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{{Short description|1945 play by J. B. Priestley}} | |||
{{About|the play|the film|An Inspector Calls (film)|the 1982 TV series|An Inspector Calls (TV series)}} | |||
{{About|the play|other uses|An Inspector Calls (disambiguation)}} | |||
{{Use British English|date=September 2011 | |||
}} | |||
{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2024}} | |||
{{Infobox play | {{Infobox play | ||
| name = An Inspector Calls | | name = An Inspector Calls | image = An Inspector Calls First 1947.jpg | ||
| image_alt= | |||
| image = An Inspector Calls Cover.jpg | |||
| caption = First edition (1947) with dust jacket | |||
| image_size = 150px | |||
| caption = | |||
| writer = ] | | writer = ] | ||
| genre = Drama | | genre = Drama | ||
| setting = |
| setting = Edwardian England | ||
| subject = | |||
| subject = A mysterious inspector interrogates a wealthy English family about their responsibility for the death of a young working class factory girl.<ref>{{cite book|last=Cousin|first=Geraldine |title=Playing for Time|publisher=Manchester University Press|location=Manchester, England|year=2007|page=16|chapter=Past present: dramatisations of 'return'|isbn= 978-0-7190-6197-4}}</ref> | |||
| premiere = 1945 | | premiere = 6 July 1945 | ||
| place = Moscow, Soviet Union | | place = ], Soviet Union | ||
| orig_lang = English | | orig_lang = English | ||
| ibdb_id = 1565 | |||
}} | }} | ||
'''An Inspector Calls''' is a ] written by English |
'''''An Inspector Calls''''' is a modern ] and ] written by English dramatist ], first performed in the ] in 1945<ref>{{cite web|title=An Inspector Calls – Context and Political Views|url=http://www.oxnotes.com/an-inspector-calls-context-and-political-views.html|website=OxNotes – English Literature Notes|publisher=OxNotes.com|location=England|access-date=8 October 2018|archive-date=8 October 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181008061452/http://www.oxnotes.com/an-inspector-calls-context-and-political-views.html|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite magazine|url=https://www.newagebd.net/article/58816/an-inspector-calls-a-riveting-drawing-room-play|title=An Inspector Calls: a riveting drawing room play|magazine=New Age|date=14 December 2018}}</ref> and at the ] in London the following year.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.bl.uk/collection-items/j-b-priestleys-scrapbook-containing-programmes-and-reviews-for-an-inspector-calls|title=J B Priestley's scrapbook containing programmes and reviews for An Inspector Calls|website=The British Library|access-date=29 September 2019|archive-date=21 June 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210621164831/https://www.bl.uk/collection-items/j-b-priestleys-scrapbook-containing-programmes-and-reviews-for-an-inspector-calls|url-status=live}}</ref> It is one of Priestley's best-known works for the stage and is considered to be one of the classics of mid-20th century English theatre. The play's success and reputation were boosted by a successful revival by English director ] for the ] in 1992<ref>{{cite book|last=Stringer|first=Jenny|title=The Oxford companion to twentieth-century literature in English|publisher=Oxford University Press|location=Oxford, England|year=1996|page=|isbn=978-0-19-212271-1|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/isbn_9780192122711/page/330}}</ref> and a tour of the UK in 2011–2012. | ||
The play is a three-act drama |
The play is a three-act drama which takes place on a single night on 5 April 1912.<ref name="1992ed" /> The play focuses on the prosperous upper-middle-class Birling family,<ref name="NichollsMarcus2004">{{cite book|last=Gale|first=Maggie|editor-last=Nicholls|editor-first= Peter|editor2-last= Marcus|editor-first2= Laura|title=The Cambridge history of twentieth-century English literature|year=2004|publisher=Cambridge University Press|location=Cambridge, England|isbn=0-521-82077-4|page=328|chapter=Theatre and drama between the wars|quote=the middle class family was at the centre of much of Priestley's work ... most clearly perhaps in 'An Inspector Calls'.}}</ref> who live in a comfortable home in the fictional town of Brumley, "an industrial city in the ]".<ref name="1992ed">{{cite book|last=Priestley|first=J. B.|editor1-first=Tim |editor1-last= Bezant|title=An Inspector Calls: A Play in Three Acts|publisher=Heinemann|location=London|year=1947|edition=1992|pages=xi–xiv|isbn=0-435-23282-7}}</ref> The family is visited by a man calling himself Inspector Goole, who questions the family about the suicide of a working-class woman in her mid-twenties. Long considered part of the repertory of classic ], the play has also been hailed as a scathing criticism of the hypocrisies of Victorian and Edwardian English society and as an expression of Priestley's socialist political principles. The play is notable amongst students as many British schools study it as a prescribed text for the ] English Literature course.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Modern texts and poetry |url=https://www.aqa.org.uk/subjects/english/gcse/english-literature-8702/subject-content/modern-texts-and-poetry |access-date=2024-03-04 |website=www.aqa.org.uk |language=en}}</ref> | ||
== |
==Synopsis== | ||
The play is set in 1912, at the Birlings' large home in the industrial town of Brumley. Arthur Birling, a wealthy ], magistrate and local politician, celebrates his daughter Sheila's engagement to Gerald Croft, son of a rival magnate. Also present are Birling's wife Sybil and their son Eric (whose drinking problem the family discreetly ignores). After dinner, Sheila and Sybil leave the dining room to go into the ], while Birling lectures the young men on the importance of self-reliance and looking after one's own, and talks of the bright future that awaits them (which, he believes, will include a knighthood for himself on the next honours list). | |||
The evening is interrupted when the maid Edna announces the arrival of a man calling himself ] Goole, who explains that earlier that day he had seen the dead body of a young woman named Eva Smith, who had died by drinking disinfectant. He has been given the "duty" of investigating her death and the Birlings' involvement in it. He has seen her diary, which mentions members of the Birling family. | |||
Inspector Goole arrives and explains that a woman called Eva Smith killed herself by drinking strong disinfectant. He implies that she has left a diary naming names, including members of the Birling family. Goole produces a photograph of Eva and shows it to Arthur, who acknowledges that she worked in one of his mills. He admits that he dismissed her 18 months ago for her involvement in an abortive workers' strike. He denies responsibility for her death. | |||
Goole produces a photograph of Smith and shows it to Birling, who acknowledges that she worked in one of his factories. He admits to having dismissed her for leading strike action, with most of the female workers demanding equal pay to males. Despite admitting that he left Smith without a job, Birling denies any responsibility for her death. | |||
Sheila enters the room and is drawn into the discussion. After prompting from Goole, she admits to recognizing Eva as well. She confesses that Eva served her in a department store and Sheila contrived to have her fired for an imagined slight. She admits that Eva's behaviour had been blameless and that the firing was motivated solely by Sheila's jealousy and spite towards a pretty working-class woman. | |||
Sheila (having been sent by her mother to bring Birling, Eric and Gerald to the drawing room) is shown a photograph of Smith. She explains that once, when she was out shopping with her mother, Sheila saw a dress she liked and tried it on, even though her mother and an assistant thought it wasn't right for her. Smith, now employed at this shop, also helped with the trying-on. Sheila realised that the dress didn't suit her; Smith held the dress against herself and Sheila could see that it looked much better on her. Seeing Smith smiling at the other assistant, Sheila took umbrage and angrily ordered the manager of the department store to fire her. Sheila's real motivation, which she ashamedly confesses, was the jealousy that she felt towards Smith, perceiving her as prettier than herself. Eric leaves the dining room. | |||
Sybil enters the room and Goole continues his interrogation, revealing that Eva was also known as Daisy Renton. Gerald starts at the mention of the name and Sheila becomes suspicious. Gerald admits that he met a woman by that name in a theatre bar. He gave her money and arranged to see her again. Goole reveals that Gerald had installed Eva as his mistress, and gave her money and promises of continued support before ending the relationship. Arthur and Sybil are horrified. As an ashamed Gerald exits the room, Sheila acknowledges his nature and credits him for speaking truthfully but also signals that their engagement is over. | |||
