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f i l m

Spotlight January 1998


In Celebration

Opened 22 April 1969 at the Royal Court Theatre, London, directed by Lindsay Anderson, starring Alan Bates, Brian Cox, James Bolam, Constance Chapman, Bill Owen

Filmed with the same cast and director by producer Ely A. Landau for the American Film Theatre in 1975.


1 JANUARY 1998. In writing about In Celebration for a 1998 audience, I'll begin with an quote from theatre critic Harold Hobson, writing about the play in 1969. In doing so, let me say in advance that I disagree with some elements of Hobson's interpretation. My comments follow:

"In David Storey's In Celebration (1969) there was, as there is in all Storey's work, a generally acceptable beauty that was still irreclaimably melancholy. During the brief intervals that separated the various scenes of In Celebration one heard the simple and comforting strains of a tinkling piano nostalgically playing 'Jesus Loves Me'. Bathed in the warmth of this old-time religion, we saw the Shaws in their small miner's house celebrating the fortieth anniversary of their wedding. For the occasion they were visited by their three sons, for whom they had done exceedingly well, since they had given them a university education.
"Colin, the middle son, was now a prosperous executive, not very articulate, but kind and generous. The youngest, Steven, was a teacher, full of affection for his parents, who were unfashionably fond of him and of each other. The eldest son, Andrew, in this united and Christian family, was the odd man out. He had been a solicitor, but was now an artist, uninspired and unsuccessful; and in the bitterness of his mocking tongue he seemed bent on destroying the happiness around him.

- A Fourth Child -

"But there had been a fourth child, a child less wanted than the others. Whereas they had been treated with unvarying kindness, he, in Andrew's searing memory, had been beaten black and blue; and at the age of seven he had died of pneumonia. Andrew could not, or at least did not, forget this; and alone in the contented household he was obsessed by the fact that his brother Steven also nursed an inexplicable grief.
"In the light of these things it was impossible to take the hymn tune at its superficial value; and very difficult to accept any interpretation of the play that saw it as a sweet domestic idyll, a Yorkshire collier's Garden of Eden invaded by a malicious and poisonous serpent.
"Lindsay Anderson's fine production of the play was too full of disturbing nuances for that. In its compelling ambiguity it perhaps even went so far as to suggest (though not to Andrew or to me) that it is better to compound cruelty to a child than to let its memory become the mainspring of vengeful action. It might have implied that the consequences of evil can never be erased, even to the third or fourth generation; or it may have meant that though the penalty for wrong-doing is always exacted, it is sometimes exacted (since Mr and Mrs Shaw are visibly happier than either Steven or Andrew) not from the wrong-doer, but from the innocent. But a quiet tale of comfort and joy (as it seemed to some people) is precisely what it could not possibly be. It was better, it was more subtle than that. With Andrew I could not but remember the dead, bruised child...

- A Bright Ferocity -

"This may not be what Storey intended. If so, it would not be the first time that a profound and moving play produced in a spectator deeply touched by it an impression other than had been foreseen. ..But this is a sign, not of failure, but of richness, and In Celebration is a very rich play. It was beautifully written, and its beauty was appropriate to the circumstances and the class of its characters. And it had reverberating echoes of great men, as when Colin was said to measure out his life in motor cars.
"It was perfectly acted by James Bolam as the upright and successful son, and by Brian Cox, who bore memorably Steven's uncommunicated sorrow. As for Andrew, for whom went all my sympathy, Alan Bates gave to him a bright ferocity that made the play vibrate with life. Lindsay Anderson's direction showed that characteristic yet amazing understanding of northern existence and northern passion that is so rare in well-born, intellectual, public school socialists."

[from: Theatre in Britain, A Personal View, Phaidon Press Limited, Oxford, © 1984, Harold Hobson]


WHILE THE FILM version of In Celebration is opened up with a few exterior arrival and departure scenes, it is otherwise very close in content to the play. It was filmed on location in a tiny "two up, two down" row house.
Social class and the family (in this case, the destructive force of each) dominate In Celebration. Unlike Hobson, I feel that the pivotal factor in the story is not the fourth child (who was the Shaw's firstborn), but the marriage of the Shaws: Mrs Shaw, a young beauty from an upwardly-mobile family, was meant by her family for better things than marriage to a miner. But Shaw seduced her and made her pregnant; then, married, Shaw spends his entire life proving to himself, to his wife, to the world, that he is good enough. Shaw treats his wife like a queen, and has trained the sons to do so as well. The lifelong habits of atonement for an undefined but pervasive sin, and a struggle for propriety (suggesting that one is never good enough), have infected all three of the surviving children.

- Impossible Standards -

Andrew has memories of the earliest, bad times, the grinding poverty that allowed only four chairs for five people, the newspaper covering the table, the scorn and pity of their teachers, the fact that he was sent to a neighbor for a while, after his brother's death, because his mother couldn't cope with him. He remembers being locked out of the house; and it is clear that he still stands outside his parents' affection. Colin and Steven remember less, but the effort and impossible standards of their upbringing affect all three.
Andrew, the oracle, the truth-teller, ever the outsider, has rejected the mold, trying to make a more honest life for himself and his wife and two children by becoming an artist. Colin (James Bolam, with Alan Bates, right), the dutiful middle son, his mother's favorite, is a striver. There are hints that he is homosexual, but he plans to marry for the sake of propriety; though outwardly a success, he is in denial as deeply as his parents are. The youngest son, Steven, whom his father unashamedly loves best, has been trying to write a novel about his childhood (Andrew has read part of it). Married, father of five, Steve is trembling on the edge of complete breakdown, weeps in his sleep, is withdrawn and tragic among his family. The senior Shaws, looking for a scapegoat, blame Andrew.

- Tidy Facade -

In a searing performance, Alan Bates as Andrew brings forth the family's secrets while revealing the legacy of his own loveless childhood. He longs for approval, but at the same time exposes the carefully maintained fictions that hold the Shaws together.
Storey's masterful account of the Shaws' life is almost biblical in its force. Lindsay Anderson's direction (with Bates, left) is spare and elegant, and the ensemble acting is of the highest quality. I suppose that technically this play belongs to the "kitchen sink" movement of the '50s and '60s, in its gritty Northern reality -- but for me, its superb quality elevates it out of the genre.
In the simple piano music mentioned by Mr Hobson and also present in the film as entre'acte interludes, I hear tremendous irony; it represents the Shaws' careful, tidy facade. Late Beethoven or Prokofiev -- something powerful, discordant, elemental, tragic -- might be more in keeping with the emotions uncovered in the course of this play. But in the end, the children leave, the parents remain united, the facade is in place, the piano tinkles. The celebration is over.

-- KR for the Alan Bates Archive