Stepping Out (play)

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Written byRichard Harris
CharactersMavis
Vera
Maxine
Andy
Sylvia
Dorothy
Lynne
Rose
Geoffrey
Mrs Fraser
Date premiered25 September 1984
Place premieredEngland
Stepping Out
Written byRichard Harris
CharactersMavis
Vera
Maxine
Andy
Sylvia
Dorothy
Lynne
Rose
Geoffrey
Mrs Fraser
Date premiered25 September 1984
Place premieredEngland
Original languageEnglish
SettingA dingy North London church hall

Stepping Out is a play written by Richard Harris in 1984. It was produced in the West End, London, where it received the Evening Standard Comedy of the Year Award, and on Broadway, New York.

The play concerns eight individuals from disparate backgrounds and with differing motivations who attend the same weekly tap dancing class in a dingy North London church hall. Despite the students at first treating the classes as social occasions, and showing little co-ordination, they later develop a level of skill and cohesiveness. The dance routines are the background for the focus of the play, the relationship and interaction of different people.

Background

According to the play's writer, Richard Harris, the inspiration for the show came from his own wife, actress Hilary Crane: "My wife started her career as a dancer and she liked to keep her foot in, as it were, so she went down to the local dance class and when she came back she suggested that I should go and have a look as she felt there might be a play in it for me".[1] Taking his wife's advice, Harris visited the local church hall, a setting very much like the one in the play, where a tap dance class was in progress. "My wife hadn't been to the tap dance class", he explained. "She went to join a modern dance group, so it was by pure luck that I happened to go there and look through the window when a tap dance class was going on. It struck me that they all seemed to be thoroughly enjoying themselves and I thought if I could capture that, the pleasure they are clearly getting out of the class, I might be a winner. So I spent a period researching and going to various dance classes and then wrote the play".[1]

Productions

References

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