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The History Boys 

The History Boys
Written by Alan Bennett
Characters Headmaster
Hector
Irwin
Mrs. Lintott
Akthar
Crowther
Dakin
Lockwood
Posner
Rudge
Scripps
Timms
Date premiered 18 May 2004
Place premiered Lyttelton Theatre
London, England
Original language English
Subject An unruly bunch of bright, funny boys in pursuit of sex, sport and a place at university
Genre Drama
Setting 1980s; Cutlers' Grammar School, Sheffield
Official site
Playbill listing
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The History Boys is a play by English playwright Alan Bennett. The play premiered at Lyttelton Theatre, in London on 18 May 2004. Its Broadway debut was on 23 April 2006 at the Broadhurst Theatre where there were 185 performances staged before closing on 1 October 2006.

Contents

Characters

  • Headmaster (Felix Armstrong) - Headmaster of Cutlers' Grammar School, Sheffield
  • (Douglas) Hector - English/General Studies teacher
  • Irwin - History teacher; brought in as a special coach
  • Mrs (Dorothy) Lintott - History teacher
  • (Adil) Akthar - Pupil; of Muslim ancestry
  • (Christopher) Crowther - Pupil; of Black British ancestry
  • (Stuart) Dakin - Pupil; hansome, object of Posner's affection
  • (James) Lockwood - Pupil
  • (David) Posner - Pupil; youngest, gay and Jewish
  • (Peter) Rudge - Pupil; better known for athletic skills than for smarts
  • (Donald) Scripps - Pupil; Anglican, plays piano
  • (Anthony) Timms - Pupil

The following are optional, non-speaking roles:

  • Other male pupils (can play piano if the actor cast as Scripps cannot)
  • Make-Up Woman, Production team - On Irwin's television show
  • Three or four unidentified MP's - Spoken to by Irwin in opening scene
  • There is a brief role of a Director on Irwin's televison programme who does speak.
  • Fiona (Proctor) - Headmaster's secretary; object of Dakin's affection, unseen save for in-play films

Plot synopsis

The action of the play takes place in Cutlers' Grammar School, Sheffield, a fictional boys' grammar school in the north of England. Set in the early 1980s, the piece follows a group of history pupils preparing for the Oxbridge entrance examinations under the guidance of three teachers (Hector, Irwin and Lintott) with contrasting styles.

Irwin teaches the essay style of brisk generalities flavoured with sufficient facts and quotations to engage the examiner's interest. He teaches the boys to find a (sometimes controversial) angle on a point in History and find evidence to support it, enabling the student to prove a less than truthful perspective of History. He believes the truth is irrelevant when it comes to finding a stance that will make his pupils stand out in the examination board. This method was one of 'false pretences', that Bennett felt he had had to teach himself in order to succeed in examinations, one academic pursuit with which he constantly had trouble. Hector, however, wishes to teach knowledge, especially English Literature, for its own intrinsic value, hoping his students will benefit greatly from his influence. He wants the boys to become cultured, rounded human beings and believes that such contrived methods are practically indecent. Exams are the enemy of all that he stands for.

Themes

The play blends comedy with tragedy and has many layers and themes. Whilst the story is ostensibly about education and, in particular, the teaching of talented pupils on the cusp of adulthood it is also a subtle study of the human and personal relationships between teacher and pupil, pupil and pupil and teacher and teacher. Hector, the confident but eccentric, eclectic and iconoclastic history teacher is contrasted with Irwin, a generation younger than he, who is clever, confused and insecure. The boys have warmed to Hector's maverick style and methods which includes role playing and a very broad cultural range - from Gracie Fields to Housman. They tolerate Hector's fondness for fondling their genitalia when on his motor bike with equanimity clearly seeing it as a harmless foible rather than a pederastic threat.

