James Saunders (playwright)

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James Saunders (8 January 1925 – 29 January 2004) was a prolific

Theatre of the Absurd.[1]

Personal life

He was educated at Wembley County Grammar School, which now forms part of

Southampton University
. He married Audrey Cross.

Plays

His play Next Time I'll Sing To You, written in 1962, was staged in the West End starring Michael Caine, Barry Foster and Liz Fraser, at the New Arts and the Criterion Theatre in 1963. It gained him the 1963 Evening Standard award (with Charles Wood) for "Most Promising Playwright". The play was also produced in New York the same year.

In 1975 he completed John Vanbrugh's four-act fragment, A Journey to London, a play that had been sentimentalised by Colley Cibber in 1728 as The Provoked Husband. Saunders' version was first staged in Greenwich and successfully revived at the Orange Tree Theatre in 1986.

Bodies, commissioned and first staged by Sam Walters at the Orange Tree in 1977, was revived by Robin Lefévre at the Hampstead Theatre in February 1978, and given a West End transfer in April 1979, starring Dinsdale Landen, Gwen Watford, David Burke and Angela Down.

Television

Saunders' television work included Watch Me I'm a Bird (1964), and the BBC sitcom Bloomers (1979), starring Richard Beckinsale (in the year that he died) playing an unsuccessful actor working in a flower shop. Beckinsale's co-star was Anna Calder-Marshall.

Works

Stage plays include:

  • Moonshine (1955)
  • The Ark (1959)
  • A Slight Accident (one-act 1961)
  • Double Double (1962)
  • Next Time I'll Sing To You (1962)
  • Who was Hilary Maconochie? (one-act 1963)
  • A Scent of Flowers (1966)
  • The Travails of Sancho Panza (1969)
  • Games (one-act 1970)
  • After Liverpool (one-act 1970)
  • Hans Kolhaus (1972)
  • A Journey to London (co-author, 1975)
  • The Island (1976)
  • Bodies (1977)
  • Over the Wall (one-act 1977)
  • Random Moments in a May Garden (1980)
  • Retreat (1995)

Sources

References

External links