The Life of the Party (play)
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3 men
| The Life of the Party | |
|---|---|
| Written by | Ray Mathew |
| Characters | 5 women 3 men |
| Date premiered | 1958 |
| Place premiered | Independent Theatre, Sydney |
| Original language | English |
| Subject | Australia |
| Genre | drama |
| Setting | living room of a flat in Kings Cross, Sydney |
Life of the Party is a 1957 Australian play by Ray Mathew.[1]
The play was a finalist in the 1957 London Observer competition.[2] It was given a public reading at the Independent Theatre in Sydney in 1958, and had a short season in London in 1960. Being produced in London was a notable achievement for an Australian play at the time.[3][4][5]
The 1960 production at the Lyric Theatre Hammersmith in London starred Alan Badel and was directed by Frith Banbury. The Daily Telegraph called it "most unpleasant."[6] Variety was also critical.[7]
Leslie Rees said the play "demonstrated both the merits and the shortcomings of a Peter Pan author" and "illustrated the growing sophistication in content of Australian plays in the late fifties and early sixties."[8] He added that the play:
Almost happened, but didn’t. Here we had acute observation at many a moment, humour, wit, delicacy. But the action was in a world of its own, not real. It was easy to see why the play failed in London. It started by beguiling —because of its deftness, flexibility, and touching off of people’s impulses—but in the end it was so much rigmarole. The author did not know when whimsy should evaporate and the sharp realism of a substantial human situation should take its place. It was a weakness that had trailed Ray Mathew throughout his career.[9]
According to academic Peter Fitzpatrick, the play "is full of deliberate confusions, its people practised in complex deceptions and self-deceptions. This imposes quite a strain on a plot that sometimes seems a rather gratuitous attempt to knock the sprawling material into some sort of shape. But it is a bold experiment conducted well before its time."[10]
The play was published in the 2004 collection Plays of the 50s.[11]