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Front Row: Evenings at the Theatre

Front Row: Evenings at the Theatre
Your Price: $36.95 CDN
Author: Beryl Bainbridge
Publisher: Continuum
Format: Hardcover
# of Pages: 214
Pub. Date: 2005
ISBN-10: 0826487874
ISBN-13: 9780826487872

About the Book:

With an outstanding introductory essay, in Front Row one of the greatest English novelists has assembled her writings, essays and reviews about the theatre to provide a highly individual view of contemporary theatre and actors. Subtitled Evenings at the Theatre , it contains insights into the work of such contemporaries as Alan Bennett, Alan Rickman and Ronald Harwood, alongside sketches of the actors Dame Beryl Bainbridge worked with in her early years.

Best known as an acclaimed novelist, Beryl Bainbridge was also a former actor. Expelled from school in Liverpool at the age of fourteen, she determined to tread the boards, joining the Liverpool Playhouse Theatre Company as an assistant stage manager. Here she received a unique form of education, reading Shakespeare and Ibsen, and eventually graduating from the role of a dog to the part of a boy mathematical genius for which she had to have her hair cut. Later she appeared in two early episodes of Coronation Street as Ken Barlow's girlfriend. Her love of the theatre endured after she became among the best-loved writers of her generation. One of her most successful novels, An Awfully Big Adventure, drew on her theatrical experiences, and she often wrote about the theatre, in her column in The Standard, and later, in the monthly theatre reviews she wrote for The Oldie.

What people say:

"This volume has a wonderful and insightful introductory essay , whilst also containing comment on the work of those such as Alan Bennett and Alan Rickman, and some delightful anecdotes from Bainbridge's early days in the theatre." — Good Book Guide

"Bainbridge the novelist can't resist the essential absurdity of people pretending not to be themselves eight times a week … the sending-up, however, is done with great affection. Bainbridge can never be a great critic of the theatre because she loves it too deeply and still identifies with people on the other side of the proscenium arch." — The Sunday Times

"Enjoyable … there is a lack of snobbishness in the columns collected here; Bainbridge is as happy to sit through Shakespeare as she is through a farce or a musical. She still marvels at the magic of theatre and her reviews lack the dour quality of so many broadsheet hacks … Front Row is an ideal book to gorge all at once or dip into every now and then … an idiosyncratic record of the last decade of the theatre, but also an intimate portrayal of one of our greatest writers and is perhaps as close as we will ever get to a full autobiography." — Attitude Magazine

"The refreshing aspect of this collection of reviews is that you feel they have been written by someone who is open to the experience of what she is about to see without prejudging it … her real strength is her outline of the story, which, as one of our foremost novelists, is hardly surprising. The emphasis in all of these reviews is on a succinct appraisal of the narrative and an appreciation of the writer … will appeal to anyone wanting a browse through that decade, not only of the plays, but also some of the sociological phenomena of that decade, in the always entertaining company of the author." — Camden New Journal

"Your professional critic is inclined to go to see a play with their knives sharpened and ready to use if it doesn't meet their preconceived expectations, whereas Dame Beryl goes more as a punter." — Islington Tribune

"The reviews in this book are mainly of a random selection of plays in the 1990s and will appeal to anyone wanting a browse through that decade, not only of the plays, but also some of the sociological phenomena of that decade, in the always entertaining company of the author." — West End Extra

"Her introductory essay is beguilling — when, please, will Dame Beryl write her autobiography." — The Times

"…highly entertaining and informed view of the London theatre." — Liverpool Daily Post

About the Author:

Dame Beryl Bainbridge (1932 - 2010) was one of the most successful and loved contemporary novelists. Her recent novels have included An Awfully Big Adventure, Master Georgie, The Birthday Boys and According to Queenie.