When Saved was banned in 1965 by the Lord Chamberlain's office, the Royal Court theatre turned itself into a private club to allow performances of Edward Bond's drama to be staged. This may be the most famous incident in the career of the playwright, who has died aged 89, but he was the author of over 50 plays, including several written for young people to perform, and others designed for broadcast on BBC Radio and he also worked on film scripts, wrote poems and long prefaces to his works. Joining Matthew Sweet to discuss his life and writing are the playwright Mark Ravenhill, actor Kenneth Cranham who starred in a 1969 production of Saved, Jen Harvie who is a Professor of Contemporary Drama at Queen Mary, London, Tony Coult, a writer and teacher of drama who has run Edward Bond's website for the past five years and written introductions to his play texts, and Claudette Bryanston, who commissioned The Children for a performance in a local Cambridge school with teenagers acting alongside adults.
Producer: Robyn Read
Writing and Place: Wales
Writing and Place: The North-East
Writing and Place: Northern Ireland
Rock Follies
Oxford Philosophy
Childhood and play
New Thinking: women and football
South Asia: poverty and princes
Liverpool Biennial + art at MIF
A lively Tudor world
New Thinking: oral histories and the NHS
New Thinking: Children and health
New Thinking: health inequalities
New Thinking: Design and health
New Thinking: Writing the NHS
Dystopian thinking
Julian the Apostate
Boyhood to manhood
Gut instinct
Diva
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
The Modern West
Global News Podcast
Friday Night Comedy from BBC Radio 4
The Infinite Monkey Cage
You’re Dead to Me
Elis James and John Robins