Laburnum Grove (play)

Laburnum Grove is a comedy-drama play by the British writer J.B. Priestley which was first staged in 1933. It was one of Priestley's earliest hits. The play premiered at the Duchess Theatre on 28 November 1933.[1] In its initial run it had over 300 performances.[2] It made its Broadway debut at Booth's Theatre on 14 January 1935 and ran for 131 performances.[3]

Synopsis

In order to get rid of his sponging relatives, a man declares to them that he is a master forger. Considerable doubt begins to arise about whether he may actually be telling the truth.

Adaptation

In 1936 the play was adapted into a film Laburnum Grove directed by Carol Reed and starring Edmund Gwenn and Victoria Hopper. It was made by Associated Talking Pictures at Ealing Studios.

gollark: Great for (literally) covering up reactor meltdowns!
gollark: That is concrete.
gollark: For some reason the image file is 2.5MB.
gollark: ... why is it 2.5MB? Minecraft...
gollark: Fun.

References

  1. Kabatchnik p.368
  2. Gale p.9
  3. Kabatchnik p.368

Bibliography

  • Gale, Maggie Barbara. J.B. Priestley. Taylor & Francis, 2008.
  • Kabatchnik, Amnon. Blood on the Stage, 1925-1950: Milestone Plays of Crime, Mystery and Detection. Scarecrow Press, 2010.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.