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Englishman Abroad (Radio Collection)
 
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Englishman Abroad (Radio Collection) [Audiobook] [Audio CD]

Alan Bennett (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

Radio Collection August 6, 2001
Michael Gambon is Guy Burgess and Penelope Wilton the actress Coral Browne in Bennett's re-telling of a real-life incident. Whilst touring 'Hamlet' Moscow with the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre in 1958, Browne is astonished to have Burgess appear in her dressing room. Having disappeared from England in 1951 together with fellow diplomat Donald Maclean, spy Burgess is a wanted man. Bennett's take on the encounter is both poignant and comic, and the play examines his life in exile, his love of England and his even greater love of Russia. This full-cast dramatisation was originally broadcast on BBC World Service.

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Product Details

  • Audio CD
  • Publisher: BBC Audiobooks (August 6, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0563535792
  • ISBN-13: 978-0563535799
  • Product Dimensions: 5.4 x 4.9 x 0.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 3.5 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,168,243 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Alan Bennett is a renowned playwright and essayist, a succession of whose plays have been staged at the Royal National Theatre and whose screenplay for The Madness of King George was nominated for an Academy Award. He made his first stage appearance with Beyond the Fringe and his latest play was The Lady in the Van with Maggie Smith. Episodes from his award-winning Talking Heads series have been shown on PBS. His first novel, The Clothes They Stood Up In, was published in 2000. He lives in London.

 

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4.0 out of 5 stars "The English never like unconcealed appetites, and I had no restraint.", December 15, 2008
This review is from: Englishman Abroad (Radio Collection) (Audio CD)
Author Alan Bennett's fascinating introduction to this play explains how he learned about a meeting between Guy Burgess, one of the Cambridge Five spy ring, who escaped to Moscow in 1956, and Coral Browne, an Australian actress touring Moscow with the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre's production of Hamlet. One evening, Burgess, a disheveled alcoholic, burst, unannounced, into her dressing room where he was violently ill in her sink. When he finally left, he also absconded with her soap, cigarettes, makeup, and her own drink. Despite this less than auspicious meeting, she agreed to meet him for lunch the next day at his apartment. It is this real-life meeting, lunch, and its aftermath that provide the action for this play.

Though Burgess has been in Moscow for two years, he has nothing to do, has never learned Russian, and has discovered that the gay scene, of which he was a part in England, does not exist in Moscow. His only "friend" is a state-assigned young lover who plays the balalaika. As Burgess and Coral converse over lunch, they listen to an old recording by Jack Buchanan, again and again, he thinking of the past, she remembering Jack Buchanan as the man she thought she would marry. Neither has much interest in politics. Burgess is starved for "gossip" from home, and both find Moscow dull. Burgess is particularly anxious to have Coral Browne take his measurements for his former Savile Row tailor so he can have some new suits made. The suits in Moscow lack "style.

The plight of the exile, be it political or social, has always been a main theme for Bennett, and though he does not write this 1983 play to drum up sympathy for Burgess, who died in Moscow in 1963, just seven years after defecting, he succeeds in raising questions about one's sense of identification with one's country--where does it originate and why, and, ultimately, does such identification with this concept of "country" make sense if the country's positions are alien to whatever else one believes?

In this BBC production, Michael Gambon makes Burgess a plausible, understandable character, while Penelope Wilton, as Coral Browne, is an excellent foil. Coral is no intellectual, nor is she political, so her role here is to bring out Burgess so that he becomes more understandable to the audience. In this she succeeds admirably. This play, now twenty-five years old, brings to life that period in which people looked for spies behind every curtain and looked toward the Soviet Union as "the enemy." Those days are gone forever. The production is now a bit dated, as a result of more recent terror, but Bennett's look at what inspires citizens to betray their country is pertinent and important. n Mary Whipple

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