Sybil enters the dining room. The Inspector mentions that Smith subsequently used the name Daisy Renton. Gerald is noticeably startled, and admits to having met a woman of that name in the Palace Bar, where Smith had resorted to prostitution to sustain herself. Seeing that Smith was hungry and struggling to cope financially, and was out of place there, Gerald gave her money and arranged for her to move temporarily into a vacant flat belonging to one of his friends. Gerald reveals that he began a relationship with Smith over the summer, but parted with her after a few months. Sheila, disheartened, returns her engagement ring to Gerald, who leaves the house, saying he will return. | |||
Goole identifies Sybil as the head of a women's charity to which Eva/Daisy had turned for help. Despite Sybil's haughty responses, she eventually admits that Eva, pregnant and destitute, had asked the committee for financial aid. Sybil had convinced the committee that the girl was a liar and that her application should be denied. Despite vigorous cross-examination from Goole, Sybil denies any wrongdoing. Sheila begs her mother not to continue, but Goole plays his final card, making Sybil admit that the "drunken young man" should give a 'public confession, accepting all the blame'. Eric enters the room, and after brief questioning from Goole, he breaks down, admitting that he drunkenly forced Eva to have sex and stole £50 from his father's business to pay her off when she became pregnant. Arthur and Sybil break down, and the family dissolves into screaming recriminations. | |||
The Inspector turns his attention to Sybil, a patron of a charity that helps women in difficult situations, which Smith (by then pregnant and destitute) had turned to for help, using the name "Mrs. Birling". Sybil, seeing this as a deliberate mockery of herself, convinced the committee to deny her a grant. She argued that Smith had been irresponsible and suggested that she find the father and get him to face his responsibilities; Smith said that she had refused to accept any more money from the father once she knew it had been stolen. Despite vigorous cross-examination from the Inspector, Sybil denies any wrongdoing. Goole plays his final card, forcing Sybil to lay the blame on the "drunken young man" who had got Smith pregnant. It slowly dawns on the rest of the family, except Sybil, that Eric is the young man in question, and "Mrs. Birling" was the first name that had come to Smith's mind because he had fathered her child. | |||
Goole accuses them of contributing to Eva's death. He reminds the Birlings (and the audience) that actions have consequences. "If men will not learn that lesson, then they will be taught it in fire and blood and anguish." | |||
Eric enters, and after brief questioning from Goole, breaks down and admits responsibility for the pregnancy: he had forced himself on Smith after a drinking spree at the Palace Bar. After finding out that Smith was pregnant, Eric stole £50 (some £6,900 in 2023) from his father's business to support her and their child, but she refused the stolen money and cut contact with Eric. Birling and Sybil are outraged by Eric's behaviour, and the evening dissolves into angry recriminations. The Inspector reminds the family that actions have consequences and that all people are intertwined in one society, stating: "if men will not learn that lesson, then they will be taught it in fire and blood and anguish". He leaves. | |||
Gerald returns, telling the family that there may be no 'Inspector Goole' on the police force. Arthur makes a call to the Chief Constable, who confirms this. Gerald points out that as Goole was lying about being a policeman, there may be no dead girl. Placing a second call to the local infirmary, Gerald determines that no recent cases of suicide have been reported. The elder Birlings and Gerald celebrate, with Arthur dismissing the evening's events as "moonshine" and "bluffing". The younger Birlings, however, realise the error of their ways and promise to change. Gerald is keen to resume his engagement to Sheila, but she is reluctant, since with or without a dead girl he still admitted to having had an affair. | |||
Birling's greatest worry is the scandal that will arise from Eric's theft of his firm's money, which will come out at the inquest. The family begins to question if "Goole" was a real police inspector. Gerald returns, and reveals that he had met a police sergeant he knew, who did not know of any police inspector named Goole. To confirm this, Birling makes a phone call to his friend, the chief constable, who confirms that there is no Inspector Goole on the force. Gerald points out that they could not be sure that Goole had shown the same photograph to the different members of the family; there could have been several young women, and they did not know that any of them had died. Gerald phones the infirmary, and they confirm that no one has died there that day, and they have not had a suicide in months. The family concludes that the Inspector was a fraud and that they have been the victims of a ]. | |||
The play ends abruptly with a telephone call, taken by Arthur, who reports that the body of a young woman has been found, a suspected case of suicide by disinfectant, and that the local police are on their way to question the Birlings. The true identity of Goole is never explained, but it is clear that the family's confessions over the course of the evening are true, and that they will be disgraced publicly when news of their involvement in Eva's demise is revealed. | |||
Gerald and the elder Birlings celebrate in relief, but Eric and Sheila continue to rue their own and the others' actions. The phone rings: it is the police, who tell Birling that a young woman has just died on her way to the infirmary in a suspected suicide, and that a policeman is on his way to question the family. The Inspector's identity is left unexplained, but it is clear that the family's confessions over the course of the evening have all been true, and that public disgrace will soon befall them. | |||
==Cast of characters== | |||
== Characters == | |||
===Eva Smith/Daisy Renton=== | |||
Arthur Birling is a "sikici-looking, rather portentous man in his middle fifties", husband of Maho and father of Haydar and Got Birling. He represents the capitalist ruling class, repeatedly describing himself with pride as a "hard-headed businessman", and the head of a patriarchal family structure, and is arguably the main subject of Priestley's social critique. Dominant, arrogant, self-centred and morally blind, he is insistent throughout about his lack of responsibility for Eva/Daisy's death and quotes his economic justification for firing her as being the importance of keeping his labour costs low and quelling dissent, which he says is standard business practice. Although he is authoritative and has risen to a position of economic and social prominence, he reveals his lower social rank to that of his wife, when he compliments the cook right at the start of the play, and by his continual need to assert his social importance. (His status as an ] and former ] of Brumley is repeated several times in the play, with increasing comic effect). He appears pleased at the economic and social cachet brought by his daughter's engagement to Gerald Croft, and resents Goole's intrusion on the family. He remains unaffected by the details of Eva/Daisy's death, and his own concerns appear to be retaining his social standing, avoiding public embarrassment by the leaking of a scandal, insisting that Eric accounts for and repays the stolen company money and that Sheila should reconsider her relationship with Gerald in order to maintain a promised Croft-Birling merger. | |||
The (deceased) young woman who represents the working class in a capitalist society. She is described as young and pretty, with dark eyes. Her parents were dead, and she had no one to turn to when she was unable to support herself through honest employment. | |||
=== Inspector Goole === | |||
Apparently a police inspector, sent to investigate a suicide.<ref>{{cite web|title=Inspector Goole Character Analysis|url=https://englishmadesimple.org/inspector-goole-a-character-analysis/|website=English Made Simple|date=15 November 2020 |publisher=englishmadesimple.org|location=England|access-date=29 October 2022|archive-date=7 February 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230207103303/https://englishmadesimple.org/inspector-goole-a-character-analysis/|url-status=live}}</ref> He seems to be familiar with every detail of the case already, interrogating the family solely to expose their guilt rather than to discover unknown information. Many critics and audiences have interpreted Goole's role as that of an "avenging angel" because of his supernatural omniscience and his final warning, and because of his name, which is a ] of the word "]". It is suggested in the final scene that a real investigation will follow Goole's, and his purpose has been to warn the family in advance and encourage them to accept responsibility for their wrongdoing. The inspector is the drive for Priestley's socialist views within the play. | |||
===Arthur Birling === | |||
