Leaves of Glass is the sixth adult stage play by Philip Ridley. It premiered at the Soho Theatre in London, England, on 3 May 2007.[1]

Leaves of Glass
Cover of the published play-text.
Written byPhilip Ridley
CharactersSteven (Male, aged 27)
Barry (Male, aged 22)
Debbie (Female, aged 33)
Liz (Female, aged 55)
Date premiered3 May 2007 (2007-05-03)
Place premieredSoho Theatre, London
Original languageEnglish

The play was commissioned and directed by Lisa Goldman after being greatly impressed by Ridley's previous adult stage play Mercury Fur.[2] The production was Lisa Goldman's first in her tenure as artistic director of the Soho Theatre.[3] Like Mercury Fur the play starred Ben Whishaw in its premiere production.[4]

It is the second entry in Ridley's unofficially titled "Brothers Trilogy", having been preceded by Mercury Fur and followed by Piranha Heights.[5][6][2]

Story

edit

The play is about two brothers, Steven and Barry. Steven is the head of a successful graffiti removal company and Barry, his younger brother, works for him as he is struggling to get income and recognition from being an artist.

The play concerns the silence which has prevailed over a traumatic incident from their childhood, which for years they have been unwilling to talk about and come to terms with.

Structure

edit

Leaves of Glass was the first of Ridley's plays for adults that completely rejects Aristotle's unities of drama, with the story instead taking place in a variety of locations and spanning many months. It has seventeen scenes and no interval with the play lasting approximately two hours in performance.

Although two of Ridley's previous plays The Fastest Clock in the Universe and Ghost from a Perfect Place each had two acts with a space for an interval, each act retained the same location with a very small time gap between each.

Commenting on the structure of Leaves of Glass, Ridley has said the following:

"the initial draft perhaps was sort of more real-time, one location. [...] I love doing that, I mean, I think that's what theatre does best and... It always amazes me that people are surprised that I should be drawn to that kind of form of telling a play because that's one of the things that theatre does so well, is real-time. Where else can you experience that? Certainly not in film now. But then what happened was that I really got into this idea of — which is what the play has ended up doing — of sort of like coming into scenes at very jagged angles. [In the play] you get kind of like layers of these scenes, like kind of little pieces of broken glass that come in. The scenes begin when they are already up and moving; the action is already happening and they don't kind of finish on a kind of particular comforting way; there is no kind of dying fall at the end. You're just in and out of these scenes almost like cinematic cuts. [...] And I quite liked that kind of oblique way of telling of what is, in a way, a very oblique story. I thought that was part of the theatrical experience for me of this kind of [...] circular descent that [the character of] Steve is on of memory and morality."[7]

Notable productions

edit

World Premiere (London, 2007)

3 May 2007 at The Soho Theatre, London.
Directed by Lisa Goldman.

U.S. Premiere (New York, 2009)[8][9]

18 January 2009 at the Peter Jay Sharp Theater at Playwrights Horizons, New York.
Co-produced by Origin Theatre Company and Stiff Upper Lip.
Directed by Ludovica Villar-Hauser.

UK revival (2023 and 2024)

11 May–3 June 2023 at Park Theatre, London.[10]
15–17 June 2023 at the Yvonne Arnaud Theatre, Guilford.[11]
3–8 July 2023 at the Hope Mill Theatre, Manchester.[12]
16 January–10 February 2024 at Park Theatre, London.[13]
Co-produced by Lidless Theatre and Zoe Weldon in association with Park Theatre and Theatre Deli.
Directed by Max Harrison.

  • Steven - Ned Costello
  • Barry - Joseph Potter
  • Debbie - Katie Buchholz (2023 run) / Katie Eldred (2024 run).
  • Liz - Kacey Ainsworth

Winner of the 2024 Off West End Award for 'Lead Performance in a Play', awarded to Ned Costello,[14] and longlisted for the 'Performance Ensemble' award.[15]

References

edit
  1. ^ https://www.thestage.co.uk/reviews/2007/leaves-of-glass-review-at-soho-theatre-london/ [dead link]
  2. ^ a b Goldman, Lisa (August 2012). The No Rules Handbook for Writers (know the rules so you can break them). Great Britain: Oberon Books Ltd. p. 185. ISBN 9781849431118.
  3. ^ Cavendish, Dominic (10 May 2007). "Haunted by a painful past". The Telegraph. Retrieved 24 October 2018.
  4. ^ Fisher, Philip (2007). "Leave of Glass". British Theatre Guide. Retrieved 18 November 2018.
  5. ^ Fisher, Philip. "Piranha Heights". British Theatre Guide. Retrieved 13 June 2018.
  6. ^ Coveney, Michael (30 May 2008). "Piranha Heights". WhatsOnStage.com. Retrieved 13 June 2018.     
  7. ^ Ridley, Philip (16 May 2007). "PLAYWRIGHT PHILIP RIDLEY TALKS TO ALEKS SIERZ". TheatreVoice (Interview: Audio). Interviewed by Aleks Sierz. Retrieved 23 July 2022.
  8. ^ "'LEAVES OF GLASS' Starring Morton, Elbrick, Villar-Hauser and Kelly Begins Run 1/14". Broadway World. 22 December 2008. Retrieved 18 November 2018.
  9. ^ Webpage on the 2009 U.S. production of Leaves of Glass on the Parity Productions website
  10. ^ Leaves of Glass 2023 webpage on the Park Theatre website
  11. ^ Leaves of Glass webpage on the Yvonne Arnaud Theatre website, captured on the Internet Archive
  12. ^ Leaves of Glass webpage on the Hope Mill Theatre website
  13. ^ Leaves of Glass webpage on the Park Theatre website
  14. ^ Offies Winners 2024 Announced! webpage on the OffWestEnd website
  15. ^ Leaves of Glass – Park Theatre #Offies 2023 #NewNoms: PERFORMANCE ENSEMBLE webpage on the OffWestEnd theatre website
edit