective jobs are the Sisyphean tasks of rolling boulders uphill and sieving water all day long, finally discover they are inhabiting a play about themselves. Influenced by Pirandello and Ionesco, it reveals Orton's voice in its experimental infancy. The Visitors is a brutally realistic rendering of a dying man who is visited in the hospital by his middle-aged daughter, while the attending nurses spend more time fighting than caring for their patients. Written in 1961, it shows the beginnings of the mature voice that would come to fruition in his next projects, The Ruffian on the Stair and Entertaining Mr. Sloane, which made his name in London and around the world.

Synopsis

As one of Britain's legendary group of Angry Young Men dramatists, Joe Orton shot to fame on the strength of vicious farces like Loot and What the Butler Saw. Today, with Orton's work garnering increasing attention and recognition in the wake of the 1987 feature film about his life, Prick Up Your Ears, his early writing has still remained obscure. Now the publication of these two recently discovered plays, written immediately before his breakthrough successes, reveals a key moment in his development as a dramatist. Fred & Madge, Orton's first play, is an absurdist drama, fraught with social critique and sexual innuendo. It's the story of a married couple whose respective jobs are the Sisyphean task of rolling boulders uphill and sieving water all day long, until they discover they are inhabiting a play about themselves. The Visitors is a brutally realistic rendering of a dying man who is visited in the hospital by his middle-aged daughter, while the attending nurses spend more time fighting than caring for their patients. Written in 1961, it shows the beginnings of the mature voice that would come to fruition in his next projects, The Ruffian on the Stair and Entertaining Mr. Sloane, which made his name in London and the world.

Library Journal

With the discovery of three early works never before published, Orton, one of Britain's Angry Young Men, has another shot at fame 30 years after his death. In addition to the two plays collected in The Visitors and Fred & Madge (ISBN 0-8021-3628-1. pap. $12), readers can take a look at this novel, which features an aspiring young actress as she sojourns from London stage to Mexican slave trade to Hollywood stardom.

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Editorials

Library Journal

With the discovery of three early works never before published, Orton, one of Britain's Angry Young Men, has another shot at fame 30 years after his death. In addition to the two plays collected in The Visitors and Fred & Madge (ISBN 0-8021-3628-1. pap. $12), readers can take a look at this novel, which features an aspiring young actress as she sojourns from London stage to Mexican slave trade to Hollywood stardom.

Book Details

Published
June 1, 1999
Publisher
Grove/Atlantic, Inc.
Pages
208
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780802136282

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