Arthur Birling is "a heavy-looking, rather ] man in his middle fifties". He represents the ruling capitalist class, repeatedly describing himself with pride as a "hard-headed businessman", and is arguably the main subject of Priestley's social critique. Dominant, arrogant, self-centred, and morally blind, he shows his stubbornness by refusing to take any responsibility for Eva's death. He remains unaffected by the suicide, and his concerns appear to be the avoidance of public scandal, the recovery of the money Eric stole from the company, and the resumption of Sheila and Gerald's engagement, which promises to effect a Croft-Birling merger (which looks likely to bring about a monopoly). | |||
Arthur Birling is used by Priestley as a dramatic vehicle to criticise capitalism, the arrogance of the wealthy middle class, and the ignorance of the older generation. | |||
=== Sybil Birling === | === Sybil Birling === | ||
Sybil Birling |
Sybil Birling, "a rather cold woman" of about fifty, is Arthur's wife, from a higher social class than his. As the leader of a charitable organisation, she assumes a social and moral superiority over Inspector Goole, whose questioning style she frequently describes as "impertinent" and "offensive". Like her husband, she refuses to accept responsibility for the death of Eva Smith and is more concerned with maintaining the family's reputation, even going so far as to lie and deny that she recognises Smith's picture. She derides women like Eva as immoral, dishonest, and greedy. | ||
=== Sheila Birling === | === Sheila Birling === | ||
Sheila Birling is the daughter of Arthur and Sybil Birling, and the older sister of Eric. Sheila begins as a naive and self-centred young woman, but becomes the most sympathetic member of the group over the course of the play, revealing insecurity about her appearance, showing remorse for her part in Eva's downfall, and encouraging her family to do the same. By the play's end her social conscience has been awakened and she has a new awareness of her responsibilities to others. She represents the younger generation's break from the selfish behaviour and capitalist views of its elders. Sheila shows her naivety and lack of maturity in the way she reacts to her father. She is quick to apologise, it is clear that she is keen to behave well. She also refers to her father as 'Daddy', a childish term. As the play progresses, Sheila's character develops and she begins to stand up for herself. | |||
The Birlings' eldest child, described as a very pretty girl in her mid-twenties, 'excitable and very pleased with life', and rather excited about her engagement to Gerald. She starts out as a playful, self-centred girl who loves attention. Throughout the play, she becomes the most sympathetic family member, showing remorse and guilt on hearing the news of her part in the girl's downfall, and encouraging the family (mostly unsuccessfully) to accept responsibility for their part in Eva/Daisy’s death. She is revealed not to be as naive as originally thought, revealing her suspicions about her fiancé’s infidelity. Despite continual criticism from her father, she becomes more rebellious toward her parents, supporting her brother against them and assisting Goole in his interrogations. By the end of the play, she represents the younger generation's protests against the morality of the older generation and seems the most responsive to Goole’s Socialist views about moral responsibility towards others. Priestley uses Sheila to show that even though most wealthy people are snobbish and don't care about anybody but themselves there are exceptions: Sheila is one. | |||
At the end of the play, Sheila is much wiser. She can now judge her parents and Gerald from a new perspective, but the greatest change has been in herself: her social conscience has been awakened and she is aware of her responsibilities. The Sheila who had a girl dismissed from her job for a trivial reason has vanished forever. | |||
Eric Birling | === Eric Birling === | ||
Eric Birling is the son of Arthur and Sybil Birling and the younger brother of Sheila. Eric is presented as a "]" character with a drinking habit, who forced himself on Eva and made her pregnant. He is distanced from the rest of the family and feels he cannot talk to them about his problems. With his sister, he repents of, and accepts responsibility for, the way he treated Eva. | |||
Eric Birling is Arthur Birling and Sybil Birling's son. | |||
=== Gerald Croft === | === Gerald Croft === | ||
The son of Sir George and Lady Croft of Crofts Limited, a friendly competitor of Birling and Company, and the fiancé of Sheila. The revelation of Gerald's affair with Eva puts an end to the engagement, though Sheila commends him for his truthfulness and for his initial compassion towards Smith. | |||
The son of Sir George Croft of Crofts Limited, a competitor of Birling and Company, he is at the Birling residence to celebrate his recent engagement to Sheila Birling. Gerald is revealed to have secretly known Eva/Daisy and installed her as his mistress, becoming "the most important person in her life", before ending the relationship. After the revelation of his affair, he is not blamed as heavily as the other characters – Sheila commends him for his honesty and for initially showing Eva/Daisy compassion, even though he is shown as cowardly and thoughtless for taking advantage of a vulnerable woman. Gerald thinks that Goole is not a police inspector, that the family may not all be referring to the same woman and that there may not be a body. Initially he appears to be correct, and does not think the Birlings have anything to feel ashamed of or worry about. He is caused to confess as soon as he shouts out in shock, and this is where the inspector gathers that Gerald had some kind of involvement in Eva/Daisy's life. | |||
=== |
=== Edna === | ||
Edna is the Birlings' maid. | |||
A mysterious interrogator who introduces himself as "Inspector Goole", claiming that he has seen the dead body of Eva/Daisy earlier that day after her slow and painful suicide by swallowing disinfectant, and that he has “a duty” to investigate the Birlings’ responsibility for her death. He makes a brief reference to a diary left by Eva/Daisy although this is never seen or explicitly referred to. Throughout the play, it is suggested that Goole knows everything about Eva/Daisy’s life and the Birlings’ involvement in her death, and is interrogating the family solely to reveal their guilt rather than to discover unknown information. Both during and after his interrogation of the family, the Birlings query whether he is actually a real inspector, and a phone call made by Arthur to the local police station reveals that there is no Inspector Goole in the local police force. Many critics and audiences have interpreted Goole’s role as an “avenging angel” or a supernatural being because of his unexplained foreknowledge of events, his prophetic final speech in which he says that humanity will learn its lesson in “fire and blood and anguish” (referring to the First World War, two years after the setting of the play 1912)<ref name="1992ed" /> and even because of his name, which plays on the word “ghoul” (meaning “ghost”).<ref name="MBG">{{cite book|last=Gale|first=Maggie Barbara|title=J.B. Priestley|publisher=Routledge|location=London|year=2008|page=140|isbn=978-0-415-40243-9}}</ref> It is suggested in the final scene that Goole’s interrogation of the family will foreshadow a further interrogation to follow by the “real” police force, and that Goole’s purpose has been to warn the family in advance and encourage them to accept responsibility and repent for their bad behaviour. Goole also forces the characters to question their very own lives, and if the ones they were living were true.In addition he also feels a responsibility to make the Birling family feel guilt for thier actions. The inspector also makes the readers think about the fact that the inspector himself can be the Birling's family guilty conscious haunting them about their past mistakes. In addition to this, Priestley is also showing his views about 1912 through the inspector and other characters bit by bit to reveal himself and his opinions as the author. | |||
=== Eva Smith/Daisy Renton === | |||
The unseen working class woman who Goole claims has committed suicide whilst pregnant with Eric Birling's baby, and who has been mistreated by each member of the Birling family and by Gerald Croft. Through reports from other characters, she is described as “pretty” with soft brown hair and big dark eyes, and it is explained that she has no family and must work for her living. Her beauty is commented on by all the characters, though it appears to work against her. Her beauty attracts both Gerald and Eric to her, with Eric sexually exploiting her. Sheila comments disparagingly that Eva looked prettier when she wore a certain dress than Sheila did herself, and seems threatened by Eva’s beauty, confessing that if Eva had been plain she would have been unlikely to have had her fired. It is also suggested that Eva/Daisy is morally principled, as she refuses to accept stolen money from Eric, despite her dire financial situation. Eva/Daisy appears to be a victim of her class, and is judged by the (female) characters for not acting appropriately for her class. Sheila imagines that Eva laughed at her and did not act respectfully towards her and so “punishes” her by having her fired. Sybil also criticizes Eva for appearing proud and putting on airs and graces, and for being “impertinent” rather than being meek and grateful to her social superiors. The audience is invited to dwell on Eva/Daisy’s vulnerability and her suffering at the hands of an exploitative employer, her sexual abuse at the hands of Eric, her powerlessness caused by her gender, class and poverty, and her victimization on the basis of a sexual double standard.http://en.wikipedia.org/Wikipedia:New_contributors%27_help_page | |||
