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{{other uses|Déjà vu (disambiguation)}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}
{{Infobox play
{{Infobox play
| name = Déjàvu
| name = Déjàvu
| image =
| image =John Osborne by Reginald Gray.jpg
|image_size =
|image_size =
| caption =
| caption = Portrait of Osborne by Reginald Gray
| writer = [[John Osborne]]
| writer = [[John Osborne]]
| genre = [[social realism]]
| genre = [[social realism]]
Line 12: Line 14:
| orig_lang = English
| orig_lang = English
}}
}}
'''''Déjàvu''''' (1991) is a stage play by [[John Osborne]]. It was Osborne's final work, the failure of which on the stage made him decide to give up play-writing. The play is a sequel to Osborne's first successful play, ''[[Look Back in Anger]]'' (1956); it portrays the life and thoughts of the central character from the earlier play, Jimmy Porter (referred to as J.P.), in middle age.
'''''Déjàvu''''' is a stage play by [[John Osborne]] performed in 1992. It was Osborne's final work for the theatre, the failure of which on the stage made him decide to give up play-writing. The play is a sequel to Osborne's first successful play, ''[[Look Back in Anger]]'' (1956); it portrays the life and thoughts of the central character from the earlier play, Jimmy Porter (referred to as J.P.), in middle age.

Osborne had been thinking about a sequel to ''Look Back in Anger'' for some years, and had been working on a draft of the play since 1987 when he started jotting down ideas and plotting it out. The play itself was written over several months, from December 1988 to April 1989. He tried out various titles, but decided on ''Déjàvu'', "deliberately misspelt", according to [[John Heilpern]], as a single word (rather than the correct "Déjà vu").<ref name =kal>Heilpern, John, ''John Osborne: A Patriot for Us'', 2007, Random House, pp.446ff.</ref>


==Creation==
==Creation==
Osborne had been thinking about a sequel to ''Look Back in Anger'' for some years, and had been working on a draft of the play since 1987 when he started jotting down ideas and plotting it out. The play itself was written over several months in from December 1988 to April 1989. He tried out several titles, but decided on ''Déjàvu'', "deliberately misspelt", according to [[John Heilpern]], as a single word (rather than the correct "Déjà vu").<ref name =kal>Heilpern, John, ''John Osborne: A Patriot for Us'', 2007, Random House, pp.446ff.</ref>

==Production difficulties==
==Production difficulties==
The play was sent to [[Richard Eyre]] at the [[National Theatre]] who rejected it, suggesting that it would work best as a "monologue performed prior to a performance of LOOK BACK IN ANGER".<ref name =kal/> [[Tony Richardson]], the original director of ''Look Back in Anger'', was enthusiastic, but it was again turned down by [[Max Stafford-Clark]] at the [[Royal Court Theatre]]. [[Stephen Daldry]], who was also shown the script, took the view that Osborne would have been better advised to do a one man show, performing Porter's rants in the play himself. Osborne approached various actors and directors but was unable to develop the production, at one point writing a frustrated letter to ''[[The Times]]'' about his problems. [[Peter O'Toole]] agreed to play the main role, but dropped out after conflicts with Osborne over proposed cuts to the script. [[John Standing]] also dropped out after an argument With Osborne. Eventually [[Peter Egan]] took the role of Porter, and the play was produced in May 1992 at the [[Thorndike Theatre]] directed by [[Tony Palmer]].<ref name =kal/>
The play was sent to [[Richard Eyre]] at the [[Royal National Theatre]] who rejected it, suggesting that it would work best as a "monologue performed prior to a performance of LOOK BACK IN ANGER".<ref name =kal/> [[Tony Richardson]], the original director of ''Look Back in Anger'', was enthusiastic, but it was again turned down by [[Max Stafford-Clark]] at the [[Royal Court Theatre]]. Several readers took the view that it was much too long, and so should be cut.<ref name =kal/> [[Stephen Daldry]] thought that Osborne would have been better advised to do a one-man show, performing Porter's rants in the play himself. Osborne approached various actors and directors but was unable to develop the production, at one point writing a bitter letter to ''[[The Times]]'' about his problems. [[Peter O'Toole]] agreed to play the main role, but dropped out after conflicts with Osborne over proposed cuts to the script. [[John Standing]] also dropped out after an argument with Osborne. Eventually [[Peter Egan]] took the role of Porter, and the play was produced in May 1992 at the [[Thorndike Theatre]] directed by [[Tony Palmer (director)|Tony Palmer]].<ref name =kal/>


