Other Works of Robert Bolt


I'm curious if anyone else here has read or seen other plays by Robert Bolt, and if so what you think of them. None of his plays besides Man are terribly well-known (at least in present), yet I think most of them are good and a few great.

I've read all of them except his BBC Radio plays, which appear not to have been published. Brief capsule reviews of each (all based on reading them and not seeing them performed, of course, where I'd probably get different opinions):

Flowering Cherry - I found this one deadeningly dull, and a rip-off of Death of a Salesman. Maybe it would work better on-stage but on the written page it came across as weak and derivative.

The Tiger and the Horse - A play about a college professor who refuses to sign a petition against nuclear weapons, and his family and friends' reaction to his decision. Although flawed it is interesting in that it's a precursor to A Man for All Seasons in many ways - the emphasis on personal commitment and integrity, for one. The dialogue and characters are very well-written and given that it was based around a topical issue of the time it hasn't aged that much - replace nuclear arms with the Iraq War, for instance, and it would work just as well today.

A Man for All Seasons - Bolt's masterpiece. 'Nuff said.

Gentle Jack - A rather bizarre play - about a dull office worker who is given supernatural powers by a Nature god in the English countryside - with some intriguing thematic ideas about personal integrity (again), and human nature - the wild, uninhibited side of nature vs. the cold world of professionalism. I completely misinterpreted what was going on the first time I read it, and had to re-read it in order to understand. It's a bizarre play on the written page (can only imagine what it would be like on stage!) with too many characters and a bit much going on, but the ideas are really strong and it's enjoyable. It would be interesting to see this on stage, considering it was a complete failure when it was first performed; perhaps the production itself was just badly flawed? Worth a look, but not for all tastes.

The Thwarting of Baron Bolligrew - This play was really famous in the '60s and '70s from what I understand. It's a children's play about a stuck-up knight sent to fight an evil baron and a dragon. Again, I'm not sure how fit I am to judge it based on reading and not seeing it performed, but on the basis of the script it would be interesting. Bolt clearly put a lot of work into it, and it's not just something he tossed off for a few bucks.

Vivat! Vivat Regina! - A play about Elizabeth I and Mary Queen of Scots. This is the one besides Flowering Cherry that I didn't really care for. While the subject matter is interesting and the dialogue is well-written, the story is rather static and the writing is dry. I found it very hard to get into despite doing so at least thrice, though again reading it wouldn't live up to seeing a performance. At least the characters of Elizabeth and Mary were well-developed, and each respectfully so.

State of Revolution - Maybe it's just because of the subject matter (the Russian Revolution) but for me this is by far Bolt's best work for the stage aside from Man. The story flows really well, the dialogue is sharp, and it's never less than gripping. The only criticism I'd make is that the characters aren't really convincing as Russians, but I at least can live with that. Would love to see it or even act in it.

Anybody else care to comment?

"I'm a Doctor of STEW!"

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You know after your list it looks as if I would like to get other plays I'll have to do some hunting. The only one I have is "State of Revolution" which I read a while ago. In the bookstores I frequent the only play I see which is there is you guessed it. It's like MFAS just overpowers everything else he wrote. I'm not sure why they don't stock some others..out of print perhaps, they don't sell?? But I'll re-read SOR shortly. Thx for the list.

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Bolt's plays have been out of print for years. Perhaps A Man for All Seasons is more famous because it was a huge success and was made into an equally succesful movie? I honestly think Bolt is a much better writer than he's given credit for, and as I said above State of Revolution and Tiger and the Horse are (IMO of course) pretty close to A Man for All Seasons, which is, to be fair, his best work.

I forgot The Critic and the Heart/Brother and Sister, which so far as I know were never published (I could be wrong though). Those two plays are basically the same though, the latter being a revision of the former.

Oberon Books published two omnibus editions of Bolt's non-Man plays in 2001, which can be located on Amazon, albeit at a rather pricy rate. The first has Cherry, Tiger and Gentle Jack; the second has Bolligrew, Vivat!, and State. I've read the second, although I had to individually track down the three plays in the first volume. The second volume can be found here:

http://www.amazon.com/Bolt-Plays-Two-Robert/dp/1840021586/ref=sr_1_13? ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1211582585&sr=1-13

I'd also recommend Sabine Prufer's The Individual at the Crossroads, a nice analysis/overview of Bolt's works. It is apparently a college thesis translated into book form, but still very readable and interesting - if you're into Bolt, that is. The section on Man is somewhat lacking IMO (they focus more on Bolt's theatrical inspirations than the play itself), but the other films/plays are dealt with in an exemplary manner - particularly the chapters on the Lean films.

Needless to say, Adrian Turner's biography of Bolt, Scenes From Two Lives, is also highly recommended.

"Great, but why do they always use so much blood? Ruins the realism, don't you think?"

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thanks....I'm going to see if I can find some of these...

Ps When I got "State Of Revolution", there was a note saying "break a leg"....;-)...I guess they figured I was an actor!...

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I received the first collection of Bolt's plays (Cherry, Tiger and Jack) as a birthday present this year. Both volumes are for sale on Amazon for about $15 or so.

"You bastard!"
"Yes, sir. In my case an accident of birth. But you, sir - you're a self-made man."

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Robert Bolt wrote the screenplay of "The Bounty" with Mel Gibson and Anthony Hopkins. I think this film was a sublime achievement, which was supported by the eerie score by Vangelis.

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That was a pretty good film, but I had a feeling it could have been a lot better. It was originally a David Lean project, and a two-part film at that, but lack of studio funding and Lean's forced the producers to scale it back to the modest film we have now. Well-directed, with a great cast and gorgeous cinematography. If it doesn't quite live up to its potential, it's still a very enjoyable film. The odd thing to note is that the movie in question was directed by Roger Donaldson, he's lately gone on to paint-by-numbers action pap like The Recruit and The Bank Job.

Mr. Rusk. You're not wearing your tie!

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Good job Hancock. I forgot that Bolt also wrote the screenplay for "Lawrence of Arabia"

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I think his screenplay work(Lawrence,Zhivago,Ryan's DAughter) is better than his plays...except for A man for all seasons....sometimes a writer only has one truly great play or book in them, and the rest is mediocre...thats just how it works...it does not detract from the brilliance of that one work if that is the case
It is not our abilities that make us who we are...it is our choices

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I believe he also wrote the screenplay for "The Mission".

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Yeah, but my post is commenting on his stage work.

"If life gives you lemons, choke on 'em and die. You stupid lemon eater."

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enjoyable stuff.



"Hipness is not a state of mind, it's a fact of life!" - Cannonball Adderley

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