Author:Alan Bennett,Richard Griffiths,Clive Merrison,Frances de la Tour,Full Cast
After a sell-out national tour and an extended stage run, Alan Bennett’s phenomenally successful play transferred to BBC Radio 3, with Richard Griffiths, Clive Merrison and Frances de la Tour starring as part of the National Theatre cast. At a boys’ grammar school in Sheffield, eight boys are being coached for the Oxbridge entrance exams. It is the mid-eighties, and the main concern of the unruly bunch of bright sixth-formers is getting out, starting university – and starting life. At the heart of The History Boys are four characters, each with contrasting outlooks on teaching and school: Hector, an eccentric English teacher with no interest in exams; Irwin, a young supply teacher who sees history as ‘entertainment’; Mrs Lintott, a traditionalist, who teaches ‘history, not histrionics’; and a Headmaster obsessed with results. Described as ‘the richest play Bennett has ever written’ (Financial Times), staff-room rivalry and the anarchy of adolescence collide in an intensely moving and thought-provoking play. Winner of the Olivier, Evening Standard, Critics’ Circle and South Bank Show Awards for Best New Play. ‘A superb, life-enhancing play’ – Guardian.
Intensely moving as well as thought-provoking and funny
—— Daily TelegraphAlan Bennett's brilliant, linguists ear for language makes this play a true delight, echoing in the mind long after the talking has ceased
—— Good Book GuideWith so many books and courses available to the beginner now, it's great to find one that gets it spot on. In future isf anyone asks me for tips on DJing, I'll simply tell them to read this
—— Rocky, X-Press 2Full of vigour and colour...Ms Blackburn's portrait of a unique artist is moving, revealing and quite unforgettable
—— EconomistJulia Blackburn...has contributed much to the legacy of a remarkable human being
—— New StatesmanWith her assured touch, she has transcribed and framed the verbatim accounts into a resonant piece of social history, never losing sight of the woman who enthralled everyone with whom she came into contact
—— Financial TimesOften books about jazz musicians make the mistake of over-focusing on the music. Blackburn is more interested in Billie as a person
—— Mike Figgis , GuardianThis is a really marvellous book, the most uninhibitedly intimate portrayal ever of the short, hard life and overall musical triumph of Lady Day...With Billie vividly reflects the chaos that Billie Holiday was born into and only rarely escaped from
—— Spectator