The play was not a commercial success, closing after a run of seven weeks. Egan later wrote, "I knew the play wouldn't work but I couldn't turn it down. I knew John deserved to be presented again – and that it would be his last work... The play was a commercial failure but it reawakened people to the great energy and power of Osborne."<ref>[http://www.theguardian.com/stage/2014/mar/25/peter-egan-john-osborne-deja-vu-play-look-back-in-anger Peter Egan, "John Osborne: Monologue, actors on acting", ''The Guardian'', 25 March 2014]</ref> The commercial failure of the play distressed Osborne who thereafter signed himself "John Osborne, ex-playwright".<ref name =kal/>
The play was not a commercial success, closing after a run of seven weeks. Egan later wrote, "I knew the play wouldn't work but I couldn't turn it down. I knew John deserved to be presented again – and that it would be his last work...The play was a commercial failure but it reawakened people to the great energy and power of Osborne."<ref>[https://www.theguardian.com/stage/2014/mar/25/peter-egan-john-osborne-deja-vu-play-look-back-in-anger Peter Egan, "John Osborne: Monologue, actors on acting", ''The Guardian'', 25 March 2014]</ref> The failure of the play distressed Osborne who thereafter signed himself "John Osborne, ex-playwright".<ref name =kal/>

The play was revived at the Comedy Theatre, Panton Street, around 1993 but closed after some weeks. Peter O'Toole and [[Hayley Mills]] were there, among many others. O'Toole walked out shouting, "Oi've never heard such f...…. rubbish!"{{cn|date=April 2023}}


==Original cast==
==Original cast==
*[[Peter Egan]] as J.P.
*[[Peter Egan]] as J.P.
*[[Gareth Thomas]] as Cliff
*[[Gareth Thomas (actor)|Gareth Thomas]] as Cliff
*[[Alison Johnston]], Alison Porter, Jimmy's daughter
*[[Alison Johnston]] as Alison Porter, J.P.'s daughter
*[[Eve Matheson]], Helena
*[[Eve Matheson]] as Helena


==Plot==
==Plot==
Jimmy Porter is living with his daughter Alison, who begins the play ironing just as her mother, also Alison, did in ''Look Back in Anger''. Jimmy and Alison argue relentlessly, as she expresses her contempt for her own misanthropic father. Jimmy's old friend Cliff tries to smooth things over, while Alison's friend Helena attempts to support her. Jimmy takes consolation in his teddy bear.
Jimmy Porter (J.P.) is living with his daughter Alison, who begins the play ironing, just as her mother, also Alison, did in ''Look Back in Anger''. J.P. and Alison argue relentlessly, as she expresses her contempt for her own misanthropic father. Jimmy's old friend Cliff tries to smooth things over, while Alison's friend Helena attempts to support her. J.P. takes consolation in his teddy bear as he objects to the vulgarisation of the English language and the corrupting influences of various social agencies. In the end, Alison walks out on her father.

==Critical reception==
==Critical reception==
Osborne and Palmer both argued that Jimmy Porter (J.P.) is essentially a "comedy character" comparable to [[Falstaff]], whose self-aggrandising rants are not to be taken too seriously. Osborne wrote that J.P. "generates energy, but, also, like, say, Malvolio or Falstaff, an inescapable melancholy". Palmer also argued that "J.P. has a life-enhancing Falstaffian quality; he was a coward, a braggart, a liar, totally unscrupulous, a drunk...and just like Falstaff, J.P. can stop the play dead in its tracks and say 'what is honour'".<ref>"Déjàvu", ''The Independent'', 10 June, 1992.</ref>
Osborne and Palmer both argued that Jimmy Porter (J.P.) is essentially a "comedy character" comparable to [[Falstaff]], whose self-aggrandising rants are not to be taken too seriously. Osborne wrote that J.P. "generates energy, but, also, like, say, Malvolio or Falstaff, an inescapable melancholy". Palmer also argued that "J.P. has a life-enhancing Falstaffian quality; he [Falstaff] was a coward, a braggart, a liar, totally unscrupulous, a drunk, with an inheritance, like J.P. And just like Falstaff, J.P. can stop the play dead in its tracks and say 'what is honour'".<ref>"Déjàvu", ''The Independent'', 10 June 1992.</ref>


