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  1. 9 ore fa · Terence Rattigan’s most personal play, The Deep Blue Sea, was inspired by the death of his former lover, Kenneth Morgan – the news arrived as Rattigan prepared for a preview performance of a new play. His subsequent study of doomed love speaks to the present as much as it does to the postwar Britain it so perfectly encapsulates.

  2. 9 ore fa · THE DEEP BLUE SEA TERENCE RATTIGAN Ustinov Studio, Theatre Royal Bath, until June 1 . TERENCE RATTIGAN’S most personal play, The Deep Blue Sea, was inspired by the death of his former lover, Kenneth Morgan – the news arrived as Rattigan prepared for a preview performance of a new play.

  3. 16 mag 2024 · By Gill Kirk , Thursday May 16, 2024. Terence Rattigans The Deep Blue Sea at Bath’s Ustinov Studio is a shining soap bubble of a play. It turns effortlessly in the air before you, an unpredictable rainbow slipping over its surface, and you are so entranced you dare not breathe. First staged in 1952, the tale is of that time, with a plot ...

  4. 16 mag 2024 · The Deep Blue Sea” at Ustinov Studio, Theatre Royal Bath. Simon Thomas in the South West. 10 May 2024. A few decades ago seeing a Terence Rattigan play seemed like an impossibility. Around the time of the playwright’s death in 1977, and during the years following, his work was so deeply unfashionable that producers just wouldn’t touch it.

  5. 14 mag 2024 · By: Cheryl Markosky May. 14, 2024. Tamsin Greig is a marvel as Hester Collyer in Lindsay Posner 's new revival of Terence Rattigan 's 1950s classic, The Deep Blue Sea, at Theatre Royal Bath...

  6. 14 mag 2024 · 14 May 2024. Oliver Chris (Freddie), Tamsin Greig (Hester Collyer), © Manuel Harlan. It begins with a body lying in front of a gas fire and ends with its hopeful flickering. In between, Terence Rattigans unarguable 1952 masterpiece The Deep Blue Sea, is one of the great theatrical roles, Hester Collyer; heartbroken and gradually defiant as ...

  7. 6 giorni fa · Theatre review: The Deep Blue Sea. Ustinov Studio, until 1 June. Words by Emma Clegg. The first performance of Terence Rattigans The Deep Blue Sea in 1952 was delivered to a hushed, enraptured audience and ended with cheers and massive applause.