===Edna=== | |||
Edna does not have much to do in this play, although she is the only person we see in this play who has a similar background to Eva Smith. We see the Birlings ordering her around, and it is she who shows in the Inspector. | |||
==Criticism and interpretation== | |||
==Reception and interpretation== | |||
Highly successful after its first and subsequent London productions, the play is now considered one of Priestley’s greatest works, and has been subject to a variety of critical interpretations. | |||
Highly successful after its first and subsequent London productions, the play is now considered one of Priestley's greatest works, and it has been the subject of a variety of critical interpretations. | |||
After the new wave of social realist theatre in the 1950s and 1960s, the play fell out of fashion |
After the new wave of social realist theatre in the 1950s and 1960s, the play fell out of fashion and was dismissed as an example of outdated ] ], but it became a staple of regional ]. Following several successful revivals (including ]'s 1992 production for the ]), the play was "rediscovered" and hailed as a damning social criticism of capitalism and middle-class hypocrisy in the manner of the social realist dramas of ] and ]. It has been read as a parable about the destruction of Victorian social values and the disintegration of pre-World War I English society, and Goole's final speech has been interpreted variously as a quasi-Christian vision of ] and ] and as a socialist manifesto. | ||
The struggle between the embattled patriarch Arthur Birling and Inspector Goole has been interpreted by many critics as a symbolic confrontation between capitalism and socialism, and arguably demonstrates Priestley's |
The struggle between the embattled patriarch Arthur Birling and Inspector Goole has been interpreted by many critics as a symbolic confrontation between capitalism and socialism, and it arguably demonstrates Priestley's socialist political criticism of the perceived selfishness and moral hypocrisy of middle-class capitalist society in 1950s Britain.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.oxnotes.com/an-inspector-calls-context-and-political-views.html|title=An Inspector Calls Context Notes – Learn GCSE English Literature|website=OxNotes GCSE Revision|access-date=8 December 2019|archive-date=5 December 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191205110118/http://www.oxnotes.com/an-inspector-calls-context-and-political-views.html|url-status=live}}</ref> While no one member of the Birling family is solely responsible for Eva's death, together they function as a hermetic class system that exploits neglected, vulnerable women, with each example of exploitation leading collectively to Eva's social exclusion, despair and suicide. The play also arguably acts as a critique of Victorian-era notions of middle-class philanthropy towards the poor, which is based on the presumption of the charity-givers' social superiority and on a severe moral judgement of the "deserving poor". The romantic idea of gentlemanly chivalry towards "fallen women" is also debunked as being based on male lust and sexual exploitation of the weak by the powerful. In Goole's final speech, Eva Smith is called a representation of millions of vulnerable working-class people, and the speech can be read as a call to action to English society to take more responsibility for working-class people, prefiguring the development of the post-World War II ]. | ||
==Productions== | ==Productions== | ||
''An Inspector Calls'' was first performed in 1945 in two |
''An Inspector Calls'' was first performed in 1945 in two Russian theatres (Moscow's ] and Leningrad's Comedy Theatre), as a suitable British venue could not be found.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Priestley|first1=J. B.|title=Introduction to the Plays of J.B.Priestly|date=1950|publisher=Heinemann|location=London|pages=xii–xiii|volume=III}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Remember Eva Smith: The Inspector's Russian Journey|url=https://100objectsbradford.wordpress.com/2011/06/15/19-remember-eva-smith-the-inspectors-russian-journey/|website=100 Objects from Special Collections at the University of Bradford|date=15 June 2011 |publisher=University of Bradford|location=Yorkshire, England|access-date=4 October 2015|archive-date=7 October 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151007163407/https://100objectsbradford.wordpress.com/2011/06/15/19-remember-eva-smith-the-inspectors-russian-journey/|url-status=live}}</ref> Priestley had written the play in a single week and all Britain's theatres had already been booked for the season.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.jbpriestleysociety.com/for-students-and-teachers/|title=For Students and Teachers {{!}} jbpriestleysociety.com|website=www.jbpriestleysociety.com|access-date=25 May 2017|archive-date=18 May 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170518074056/http://www.jbpriestleysociety.com/for-students-and-teachers/|url-status=live}}</ref> The play had its first British production in 1946 at the ] in London with ] as Inspector Goole, ] as Gerald Croft, ] as Sheila Birling, ] as Arthur Birling, Marian Spencer as Sybil Birling and ] as Eric Birling.<ref>{{cite web |title=An Inspector Calls at New Theatre 1946 |url=https://www.abouttheartists.com/productions/144510-an-inspector-calls-at-new-theatre-1946 |access-date=20 January 2023 |website=www.abouttheartists.com}}</ref> | ||
The first |
The first Broadway production opened at the ] on 21 October 1947 and ran for 95 performances until 10 January 1948. The production was staged by ] and produced by Courtney Burr and Lassor H. Grosberg. The cast included ] as Arthur Birling, ] as Gerald Croft, ] as Sheila Birling, ] as Sybil Birling, ] as Edna, ] as Eric Birling and ] as Inspector Goole.<ref name="Nathan1948">{{cite book | ||
|last1= Nathan | |||
|first1= George Jean | |||
|title= The Theatre Book of the Year: A Record and an Interpretation | |||
|chapter= An Inspector Calls | |||
|date= 1948 | |||
|location= New York | |||
|publisher= Alfred A. Knopf | |||
|pages= 113–115 | |||
}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=An Inspector Calls at Booth Theatre 1947–1948 |url=https://www.abouttheartists.com/productions/144511-an-inspector-calls-at-booth-theatre-1947-1948 |access-date=20 January 2023 |website=www.abouttheartists.com}}</ref> | |||
The play was produced and performed at the Ferdowsi |
The play was produced and performed at the Ferdowsi Theatre in ] in the late 1940s, based on the translation by ]. It was staged in the first season of the ] in 1953.<ref>Edinburgh Gateway Company (1965), ''The Twelve Seasons of the Edinburgh Gateway Company, 1953 – 1965'', St. Giles Press, Edinburgh, p. 44</ref> | ||
In 1986 ] directed a production at the ], Manchester, with Geraldine Alexander as Sheila Birling, ] as Eric Birling and ] as Inspector Goole.<ref>{{cite web |title=An Inspector Calls at The Royal Exchange 1986 |url=https://www.abouttheartists.com/productions/144512-an-inspector-calls-at-the-royal-exchange-1986 |access-date=20 January 2023 |website=www.abouttheartists.com}}</ref> | |||
] played Inspector Goole in a 1987 production directed by ] and designed by ] that opened at the ] on 14 April then transferred to London's Westminster Theatre on 13 May 1987. The cast included ] as Sybil Birling, ] as Arthur Birling, ] as Sheila Birling, ] as Gerald Croft and ] as Eric Birling. | |||
] played Inspector Goole in a 1987 production directed by ] and designed by Daphne Dare that opened at ] on 14 April then transferred to London's Westminster Theatre on 13 May 1987. The cast included ] as Sybil Birling, ] as Arthur Birling, ] as Sheila Birling, ] as Gerald Croft and ] as Eric Birling.<ref>{{cite web |title=An Inspector Calls at Theatr Clwyd and others 1987 |url=https://www.abouttheartists.com/productions/144513-an-inspector-calls-at-theatr-clwyd-and-others-1987 |access-date=20 January 2023 |website=www.abouttheartists.com}}</ref> | |||
==Royal National Theatre Revival== | |||