The play's original reviews were mixed. ''The Independent'' noted that Jimmy's rants in the original play were exhilarating because they were transgressive, but the "ageing J.P. merely proves that, in less shockable times, the unspeakable is all too easily spoken".<ref>"Déjàvu", ''The Independent'', 12 June, 1992.</ref> Several critics complained that the play was essentially a vehicle for J.P. pontifications, being as, as ''[[The Sunday Times]]'' put it, "essentially one long speech".<ref>The Sunday Time, 14 June, 1992.</ref> [[Sheridan Morley]] called it "a monologue without a play".<ref>Morley, Sheridan, "Déjàvu", ''International Herald Tribune'', 17 May, 1992.</ref>
The play's original reviews were mixed. ''The Independent'' noted that Jimmy's rants in the original play were exhilarating because they were transgressive, but the "ageing J.P. merely proves that, in less shockable times, the unspeakable is all too easily spoken".<ref>"Déjàvu", ''The Independent'', 12 June 1992.</ref> Several critics complained that the play was essentially a vehicle for J.P.'s pontifications, being as, as ''[[The Sunday Times]]'' put it, "essentially one long speech".<ref>The Sunday Times, 14 June 1992.</ref> [[Sheridan Morley]] called it "a monologue without a play".<ref>Morley, Sheridan, "Déjàvu", ''International Herald Tribune'', 17 May 1992.</ref>
Sheila Stowell, in an essay on ''Déjàvu'', comments that the play is not a "sequel" in the traditional Hollywood sense of an attempt to cash-in on an earlier success; rather it is an attempt to "blow up" the rebellious image of ''Look Back''’s Jimmy Porter. She disputes the comparison to Falstaff because J.P.'s antagonists are all "sham characters", easily outwitted by the hero, unlike Shakespeare's play in which Falstaff's bluster is seen for what it is.<ref name = case>Sheila Stowell "Honey, I Blew up the Ego", Patricia D. Denison, ''John Osborne: A Casebook'', pp.167ff.</ref> However, she argues that J.P.'s social criticisms are largely consistent with the anarchic attitudes of the 1956 Jimmy.<ref name = case/>
Sheila Stowell, in an essay on ''Déjàvu'', comments that the play is not a "sequel" in the traditional Hollywood sense of an attempt to cash-in on an earlier success; rather it is an attempt to "blow up" the rebellious image of ''Look Back''’s Jimmy Porter. She disputes the comparison to Falstaff because J.P.'s antagonists are all "sham characters", easily outwitted by the hero, unlike Shakespeare's play in which Falstaff's bluster is exposed for what it is.<ref name = case>Sheila Stowell "Honey, I Blew up the Ego", Patricia D. Denison, ''John Osborne: A Casebook'', pp.167ff.</ref> However, she argues that J.P.'s social criticisms are largely consistent with the anarchic attitudes of the 1956 Jimmy.<ref name = case/>


==References==
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}
{{John Osborne}}
{{Navbox
| name = John Osborne
| navbar = plain
| title = The Plays of John Osborne
| titlestyle = background:#A7DC74;
| image =
| list1 = ''The Devil Inside'', ''[[The Great Bear (play)|The Great Bear]]'', ''Personal Enemy'', ''[[Look Back in Anger]]'', ''[[The Entertainer (film)|The Entertainer]]'', ''[[Epitaph for George Dillon]]'', ''The World of Paul Slickey'', ''A Subject of Scandal and Concern'', ''[[Luther (play)|Luther]]'', ''Plays for England'', ''Inadmissible Evidence'', ''A Patriot for Me'', ''A Bond Honoured'', ''The Hotel in Amsterdam'', ''Time Present'', ''West of Suez'', ''A Sense of Detachment'', ''[[Hedda Gabler]]'', ''A Place Calling Itself Rome'', ''The End of Me Old Cigar'', ''The Picture of [[Dorian Gray]]'', ''Watch It Come Down'', ''[[Try a Little Tenderness (play)|Try a Little Tenderness]]'', ''The Father'', ''[[Déjàvu]]''
}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Déjàvu}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Dejavu}}
[[Category:1992 plays]]
[[Category:1992 plays]]
[[Category:Plays by John Osborne]]
[[Category:Plays by John Osborne]]
[[Category:Sequel plays]]

Latest revision as of 20:27, 6 April 2024

Déjàvu
Portrait of Osborne by Reginald Gray
Written byJohn Osborne
Date premiered8 May 1992
Place premieredThorndike Theatre
Original languageEnglish
SubjectA middle-aged man rants about modern life
Genresocial realism

Déjàvu is a stage play by John Osborne performed in 1992. It was Osborne's final work for the theatre, the failure of which on the stage made him decide to give up play-writing. The play is a sequel to Osborne's first successful play, Look Back in Anger (1956); it portrays the life and thoughts of the central character from the earlier play, Jimmy Porter (referred to as J.P.), in middle age.

