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A Clockwork Lemon
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# : |
17946 |
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Section : |
THE ARTS
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| Issue
Date : |
5 / 1990 |
1,871 Words |
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Claudia Woolgar Claudia Woolgar is a free-lance theater critic and arts
journalist based in London. |
Viddy well, on my brothers, ultra-violence and real horrorshow have come to the Royal Shakespeare Company in London. Alex and his three droogs have been to chocking an old veck, razrezing his books, pulling off his outer plat-ties, and taking a malenky bit of cutter ever since the curtain rose on the RSC stage adaptation of Anthony Burgess' controversial novel, A Clockwork Orange.
Written in 1962, A Clockwork Orange has had a checkered history. It was Stanley Kubrick's classic film, made in 1971 that brought Burgess' original story to a wide public. Suddenly youth gangs had adopted the black bowler hats worn by the main character, Alex, and his three droogs. Soon they were mimicking the "nadsat" language Burgess had invented - a bizarre cross between Russian and English. And soon, too, the swelling wave of random youth violence in the early seventies was blamed on Burgess and Kubrick.
Both denied responsibility for the violent deeds of the young, but when public criticism mounted and Kubrick allegedly received death threats directed at his family, the film was withdrawn from British cinemas. Kubrick's film A Clockwork Orange remains banned to this day in Great Britain. And yet, in February 1990, London's Royal Shakespeare Company took the infamous story of Alex and his droogs and resurrected it on the stage.
Permission to produce a stage adaptation of Burgess' novel had been repeatedly refused ever since sixties. Fearing that someone might go ahead and stage it despite his own wishes, Burgess actually wrote a stage version of A Clockwork Orange several years ago. It lay unnoticed at the Barbican until Ron Daniels, a director at the
... (1997 of 10663 Characters)
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