The boys themselves are sharply contrasted and skilfully characterised. Dakin, is handsome and self-confident attracting not only the lovestruck and guilt-ridden Posner but also the Headmaster's secretary the "fair Fiona" and eventually Irwin as well. Rudge is the sporting hearty who despite his lack of overt academic competence has sufficient other qualities and connections to get him into Oxford. The play is about the "anarchy of adolescence" and whilst the fact of Hector's homosexuality runs through the story and is ultimately Hector's downfall "The History Boys" is not primarily about sex. The sexual confidence and promiscuity of Dakin and the sexual confusions of Hector, Irwin and Posner are neatly contrasted however and this theme may well be autobiographical.

The idea that culture is not sharply divided into highbrow and lowbrow is one of Hector's beliefs and he is as comfortable in the genre of Hollywood as he is in the classics. This seems to be a plea for tolerance and understanding and for the need to trawl widely in order to grow and to learn - especially early in life. The belief that in education anything goes so long as it helps the pupil's development contrasts sharply with the headmaster's wish to stick to the curriculum and to get results above all. For Hector entry to Oxbridge will (or should) come from a rounded education as much as from curriculum adherence. For Irwin the need is to play the game so that in the Oxbridge entrance exams and interviews taking the conventional line is to be avoided in favour of articulating a contrary position in order to be noticed.

The play is set in the 1980s - a time of social and political change and in a sense The History Boys is a refection of that change. The likes of Hector would never be accepted again and results driven headmasters became the norm. Bennett suggests that this is a regrettable consequence of the Thatcherite and post-Thatcherite focus in education on curriculum, standards and political-correctness.

Productions

Royal National Theatre
The play opened at the Lyttelton Theatre (part of the National Theatre) in London on 18 May 2004 where it played to sell-out audiences and its limited run was frequently extended. On 24 November 2005, the same production was revived once again at the Lyttelton Theatre where it played another successful run, the original cast reuniting in the final week in February 2006.
International Tour
Following closing in London, the National Theatre production toured to Hong Kong in February 2006 and featured in the 2006 New Zealand International Arts Festival held in Wellington (February 2006) before playing at the Sydney Theatre in Sydney, Australia from March 4 to April 8, 2006. At each venue, the play was presented to sell-out audiences with the original London cast, including Richard Griffiths however Frances de la Tour was replaced by Maggie Stead until the Broadway season.
Broadway
The American premiere of the play took place on April 23, 2006 when the same National production opened on Broadway at the Broadhurst Theatre. Originally scheduled to run through September 2, 2006, the run was extended through to October 8, 2006 following huge public demand in the aftermath of sweeping the Tony, New York Critics Circle and other American theatrical awards.
West End
Following its Broadway triumph and second UK tour, the play opened at London's Wyndham's Theatre on 2 January 2007, following previews from 20 December 2006. The production closed on 14 April 2007. A further West End run of the play opened once again at the Wyndham's Theatre on 20 December 2007 running through 26 April 2008.
Lexington, Kentucky
Apprentice Players will present the regional premiere of the play in August 2008 under the direction of Jacob Sexton, at the University of Kentucky Briggs Theater.
San Francisco, CA, USA
The History Boys is being produced by the New Conservatory Theatre Center in 2008 with a run scheduled for September 19 - October 26. Directed by the theatre's Artistic Director, Ed Decker, it will star James Breedlove, Juan Carlos De La Rosa, Ryan Foster, Nic Knerr, Chistopher Morrell, Zac Schuman and Jonathan Shue as the boys. Info at http://www.nctcsf.org
UK National Tours
The first UK tour of the production opened in 2005, continuing to play nine regional venues. A second UK tour began on the 31 August 2006 at the Birmingham Rep, touring to eight further venues. The latest (third) UK tour launched on 6 September 2007 at the Theatre Royal, Plymouth, before continuing to Truro, Cheltenham, Bath, Dublin, Blackpool, Leeds, Cambridge and Eastbourne before culminating in Newcastle on 10 November 2007.
Ireland
The Irish premiere of the play took place on Tuesday 9 October 2007 at the Olympia Theatre in Dublin, running to Saturday 13 October 2007.
Australia
Following the original Australian production at the Sydney Theatre in Sydney from March 4 to April 8, 2006, a production of the play ran at the Melbourne Theatre Company from Apr 9May 12 2007.
Israel
The Israeli production, directed by Micha Levinson, premiered in March 2007 at the Beit Lessin Theater in Tel-Aviv, in Hebrew with local actors, starring Oded Kotler and Sandra Sade.
New Zealand
A production directed by Elric Hooper is scheduled to play at The Court Theatre (NZ) in Christchurch, New Zealand from May - June 2008.
Cincinnati, Ohio
New Stage Collective Will be producing the play in October 2008.
Honolulu, Hawaii
the play will be presented by The Actors' Group(TAG)in August 2008. Directed by Brad Powell, the production is scheduled to play at the Mendonca Building, 1116 Smith St. (www.taghawaii.net;(808) 722-6941)
San Diego, California
A production presented by Cygnet Theatre directed by Sean Murray is scheduled to play at The Old Town Theatre February 28th through March 29th, 2009 with previews February 19th thru the 27th. http://www.cygnettheatre.com/ Box Office:(619) 337-1525
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
The Arts Club Theatre will be staging the play at their Granville Island Stage from September 25 to October 25, 2008. http://www.artsclub.com/ Box Office: (604) 687-1644
Mankato, Minnesota
Minnesota State University, Mankato's Department of Theatre and Dance will be staging a production directed by Dr. Paul J. Hustoles, chair of the department. It will run Jan.28-Feb.8 2009 Wed-Sun. [1]