Creation

[edit]

Osborne had been thinking about a sequel to Look Back in Anger for some years, and had been working on a draft of the play since 1987 when he started jotting down ideas and plotting it out. The play itself was written over several months in from December 1988 to April 1989. He tried out several titles, but decided on Déjàvu, "deliberately misspelt", according to John Heilpern, as a single word (rather than the correct "Déjà vu").[1]

Production difficulties

[edit]

The play was sent to Richard Eyre at the Royal National Theatre who rejected it, suggesting that it would work best as a "monologue performed prior to a performance of LOOK BACK IN ANGER".[1] Tony Richardson, the original director of Look Back in Anger, was enthusiastic, but it was again turned down by Max Stafford-Clark at the Royal Court Theatre. Several readers took the view that it was much too long, and so should be cut.[1] Stephen Daldry thought that Osborne would have been better advised to do a one-man show, performing Porter's rants in the play himself. Osborne approached various actors and directors but was unable to develop the production, at one point writing a bitter letter to The Times about his problems. Peter O'Toole agreed to play the main role, but dropped out after conflicts with Osborne over proposed cuts to the script. John Standing also dropped out after an argument with Osborne. Eventually Peter Egan took the role of Porter, and the play was produced in May 1992 at the Thorndike Theatre directed by Tony Palmer.[1]

The play was not a commercial success, closing after a run of seven weeks. Egan later wrote, "I knew the play wouldn't work but I couldn't turn it down. I knew John deserved to be presented again – and that it would be his last work...The play was a commercial failure but it reawakened people to the great energy and power of Osborne."[2] The failure of the play distressed Osborne who thereafter signed himself "John Osborne, ex-playwright".[1]

The play was revived at the Comedy Theatre, Panton Street, around 1993 but closed after some weeks. Peter O'Toole and Hayley Mills were there, among many others. O'Toole walked out shouting, "Oi've never heard such f...…. rubbish!"[citation needed]

Original cast

[edit]

Plot

[edit]

Jimmy Porter (J.P.) is living with his daughter Alison, who begins the play ironing, just as her mother, also Alison, did in Look Back in Anger. J.P. and Alison argue relentlessly, as she expresses her contempt for her own misanthropic father. Jimmy's old friend Cliff tries to smooth things over, while Alison's friend Helena attempts to support her. J.P. takes consolation in his teddy bear as he objects to the vulgarisation of the English language and the corrupting influences of various social agencies. In the end, Alison walks out on her father.

Critical reception

[edit]

Osborne and Palmer both argued that Jimmy Porter (J.P.) is essentially a "comedy character" comparable to Falstaff, whose self-aggrandising rants are not to be taken too seriously. Osborne wrote that J.P. "generates energy, but, also, like, say, Malvolio or Falstaff, an inescapable melancholy". Palmer also argued that "J.P. has a life-enhancing Falstaffian quality; he [Falstaff] was a coward, a braggart, a liar, totally unscrupulous, a drunk, with an inheritance, like J.P. And just like Falstaff, J.P. can stop the play dead in its tracks and say 'what is honour'".[3]

The play's original reviews were mixed. The Independent noted that Jimmy's rants in the original play were exhilarating because they were transgressive, but the "ageing J.P. merely proves that, in less shockable times, the unspeakable is all too easily spoken".[4] Several critics complained that the play was essentially a vehicle for J.P.'s pontifications, being as, as The Sunday Times put it, "essentially one long speech".[5] Sheridan Morley called it "a monologue without a play".[6]

Sheila Stowell, in an essay on Déjàvu, comments that the play is not a "sequel" in the traditional Hollywood sense of an attempt to cash-in on an earlier success; rather it is an attempt to "blow up" the rebellious image of Look Back’s Jimmy Porter. She disputes the comparison to Falstaff because J.P.'s antagonists are all "sham characters", easily outwitted by the hero, unlike Shakespeare's play in which Falstaff's bluster is exposed for what it is.[7] However, she argues that J.P.'s social criticisms are largely consistent with the anarchic attitudes of the 1956 Jimmy.[7]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e Heilpern, John, John Osborne: A Patriot for Us, 2007, Random House, pp.446ff.
  2. ^ Peter Egan, "John Osborne: Monologue, actors on acting", The Guardian, 25 March 2014
  3. ^ "Déjàvu", The Independent, 10 June 1992.
  4. ^ "Déjàvu", The Independent, 12 June 1992.
  5. ^ The Sunday Times, 14 June 1992.
  6. ^ Morley, Sheridan, "Déjàvu", International Herald Tribune, 17 May 1992.
  7. ^ a b Sheila Stowell "Honey, I Blew up the Ego", Patricia D. Denison, John Osborne: A Casebook, pp.167ff.