A revival of the play by British director ] (produced by ]) opened at the ]'s ] in September 1992.<ref>{{cite web |title=An Inspector Calls at Lyttelton Theatre 1992–1993 |url=https://www.abouttheartists.com/productions/113848-an-inspector-calls-at-lyttelton-theatre-1992-1993 |access-date=20 January 2023 |website=www.abouttheartists.com}}</ref> Daldry's concept was to reference two eras: the 1945 post-war era, when the play was written, and the ostensible historical setting for the work in pre-war 1912; this emphasised the way the character Goole was observing, and deploring, the Birling family's behaviour from Priestley's own cultural viewpoint.<ref>{{cite web|last1=Woodeson|first1=Nicholas|author-link=Nicholas Woodeson|title=Revisiting Inspector Calls|url=http://www.whatsonstage.com/west-end-theatre/news/09-2009/nicholas-woodeson-on-revisiting-inspector-calls_15779.html|website=WhatsOnStage.com|date=23 September 2009 |access-date=7 February 2018|archive-date=8 February 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180208004223/http://www.whatsonstage.com/west-end-theatre/news/09-2009/nicholas-woodeson-on-revisiting-inspector-calls_15779.html|url-status=live}}</ref><ref name=lyn/> It won the ], and was widely praised for making the work involving and politically relevant for a modern audience. The production is often credited with single-handedly rediscovering Priestley's works and "rescuing" him from the reputation of being obsolete and class-bound, although the production had some detractors, including ],<ref>{{cite news|last1=Morley|first1=Sheridan|title=Stop messing about|url=http://archive.spectator.co.uk/article/26th-september-1992/53/theatre|access-date=4 October 2015|work=]|date=25 September 1992|page=53|archive-date=5 October 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151005175442/http://archive.spectator.co.uk/article/26th-september-1992/53/theatre|url-status=live}}</ref> who regarded it as a gimmicky travesty of the author's patent intentions. The success of the production since 1992 has led to a critical reappraisal of Priestley as a politically engaged playwright who offered a sustained critique of the hypocrisy of English society. A Broadway transfer of the production starring ] opened at the Royale Theatre (now the ]) on 27 April 1994 and played 454 performances.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.ibdb.com/broadway-production/an-inspector-calls-4605|title=An Inspector Calls|website=Internet Broadway Database|access-date=26 October 2016|archive-date=26 October 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161026232711/https://www.ibdb.com/broadway-production/an-inspector-calls-4605|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
The play was successfully revived by English director ] for the ]'s ] on 11 September 1992 and later transferred to the ] on 25 August 1993 and then to the ] on 24 October 1995. The original production featured ] as Inspector Goole (later played by ] and ]), ] as Arthur Birling (later played by ], ] and ]), ] as Sybil Birling (later played by ], ] and ]), ] as Sheila Birling (later played by ]) and ] as Gerald Croft. Daldrey's production was transferred to Broadway in 1994, where it ran at New York City's Royale Theatre from 27 April to 28 May 1995. ] recreated his role as Inspector Goole with ] as Arthur Birling and ] (later ]) as Sybil Birling. It won the ]. | |||
]]] The Stephen Daldry production went on a tour of the UK in 2011 and continued to tour into 2020,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.aninspectorcalls.com/#/tour/|title=An Inspector Calls|website=www.aninspectorcalls.com|access-date=9 April 2012|archive-date=11 April 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120411231654/http://www.aninspectorcalls.com/#/tour/|url-status=live}}</ref> with ] and Liam Brennan <!--Do not link to the page about the consultant anaesthetist--> among the actors playing Inspector Goole.<ref name="AnInspectorCallsWebsite">{{cite web |title=An Inspector Calls cast |url=https://www.aninspectorcalls.com/company/cast |website=An Inspector Calls |access-date=5 February 2020 |archive-date=8 September 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190908124921/http://aninspectorcalls.com/company/cast |url-status=live }}</ref> The production returned to the ] in London's ] in November 2016, with Liam Brennan in the name part.<ref name=lyn>{{cite news|last1=Gardner|first1=Lyn|title=An Inspector Calls review – Stephen Daldry helps make the case for justice|url=https://www.theguardian.com/culture/2016/nov/13/an-inspector-calls-review-stephen-daldry-jb-priestly-playhouse|access-date=7 February 2018|work=The Guardian|date=13 November 2016|archive-date=7 February 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180207182902/https://www.theguardian.com/culture/2016/nov/13/an-inspector-calls-review-stephen-daldry-jb-priestly-playhouse|url-status=live}}</ref> Brennan once again starred as Inspector Goole in a 2022 tour of the UK billed as the production's Thirtieth Anniversary Tour. | |||
Daldry’s production<ref>http://www.aninspectorcalls.com/</ref> (with set design by ]) was notable for employing non-naturalistic staging, set design, lighting and musical composition, drawing heavily from Expressionism as well as cinematic styles of ] and ]. Advertisements for the production featured the Inspector, standing in half shadow lit by a street lamp, recalling the image of ] in the film ]. Daldry and McNeil researched early productions of the play (including the Moscow première) that featured minimalist, non-naturalistic set and lighting design. McNeil's set “divides” the stage into three time zones, reflecting Priestley’s own presentation of multiple time zones in his other plays such as ]. The set of the Birling’s house represents the time zone of the play in early 1912; the front of the stage, featuring warped floor boards, a red telephone box and street children listening to a wireless, represented London in middle of World War II, when Priestley wrote the play; and Goole’s final speech is delivered directly to the audience, with the house lights turned up so that the audience are visible, representing the present day. | |||
Another production opened on 25 October 1995 at the Garrick Theatre and ran for six years until its transfer to the Playhouse Theatre in 2001.<ref>{{cite web |title=An Inspector Calls at Garrick Theatre 1995–2001 |url=https://www.abouttheartists.com/productions/122795-an-inspector-calls-at-garrick-theatre-1995-2001 |access-date=20 January 2023 |website=www.abouttheartists.com}}</ref> In 2009 it reopened at the Novello Theatre for a year-long run, followed by another transfer to ] in December 2009, running for only four months.<ref>{{cite web |title=An Inspector Calls at Novello Theatre and others 2009–2010 |url=https://www.abouttheartists.com/productions/122797-an-inspector-calls-at-novello-theatre-and-others-2009-2010 |access-date=20 January 2023 |website=www.abouttheartists.com}}</ref> | |||
The set of the Birling’s house is raised on stilts and built in non-realistic, almost cartoonish – doors are deliberately low so that the actors have to stoop to walk in and out, and windows are high above door frames, through which characters sometimes pop out like dolls. The walls of the house open like a doll’s house, emphasising that the Birlings family live in a cloistered fantasy world. The house is raised above the stage on stilts, physically looking down on a cobblestoned area lit with a street lamp. | |||
==Adaptations== | |||
]Daldry’s production and staging placed considerable emphasis on the Birling house as a site of social exclusion, and places a number of additional characters on stage who represent those who are excluded from the Birling’s world. As the play begins, the Birlings are inside their house, visible only slightly through the windows. Our attention is drawn instead to the back of the house and the cobblestoned area, where three young children in WWII dress are scavenging through food scraps thrown by Edna, the Birling’s elderly (and voiceless) maidservant. The children interact freely with Goole and Edna, but are only occasionally seen by the Birlings themselves, who inevitably become disturbed by their presence and look away or else ignore them. Edna appears to share a sense of complicity with Goole, inviting him closer to the house and smiling occasionally when the secrets of the family are revealed, but she makes no comment on the action. | |||
The play has been adapted to film or television at least eleven times, including: | |||
* A 1948 British television film, produced by Harold Clayton<ref>{{cite web |title=An Inspector Calls (lost television adaptation of play; 1948) – The Lost Media Wiki |url=https://lostmediawiki.com/An_Inspector_Calls_(lost_television_adaptation_of_play;_1948) |access-date=16 September 2023 |website=lostmediawiki.com }}</ref> | |||
Crucially, the Birlings must descend from the safety and opulence of their brightly lit Edwardian drawing room and into the dimly lit cobblestoned area to engage with Goole and confess their actions. Towards the end of the play, a crowd of men women and children appear en masse, as the Birlings are judged and accused by Goole. Though their presence is never explained, these silent nameless characters have been interpreted variously as being a Greek chorus, a jury or a lynch mob, all standing in silent judgment of the Birlings and representing the powerless working class masses that are excluded from and exploited by the Birling’s lives and working practices. | |||
* ], directed by ] | |||
* A 1965 Bengali film, '']'', directed by ] | |||
