Narrow Road To The Deep North (play)
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''Narrow Road to the Deep North'' is a 1968 satirical play on the British Empire by the English playwright
Edward Bond Edward Bond (born 18 July 1934) is an English playwright, theatre director, poet, theorist and screenwriter. He is the author of some fifty plays, among them '' Saved'' (1965), the production of which was instrumental in the abolition of the ...
. It is a political parable set in
Japan Japan ( ja, 日本, or , and formally , ''Nihonkoku'') is an island country in East Asia. It is situated in the northwest Pacific Ocean, and is bordered on the west by the Sea of Japan, while extending from the Sea of Okhotsk in the north ...
in the Edo period. It deals with the poet Basho and the changing political landscape over about 35 years. The play won Bond the John Whiting Award for 1968.


Quotation

:''Of course, that's only a
symbol A symbol is a mark, sign, or word that indicates, signifies, or is understood as representing an idea, object, or relationship. Symbols allow people to go beyond what is known or seen by creating linkages between otherwise very different conc ...
, but we need symbols to protect us from ourselves.''


The censor

Because of the play's scenes of violence (it was known in the press as "The One With Five Dead Babies and a Disembowelling"), it was originally refused a theatrical license by the Lord Chamberlain, though permission was eventually given after Bond agreed to some last minute amendments.


Original production

It was first performed in 1968 for the Peoples and Cities conference at the
Belgrade Theatre The Belgrade Theatre is a live performance venue in Coventry, England. It was the first civic theatre to be built in Britain after the Second World War and is now a Grade II listed building. Background Coventry was the fastest growing city in ...
, Coventry, in a production directed by Jane Howell: *Basho, old, a priest - Peter Needham *Kiro, twenty - Paul Howes *Argi - Malcolm Ingram *Tola - Christopher Matthews *Heigoo - John Rowe *Breebree - Gordon Reid *Shogo, twenty-five - Edward Peel *Prime Minister -
Peter Sproule Peter Sproule (born 1947) is an English actor. His roles include a guest appearance on an early episode of '' Upstairs, Downstairs''. He trained at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art and made his first appearance at the Bristol Old Vic ...
*Commodore, forty-seven - Nigel Hawthorne *Georgina, thirty-nine - Susan Williamson *Peasants, soldiers, tars, tribesmen, etc. - *Alison King *Diana Berriman * Alan David *Geoffrey White                                *Vandra Edwards *Malcolm Ingram *Christopher Matthews *John Rowe *Gordon Reid *Peter Sproule 


Royal Court Theatre

The play was then staged as part of an Edward Bond season at the Royal Court in 1969, to mark the abolition of stage censorship the previous year.


Critical reception

Bond said he "knew the critics would like it, and they did." '' The Independent'''s Maeve Walsh reported that ''Narrow Road to the Deep North'' was found by the critics to be cryptic but was still admired overall. '' The Observer'' called it "a funny, ironic and beautiful play...In a series of short elegant scenelets, Brechtian in style, but with a sly mock-Zen lightness all their own, the play compares, and finally equates, the tyranny of brute force and religious conscience." Clive Barnes of '' The New York Times'', despite praising earlier productions, criticized the Vivian Beaumont Theater performance as "distressingly tedious" for the acting and staging. Barnes wrote, "The writing has a fake Oriental archness to it—a solemnity, at times a pomposity. Yet the ideas are fresh. .. ''Narrow Road to the Deep North'' is far better play than it would appear to be from its Lincoln Center production. But on just how much better I will for the moment hold my peace." Ann Marie Demling noted that it is one of the Bond plays to which "awards and citations of excellence have been given" along with ''Saved'' (1965), ''Lear'' (1971), ''Bingo'' (1973) and ''The Fool'' (1975). Richard Stayton of '' Los Angeles Times'' wrote that "Bond’s metaphor for the Vietnam War unfortunately travels neatly into the 1990s as a mirror to such tragedies as Bosnia", but panned the performance he had seen (which was by The Actors' Gang). Gerry Colgan of '' The Irish Times'' wrote in 2001 that while Bond's works were not generally well-known in Ireland, ''Narrow Road to the Deep North'' was a play that had " esonateddown the years" along with ''Saved'' (1965). Michael Mangan described it as one of Bond's "major plays" in a 2018 book on the dramatist. Academic Amer Hamed Suliman dubbed it "one of Edward Bond's most significant works" in 2019.


References

* Review, ''Educational Theatre Journal'', 24(2):195–197, May 1972. * ''Narrow Road to the Deep North'', by Edward Bond, Methuen Modern Plays, 1981, .


Notes


External links

* {{John Whiting Award 1968 plays British Empire Plays by Edward Bond Plays set in Japan Plays set in the 17th century