Royal National Theatre Casts

Role Cast A Cast B Cast C Cast D
[18 May 2004 - 2005] [24 Nov 2005- Jan 2006] [31 Aug 2006- 14 Apr 2007] [6 Sep 2007 - 26 Apr 2008]
[23 Jan 2006 - 1 Feb 2006]
International Tour + Film
Headmaster Clive Merrison Bruce Alexander William Chubb David Mallinson
Malcolm Sinclair => (23 Jan 2006 - 28 Jan 2006)
Hector Richard Griffiths Desmond Barrit Stephen Moore Desmond Barrit
Irwin Stephen Campbell Moore Tobias Menzies Orlando Wells Tim Delap
Geoffrey Streatfeild => (20 Dec 2004 - 2005)
Mrs Lintott Frances de la Tour Diane Fletcher Isla Blair Elizabeth Bell
Maggie Stead => (23 Jan 2006 - 28 Jan 2006 + International Tour until Broadway)
Akthar Sacha Dhawan Marc Elliot Marc Elliot Alton Letto
Crowther Samuel Anderson Kenny Thompson Akemnji Ndifornyen Nathan Stewart-Jarrett
Dakin Dominic Cooper Jamie King Ben Barnes (pre late Jan/early Feb 07) Andrew Hawley
Jamie King (post late Jan/early Feb 07)
Lockwood Andrew Knott Matt Smith David Poynor Sam Phillips
Posner Samuel Barnett Steven Webb Steven Webb Daniel Fine
Rudge Russell Tovey Phillip Correla Phillip Correla Ryan Hawley
Scripps Jamie Parker Thomas Morrison Thomas Morrison Thomas Howes
Timms James Corden James Cartwright Owain Arthur Danny Kirrane

Film adaptation

In October 2006 a film adaptation of the play was released in the United States, and later in November 2006 in the United Kingdom. The film was directed by Hytner and featured the original stage cast.

Awards and nominations

Awards
  • 2004 Evening Standard Award for Best Play
  • 2005 Olivier Award for Best New Play
  • 2006 Drama Desk Award for Best New Play
  • 2006 New York Drama Critics' Circle Best Play
  • 2006 Outer Critics Circle Award for Outstanding Broadway Play
  • 2006 Tony Award for Best Play

References

Further reading

  • Bennett, Alan (2004). The History Boys. London: Faber and Faber, 96 pp. ISBN 0571224644. 

External links


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