The dramatic conflict is heightened by film noir-inspired lighting and smoke, a dissonant string orchestra score that is reminiscent of movie scores for horror films (including ]’s scores for ] films), and the house itself, which acts as a character in the story, apparently reacting to the family’s crisis. After the revelations of Goole’s visit, the house is tipped forward and half-falls into a ravine in the stage floor, its contents shattering and exploding all over the stage, leaving the Birlings to walk through the wreckage of their home. When Gerald proposes that Goole’s interrogation has no basis in evidence and that there is no dead woman in the infirmary, the house moves up and rights itself, suggesting the revival of the family's fortunes and their ability to withdraw from the world again. | |||
* A 1973 Soviet film, ''He came'', directed by A. Proshkin and L. Ishimbaeva | |||
* A 1979 Soviet film, ''Inspektor Gull'', directed by A. Proshkin | |||
The dynamic staging was considered to be a radical break with previous UK stagings of the play (which usually adhered to a single realistically depicted Edwardian drawing room set and a static dialogue-based performance style) and emphasized the metaphorical elements of the “inspection” and the themes of social exclusion and class warfare. Many theatre critics in 1992 read the production as a critic of Thatcherite Conservative politics, with Goole’s final speech reading as a direct rebuttal of former Prime Minister ]’s well-known statement “There is no such thing as society”. | |||
* A 1983 Swiss film, ''E Inspäkter chunnt'', directed by Bruno Kaspar | |||
* ], directed by Michael Simpson | |||
Daldry’s production was widely praised for re-invigorating the play for a new generation of theatregoers, and for making the play involving and politically relevant for a modern audience. The production is often credited with single-handedly rediscovering Priestley’s works and “rescuing” him from the reputation of being obsolete and class-bound. The success of the production since 1992 has led to a critical reappraisal of Priestley as a politically engaged playwright who offered a sustained critique of the hypocrisy of English society. | |||
* A 1998 ] radio play, starring ] | |||
* A 2010 ] radio play, starring ] | |||
Daldry's production was revived in London at the ] in September 2009 with a new cast, though retaining McNeil's original sets and staging. The Royal National Theatre also staged a successful revival of Priestley's ] in 2009. | |||
* A 2010 Bengali film, '']'' directed by Saron Dutta | |||
* ], directed by ] and ] | |||
The production established Daldry's reputation as a leading stage director. Following the success of the production, Daldry became Artistic Director of the ] in London from 1992–98, where he headed the theatre's £26 million development scheme. He went on to a successful career as a film director, winning international success and critical acclaim for his films ], ] and ], all of which won him ] nominations for best director. | |||
* ], directed by ] | |||
* A 2018 British film, directed by Jason Farries | |||
Daldry's production was revived at the ] in London for an eight-week run from September 25, 2009 (following previews from September 22) through November 14, 2009 and, according to Playbill.com, will transfer to ] on December 3 for a run through March 20, 2010. Daldry returned to re-direct the production and casting includes ] returning to the role of Inspector Goole (he previously took over that role from Kenneth Cranham during the same production's Broadway run in 1994) and ] as Arthur Birling, Sandra Duncan as Sybil Birling, Marianne Oldham as Sheila Birling, Robin Whiting as Eric Birling, Timothy Watson as Gerald Croft and Diana Payne Myers as Edna. | |||
* A 2022 play at the ] | |||
==2011/12 UK tour== | |||
The Stephen Daldry production went on a tour of the UK in 2011 and 2012.<ref>http://www.aninspectorcalls.com/#/tour/</ref> The play starred ] as Inspector Goole, Karen Archer as Sybil Birling, Geoff Leesley as Arthur Birling, John Sackville as Gerald Croft, Kelly Hotten as Sheila Birling, Henry Gilbert as Eric Birling and Janie Booth as Edna. | |||
The touring production used the same set and staging as the earlier Daldry productions, and included dates at ] in Salford, as well as in Belfast, Glasgow, Cardiff, Swindon and Newcastle. The tour finished in Wimbledon in May 2012. | |||
==Film, television and radio adaptations== | |||
Three films have been adapted from the play; a theatrical release and two television mini-series. | |||
{{Main|An Inspector Calls (film)|An Inspector Calls (TV series)}} | |||
Produced in the United Kingdom by Watergate Productions Ltd, the 1954 screenplay was adapted by ] and directed by ]. ] starred as Inspector Goole, renamed "Poole" for the film, with ] as Eva Smith, ] as Sheila Birling, ] as Arthur Birling, ] as Gerald Croft, ] as Sybil Birling and ] as Eric Birling. | |||
In 1979, a Soviet made-for-television two-part film '']'' (''Inspector Gull'' )) was produced, starring ] as Gull (Goole), ] as Arthur Birling and ] as Gerald Croft. | |||
A three-part television ] was produced by ] in 1982, directed by Michael Simpson. ] starred as Inspector Goole, and the cast included Sarah Berger as Sheila Birling, ] as Arthur Birling, ] as Gerald Croft, ] as Sybil Birling and ] as Eric Birling. | |||
On 14 July 2007 ] broadcast an adaptation by John Foley originally aired on the ], starring ] as Inspector Goole, ] as Arthur Birling and ] as Sybil Birling. The production was directed by Rosalyn Ward. | |||
A full-cast unabridged audio adaptation and analysis was released on audio CD and MP3-CD in the United Kingdom by SmartPass in 2004 as part of their ''Audio Education Study Guides'' series. | |||
A second 90 minute BBC Radio adaptation was transmitted on ] on 29 May 2010 in the ] slot.<ref>{{cite web | title=An Inspector Calls|url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00sh472|publisher=]|date=2010-05-29|accessdate=2010-06-05| archiveurl= http://web.archive.org/web/20100529091129/http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00sh472| archivedate= 29 May 2010 <!--DASHBot-->| deadurl= no}}</ref> It starred ] as Inspector Goole, ] as Arthur Birling, ] as Sybil Birling and ] as Sheila Birling. The production was directed by ]. | |||
==Awards and nominations== <!-- Non-performance awards only --> | ==Awards and nominations== <!-- Non-performance awards only --> | ||
;Awards | ;Awards | ||
;1993 Laurence Olivier Award for Best Revival | |||
* 1994 Drama Desk Award for Best Revival of a Play | * 1994 Drama Desk Award for Best Revival of a Play | ||
* 1994 Tony Award for Best Revival of a Play | * 1994 Tony Award for Best Revival of a Play | ||
==Editions== | |||
* {{cite book | last=Priestley | first=J. B. | title= An Inspector Calls: A Play in Three Acts | edition=First | location=London | publisher=Heinemann | year=1947 | oclc=59564726}} | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
{{Reflist}} | {{Reflist}} | ||
* {{cite web | author= | title=English Literature: An Inspector Calls | url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/schools/gcsebitesize/english_literature/dramainspectorcalls | work=GCSE Bitesize | publisher=BBC Schools Online | year=2008 | accessdate=2008-05-09}} | |||
* {{cite web | author= | title=J.B. Priestley | url=http://www.jbpriestley.co.uk/bio.php | publisher=J.B. Priestley.com | year=2008 | accessdate=2008-10-05 |archiveurl = http://web.archive.org/web/20080610054518/http://www.jbpriestley.co.uk/bio.php <!-- Bot retrieved archive --> |archivedate = 2008-06-10}} | |||
==Further reading== | |||
* {{cite book | last=Priestley | first=J. B. | title= An Inspector Calls: A Play in Three Acts | edition=First edition | location=London | publisher=Heinemann | year=1947 | oclc=59564726}} | |||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
{{Portal|Theatre}} | |||
* at the ] | |||
{{wikiquote}} | |||
* {{IBDB show|1565}} | |||
* in | |||
{{JBPriestley}} | |||
{{Navboxes | |||
| title = Awards for ''An Inspector Calls'' | |||
| list = | |||
{{DramaDesk PlayRevival 1976–2000}} | {{DramaDesk PlayRevival 1976–2000}} | ||
{{OlivierAward PlayRevival 1991–2000}} | {{OlivierAward PlayRevival 1991–2000}} | ||
{{TonyAward PlayRevival 1994–2000}} | {{TonyAward PlayRevival 1994–2000}} | ||
}} | |||
{{JBPriestley}} | |||
* http://www.dooyoo.co.uk/theatre-musicals-national/an-inspector-calls/1023475/ | |||
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Revision as of 16:56, 25 December 2024
1945 play by J. B. Priestley This article is about the play. For other uses, see An Inspector Calls (disambiguation).
An Inspector Calls | |
---|---|
First edition (1947) with dust jacket | |
Written by | J. B. Priestley |
Date premiered | 6 July 1945 |
Place premiered | Moscow, Soviet Union |
Original language | English |
Genre | Drama |
Setting | Edwardian England |
An Inspector Calls is a modern morality play and Drawing room play written by English dramatist J. B. Priestley, first performed in the Soviet Union in 1945 and at the New Theatre in London the following year. It is one of Priestley's best-known works for the stage and is considered to be one of the classics of mid-20th century English theatre. The play's success and reputation were boosted by a successful revival by English director Stephen Daldry for the National Theatre in 1992 and a tour of the UK in 2011–2012.
