Aw, Shucks! An Inspector Calls finished at Playhouse Theatre on March 25, 2017

An Inspector Calls is now showing at New Wimbledon Theatre

An Inspector Calls

An Inspector Calls at Playhouse Theatre

Aw, Shucks! An Inspector Calls finished at Playhouse Theatre on March 25, 2017

An Inspector Calls is now showing at New Wimbledon Theatre

Why see An Inspector Calls?

IF THERE'S NOTHING ELSE, WE'LL HAVE TO SHARE OUR GUILT.

Celebrating its 25th anniversary, Stephen Daldry's landmark production of JB Priestly's scathing social commentary returns to the West End this November. First staged in 1992 for the National Theatre, Daldry's reimagining has come to be seen as the definitive staging of the mid 20th-century classic, bringing new audiences to the drawing room drama of the Birling family, and their contribution to the death of a young working class woman in the Midlands of 1912.

The story of an inspector calls

One night in April 1912, the comfortably upper middle class Birling family gather to celebrate the engagement of the daughter, Shelia. Attended by her fiance Gerald, her younger brother Eric and her parents, Sybil and the boorish, dominating Arthur, the party is soon interrupted by the appearance of the mysterious Inspector Goole, who has come to enquire upon the recent suicide of Miss Eva Smith, a young working-class woman known to the family.

In his possession, Google has a photograph of the young woman and her diary, implying that she has named her tormentors within. Over the course of the evening, each member of the Birling family comes to realise they have all played a part in her downfall, in turn exploiting her, abandoning her, leading her to social and financial ruin, before she finally took her own life. Faced with the maddening guilt and unable to accept the responsibility, we see one devastating night in the life of this entitled family, as they all seek to escape blame, believing their wealth and status will protect them from the consequences.

Timely as ever, Priestly's blazing critique of social responsibility rings just as true as it did back in 1945, strengthened by our continued fascination with capitalism and our refusal to accept the realities of europe's refugee crisis.


Cast

Clive Francis as Mr Birling
Barbara Marten as Mrs Birling
Liam Brennan as Inspector Goole
Matthew Douglas as Gerald Croft
Carmela Corbett as Sheila Birling
Hamish Riddle as Eric Birling
Diana Payne-Myers as Edna

AND

Geoffrey Towers, Benedict Salter and Beth Tuckey.

Creative

Written by JB Priestly
Directed by Stephen Daldry

Reviews

Customer reviews

Jay

Brilliant

I absolutely cherished every moment of the show! It was nothing short of fantastic! ... Read more

Tom Kingston

Brilliant

A fantastic performance by a polished cast. The attention to detail and symbolism in the set was cleverly and skilfully executed. A full house, the majority of which were GCSE students, and everyone was transfixed. There was no interval but the play was so enthralling that it went by in no time at all. A lovely theatre that was a pleasure to visit. ... Read more

Dan Lane

Outstanding production

The pace, rhythm and melodrama is played to perfection and intensified by the supremely uncanny set that blends Edwardian gentility (period setting) with blitzed London (backdrop to writing). While the characters recognise, then variously explain away their complicity in Eva Smith’s suicide, the stage, and so the confessions, is haunted by figures of social conscience, judgement and consequence. The disproproportions of the house are perfectly in proportion with the egos of the Birling, and its symbolic rebuilding of ‘the House of Birling’ is in lock-step with the melodrama. A wonderful evening, thank you. ... Read more
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