The play is a three-act drama which takes place on a single night on 5 April 1912. The play focuses on the prosperous upper-middle-class Birling family, who live in a comfortable home in the fictional town of Brumley, "an industrial city in the north Midlands". The family is visited by a man calling himself Inspector Goole, who questions the family about the suicide of a working-class woman in her mid-twenties. Long considered part of the repertory of classic drawing-room theatre, the play has also been hailed as a scathing criticism of the hypocrisies of Victorian and Edwardian English society and as an expression of Priestley's socialist political principles. The play is notable amongst students as many British schools study it as a prescribed text for the GCSE English Literature course.
Synopsis
The play is set in 1912, at the Birlings' large home in the industrial town of Brumley. Arthur Birling, a wealthy factory owner, magistrate and local politician, celebrates his daughter Sheila's engagement to Gerald Croft, son of a rival magnate. Also present are Birling's wife Sybil and their son Eric (whose drinking problem the family discreetly ignores). After dinner, Sheila and Sybil leave the dining room to go into the drawing room, while Birling lectures the young men on the importance of self-reliance and looking after one's own, and talks of the bright future that awaits them (which, he believes, will include a knighthood for himself on the next honours list).
The evening is interrupted when the maid Edna announces the arrival of a man calling himself Inspector Goole, who explains that earlier that day he had seen the dead body of a young woman named Eva Smith, who had died by drinking disinfectant. He has been given the "duty" of investigating her death and the Birlings' involvement in it. He has seen her diary, which mentions members of the Birling family.
Goole produces a photograph of Smith and shows it to Birling, who acknowledges that she worked in one of his factories. He admits to having dismissed her for leading strike action, with most of the female workers demanding equal pay to males. Despite admitting that he left Smith without a job, Birling denies any responsibility for her death.
Sheila (having been sent by her mother to bring Birling, Eric and Gerald to the drawing room) is shown a photograph of Smith. She explains that once, when she was out shopping with her mother, Sheila saw a dress she liked and tried it on, even though her mother and an assistant thought it wasn't right for her. Smith, now employed at this shop, also helped with the trying-on. Sheila realised that the dress didn't suit her; Smith held the dress against herself and Sheila could see that it looked much better on her. Seeing Smith smiling at the other assistant, Sheila took umbrage and angrily ordered the manager of the department store to fire her. Sheila's real motivation, which she ashamedly confesses, was the jealousy that she felt towards Smith, perceiving her as prettier than herself. Eric leaves the dining room.
Sybil enters the dining room. The Inspector mentions that Smith subsequently used the name Daisy Renton. Gerald is noticeably startled, and admits to having met a woman of that name in the Palace Bar, where Smith had resorted to prostitution to sustain herself. Seeing that Smith was hungry and struggling to cope financially, and was out of place there, Gerald gave her money and arranged for her to move temporarily into a vacant flat belonging to one of his friends. Gerald reveals that he began a relationship with Smith over the summer, but parted with her after a few months. Sheila, disheartened, returns her engagement ring to Gerald, who leaves the house, saying he will return.
The Inspector turns his attention to Sybil, a patron of a charity that helps women in difficult situations, which Smith (by then pregnant and destitute) had turned to for help, using the name "Mrs. Birling". Sybil, seeing this as a deliberate mockery of herself, convinced the committee to deny her a grant. She argued that Smith had been irresponsible and suggested that she find the father and get him to face his responsibilities; Smith said that she had refused to accept any more money from the father once she knew it had been stolen. Despite vigorous cross-examination from the Inspector, Sybil denies any wrongdoing. Goole plays his final card, forcing Sybil to lay the blame on the "drunken young man" who had got Smith pregnant. It slowly dawns on the rest of the family, except Sybil, that Eric is the young man in question, and "Mrs. Birling" was the first name that had come to Smith's mind because he had fathered her child.
Eric enters, and after brief questioning from Goole, breaks down and admits responsibility for the pregnancy: he had forced himself on Smith after a drinking spree at the Palace Bar. After finding out that Smith was pregnant, Eric stole £50 (some £6,900 in 2023) from his father's business to support her and their child, but she refused the stolen money and cut contact with Eric. Birling and Sybil are outraged by Eric's behaviour, and the evening dissolves into angry recriminations. The Inspector reminds the family that actions have consequences and that all people are intertwined in one society, stating: "if men will not learn that lesson, then they will be taught it in fire and blood and anguish". He leaves.
Birling's greatest worry is the scandal that will arise from Eric's theft of his firm's money, which will come out at the inquest. The family begins to question if "Goole" was a real police inspector. Gerald returns, and reveals that he had met a police sergeant he knew, who did not know of any police inspector named Goole. To confirm this, Birling makes a phone call to his friend, the chief constable, who confirms that there is no Inspector Goole on the force. Gerald points out that they could not be sure that Goole had shown the same photograph to the different members of the family; there could have been several young women, and they did not know that any of them had died. Gerald phones the infirmary, and they confirm that no one has died there that day, and they have not had a suicide in months. The family concludes that the Inspector was a fraud and that they have been the victims of a hoax.
Gerald and the elder Birlings celebrate in relief, but Eric and Sheila continue to rue their own and the others' actions. The phone rings: it is the police, who tell Birling that a young woman has just died on her way to the infirmary in a suspected suicide, and that a policeman is on his way to question the family. The Inspector's identity is left unexplained, but it is clear that the family's confessions over the course of the evening have all been true, and that public disgrace will soon befall them.
Characters
Eva Smith/Daisy Renton
The (deceased) young woman who represents the working class in a capitalist society. She is described as young and pretty, with dark eyes. Her parents were dead, and she had no one to turn to when she was unable to support herself through honest employment.
Inspector Goole
Apparently a police inspector, sent to investigate a suicide. He seems to be familiar with every detail of the case already, interrogating the family solely to expose their guilt rather than to discover unknown information. Many critics and audiences have interpreted Goole's role as that of an "avenging angel" because of his supernatural omniscience and his final warning, and because of his name, which is a homophone of the word "ghoul". It is suggested in the final scene that a real investigation will follow Goole's, and his purpose has been to warn the family in advance and encourage them to accept responsibility for their wrongdoing. The inspector is the drive for Priestley's socialist views within the play.
Arthur Birling
Arthur Birling is "a heavy-looking, rather portentous man in his middle fifties". He represents the ruling capitalist class, repeatedly describing himself with pride as a "hard-headed businessman", and is arguably the main subject of Priestley's social critique. Dominant, arrogant, self-centred, and morally blind, he shows his stubbornness by refusing to take any responsibility for Eva's death. He remains unaffected by the suicide, and his concerns appear to be the avoidance of public scandal, the recovery of the money Eric stole from the company, and the resumption of Sheila and Gerald's engagement, which promises to effect a Croft-Birling merger (which looks likely to bring about a monopoly). Arthur Birling is used by Priestley as a dramatic vehicle to criticise capitalism, the arrogance of the wealthy middle class, and the ignorance of the older generation.
Sybil Birling
Sybil Birling, "a rather cold woman" of about fifty, is Arthur's wife, from a higher social class than his. As the leader of a charitable organisation, she assumes a social and moral superiority over Inspector Goole, whose questioning style she frequently describes as "impertinent" and "offensive". Like her husband, she refuses to accept responsibility for the death of Eva Smith and is more concerned with maintaining the family's reputation, even going so far as to lie and deny that she recognises Smith's picture. She derides women like Eva as immoral, dishonest, and greedy.
Sheila Birling
Sheila Birling is the daughter of Arthur and Sybil Birling, and the older sister of Eric. Sheila begins as a naive and self-centred young woman, but becomes the most sympathetic member of the group over the course of the play, revealing insecurity about her appearance, showing remorse for her part in Eva's downfall, and encouraging her family to do the same. By the play's end her social conscience has been awakened and she has a new awareness of her responsibilities to others. She represents the younger generation's break from the selfish behaviour and capitalist views of its elders. Sheila shows her naivety and lack of maturity in the way she reacts to her father. She is quick to apologise, it is clear that she is keen to behave well. She also refers to her father as 'Daddy', a childish term. As the play progresses, Sheila's character develops and she begins to stand up for herself.
Eric Birling
Eric Birling is the son of Arthur and Sybil Birling and the younger brother of Sheila. Eric is presented as a "Jack the Lad" character with a drinking habit, who forced himself on Eva and made her pregnant. He is distanced from the rest of the family and feels he cannot talk to them about his problems. With his sister, he repents of, and accepts responsibility for, the way he treated Eva.
Gerald Croft
The son of Sir George and Lady Croft of Crofts Limited, a friendly competitor of Birling and Company, and the fiancé of Sheila. The revelation of Gerald's affair with Eva puts an end to the engagement, though Sheila commends him for his truthfulness and for his initial compassion towards Smith.
Edna
Edna is the Birlings' maid.
Reception and interpretation
Highly successful after its first and subsequent London productions, the play is now considered one of Priestley's greatest works, and it has been the subject of a variety of critical interpretations.
After the new wave of social realist theatre in the 1950s and 1960s, the play fell out of fashion and was dismissed as an example of outdated bourgeois "drawing room" dramas, but it became a staple of regional repertory theatre. Following several successful revivals (including Stephen Daldry's 1992 production for the National Theatre), the play was "rediscovered" and hailed as a damning social criticism of capitalism and middle-class hypocrisy in the manner of the social realist dramas of Shaw and Ibsen. It has been read as a parable about the destruction of Victorian social values and the disintegration of pre-World War I English society, and Goole's final speech has been interpreted variously as a quasi-Christian vision of hell and judgement and as a socialist manifesto.
The struggle between the embattled patriarch Arthur Birling and Inspector Goole has been interpreted by many critics as a symbolic confrontation between capitalism and socialism, and it arguably demonstrates Priestley's socialist political criticism of the perceived selfishness and moral hypocrisy of middle-class capitalist society in 1950s Britain. While no one member of the Birling family is solely responsible for Eva's death, together they function as a hermetic class system that exploits neglected, vulnerable women, with each example of exploitation leading collectively to Eva's social exclusion, despair and suicide. The play also arguably acts as a critique of Victorian-era notions of middle-class philanthropy towards the poor, which is based on the presumption of the charity-givers' social superiority and on a severe moral judgement of the "deserving poor". The romantic idea of gentlemanly chivalry towards "fallen women" is also debunked as being based on male lust and sexual exploitation of the weak by the powerful. In Goole's final speech, Eva Smith is called a representation of millions of vulnerable working-class people, and the speech can be read as a call to action to English society to take more responsibility for working-class people, prefiguring the development of the post-World War II welfare state.
Productions
An Inspector Calls was first performed in 1945 in two Russian theatres (Moscow's Kamerny Theatre and Leningrad's Comedy Theatre), as a suitable British venue could not be found. Priestley had written the play in a single week and all Britain's theatres had already been booked for the season. The play had its first British production in 1946 at the New Theatre in London with Ralph Richardson as Inspector Goole, Harry Andrews as Gerald Croft, Margaret Leighton as Sheila Birling, Julien Mitchell as Arthur Birling, Marian Spencer as Sybil Birling and Alec Guinness as Eric Birling.
The first Broadway production opened at the Booth Theatre on 21 October 1947 and ran for 95 performances until 10 January 1948. The production was staged by Cedric Hardwicke and produced by Courtney Burr and Lassor H. Grosberg. The cast included Melville Cooper as Arthur Birling, John Buckmaster as Gerald Croft, Rene Ray as Sheila Birling, Doris Lloyd as Sybil Birling, Patricia Marmont as Edna, John Merivale as Eric Birling and Thomas Mitchell as Inspector Goole.
The play was produced and performed at the Ferdowsi Theatre in Iran in the late 1940s, based on the translation by Bozorg Alavi. It was staged in the first season of the Edinburgh Gateway Company in 1953.
In 1986 Richard Wilson directed a production at the Royal Exchange, Manchester, with Geraldine Alexander as Sheila Birling, Hugh Grant as Eric Birling and Graeme Garden as Inspector Goole.
Tom Baker played Inspector Goole in a 1987 production directed by Peter Dews and designed by Daphne Dare that opened at Theatr Clwyd on 14 April then transferred to London's Westminster Theatre on 13 May 1987. The cast included Pauline Jameson as Sybil Birling, Peter Baldwin as Arthur Birling, Charlotte Attenborough as Sheila Birling, Simon Shepherd as Gerald Croft and Adam Godley as Eric Birling.
A revival of the play by British director Stephen Daldry (produced by PW Productions) opened at the National Theatre's Lyttelton Theatre in September 1992. Daldry's concept was to reference two eras: the 1945 post-war era, when the play was written, and the ostensible historical setting for the work in pre-war 1912; this emphasised the way the character Goole was observing, and deploring, the Birling family's behaviour from Priestley's own cultural viewpoint. It won the Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Revival of a Play, and was widely praised for making the work involving and politically relevant for a modern audience. The production is often credited with single-handedly rediscovering Priestley's works and "rescuing" him from the reputation of being obsolete and class-bound, although the production had some detractors, including Sheridan Morley, who regarded it as a gimmicky travesty of the author's patent intentions. The success of the production since 1992 has led to a critical reappraisal of Priestley as a politically engaged playwright who offered a sustained critique of the hypocrisy of English society. A Broadway transfer of the production starring Philip Bosco opened at the Royale Theatre (now the Bernard Jacobs Theatre) on 27 April 1994 and played 454 performances.
The Stephen Daldry production went on a tour of the UK in 2011 and continued to tour into 2020, with Tom Mannion and Liam Brennan among the actors playing Inspector Goole. The production returned to the Playhouse in London's West End in November 2016, with Liam Brennan in the name part. Brennan once again starred as Inspector Goole in a 2022 tour of the UK billed as the production's Thirtieth Anniversary Tour.
Another production opened on 25 October 1995 at the Garrick Theatre and ran for six years until its transfer to the Playhouse Theatre in 2001. In 2009 it reopened at the Novello Theatre for a year-long run, followed by another transfer to Wyndham's Theatre in December 2009, running for only four months.
Adaptations
The play has been adapted to film or television at least eleven times, including:
- A 1948 British television film, produced by Harold Clayton
- A 1954 British film, directed by Guy Hamilton
- A 1965 Bengali film, Thana Theke Aschi, directed by Hiren Nag
- A 1973 Soviet film, He came, directed by A. Proshkin and L. Ishimbaeva
- A 1979 Soviet film, Inspektor Gull, directed by A. Proshkin
- A 1983 Swiss film, E Inspäkter chunnt, directed by Bruno Kaspar
- A 1982 British television serial, directed by Michael Simpson
- A 1998 BBC World Service radio play, starring Bob Peck
- A 2010 BBC Radio 4 radio play, starring Toby Jones
- A 2010 Bengali film, Thana Theke Aschi directed by Saron Dutta
- A 2015 Hong Kong film, directed by Raymond Wong and Herman Yau
- A 2015 British television film, directed by Aisling Walsh
- A 2018 British film, directed by Jason Farries
- A 2022 play at the Yvonne Arnaud Theatre
Awards and nominations
- Awards
- 1993 Laurence Olivier Award for Best Revival
- 1994 Drama Desk Award for Best Revival of a Play
- 1994 Tony Award for Best Revival of a Play
Editions
- Priestley, J. B. (1947). An Inspector Calls: A Play in Three Acts (First ed.). London: Heinemann. OCLC 59564726.
References
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- Stringer, Jenny (1996). The Oxford companion to twentieth-century literature in English. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. p. 330. ISBN 978-0-19-212271-1.
- ^ Priestley, J. B. (1947). Bezant, Tim (ed.). An Inspector Calls: A Play in Three Acts (1992 ed.). London: Heinemann. pp. xi–xiv. ISBN 0-435-23282-7.
- Gale, Maggie (2004). "Theatre and drama between the wars". In Nicholls, Peter; Marcus, Laura (eds.). The Cambridge history of twentieth-century English literature. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. p. 328. ISBN 0-521-82077-4.
the middle class family was at the centre of much of Priestley's work ... most clearly perhaps in 'An Inspector Calls'.
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