N. F. Simpson
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Norman Frederick Simpson (born 29 January 1919) is an English playwright closely associated with the Theatre of the Absurd. To his friends, he is known as Wally Simpson, in comic reference to the abdication crisis of 1936.
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[edit] Early Years
A Londoner by birth, Simpson studied at Emanuel School before taking a job as a bank clerk. During wartime he served in the Royal Artillery and Intelligence Corps, travelling to Italy, Palestine and Cyprus. Following a post-war degree in English Literature at the University of London, Simpson taught English in adult education for almost twenty years.
[edit] Theatre Debut
The turning point in N. F. Simpson’s life came in 1957 when he was awarded third prize in The Observer newspaper’s quest for new writers, spearheaded by theatre critic Kenneth Tynan. A Resounding Tinkle was premiered at the Royal Court Theatre, London on 1 December 1957 with Nigel Davenport (Bro Paradock) and Wendy Craig (Middie Paradock). To Simpson’s regret, director William Gaskill truncated the play to a fifty-minute one-act piece. 1959 saw the first complete performance of the two-act version by the Cambridge Theatre Actors, under the direction of John Bird and starring Peter Cook. The Royal Court belatedly staged a full rendition on 17 January 2006.
[edit] Style
A Resounding Tinkle typifies Simpson’s aversion to plot and establishes his talent for memorable one-liners and non-sequiturs. The play, as with all of his subsequent work, demands absolutely straight delivery from actors. Such an approach fosters a conviction within the audience that the characters are living in a form of reality, where the formation of a government can be arranged via door-to-door enquiries. The extraordinary and impossible are treated as perfectly rational everyday events. This comic balance is recognised as a major influence on the early work of Peter Cook, particularly the E. L. Wisty monologues.
Many comparisons have been drawn to the work of key absurdist playwright Eugène Ionesco. However, Simpson strongly refutes any link, adding that he had never even heard of the writer when he himself commenced a career in nonsense. In his own view, the valid literary parallels are with Lewis Carroll, James Thurber and P. G. Wodehouse.
N. F. Simpson’s early work must also be viewed in its cultural context. BBC Radio’s The Goon Show was widely loved, bringing surrealism to the masses for the first time. Plays such as A Resounding Tinkle arguably gentrified the idiom for London’s theatregoers, and with them the highbrow elite.
[edit] Theatre Career
A close relationship between N. F. Simpson and the Royal Court continued after Tinkle, encompassing the plays The Hole (1958), key work One Way Pendulum (1959) and The Cresta Run (1965). He wrote The Form (1961) for the Arts Theatre, and contributed to West End revues One To Another (1959), One Over The Eight (1961) and On The Avenue (1961), which variously involved Peter Cook, John Mortimer, Harold Pinter, Beryl Reid and Kenneth Williams.
Following a long break from substantial theatre writing, Simpson returned to the Royal Court in 1972 with Was He Anyone? This play would form the basis of Harry Bleachbaker, a novel first published in 1976.
In November 1976, Simpson was appointed Literary Manager of the English Stage Company at the Royal Court. Having supported new work by Barrie Keefe, Sam Shephard and Snoo Wilson, he departed the post in April 1978, returning to theatre land once more for an Eduardo De Filippo translation, Inner Voices, at the National Theatre in 1983.
[edit] Radio
The BBC were at first resistant to the new wave of English playwrights who emerged in the late 1950s. Simpson’s A Resounding Tinkle and The Hole were both rejected by the radio network controller in November 1959. Tinkle eventually surfaced on the BBC Third Programme in July 1960, presented in its one-act form with Deryck Guyler and Alison Leggatt as the Paradocks.
That same year saw Simpson’s first radio commission, a sketch for the BBC Home Service’s weekly revue Monday Night At Home. Cold feet amongst the production team caused it to be dropped before transmission. Subsequently, Simpson’s radio work rarely strayed from the confines of the third channel, most notably the 1982 monologues Snippets, read by Richard Vernon.
[edit] Film & Television
The Theatre of the Absurd arrived on television in 1961, with productions of N. F. Simpson plays on both British networks. BBC TV produced a live performance of One Way Pendulum, now lost, whilst Granada mounted a shortened version of A Resounding Tinkle for ITV.
The playwright was invited to contribute to BBC TV’s That Was The Week That Was, although his sketch was dropped due to overruns in the live transmission on 16 November 1963. ‘Televising Parliament’, his first original work for the screen, has consequently never surfaced.
Hot on the heels of his Summer Holiday success, director Peter Yates agreed to shoot Simpson’s most celebrated stage play One Way Pendulum for cinema release in 1964. Starring Eric Sykes, George Cole and a mute Jonathan Miller, Yates’ rendition of the play captured Simpson’s matter-of-fact approach to nonsense but failed at the box office.
Acting as the corporation’s Assistant Head of Light Entertainment, Frank Muir invited Simpson to write for BBC Two in 1965. Across seven half-hours, the central characters of Tinkle were expanded upon for Three Rousing Tinkles (1966) and Four Tall Tinkles (1967). He followed this with World in Ferment (1969), a six-part parody of current affairs programming starring John Bird, Eleanor Bron, Jack Shepherd and Angela Thorne. His final series for television was Charley’s Grants (1970), an unsuccessful co-write with John Fortune and John Wells starring Hattie Jacques and produced by Ian MacNaughton, fresh from Monty Python’s Flying Circus.
Plays followed, including a satire on advertising, Thank You Very Much (1971), and an effective three-hander for ITV, Silver Wedding (1974), directed by Mike Newell. Simpson’s most high profile production for television was Elementary, My Dear Watson (1973), a Sherlock Holmes parody for BBC One’s Comedy Playhouse starring John Cleese and Willie Rushton. It has been screened several times at the National Film Theatre in London.
It is frequently argued that Simpson’s work operates better in small doses, so it is natural that he should have produced so much sketch material for television. World in Ferment lent towards this strength, and his skilful monologues for women were seen again in But Seriously – It’s Sheila Hancock (1972). Other vehicles included Ned Sherrin’s A Rather Reassuring Programme (1977), Beryl Reid Says… Good Evening (1968) and The Dick Emery Show (1977 – 1980).
[edit] Current Activities
N. F. Simpson now resides in Cornwall and continues to write.
A radio documentary about his life and work, Reality is an Illusion Caused by Lack of N. F. Simpson, aired on BBC Radio 4 on 5 April 2007, featuring contributions from Eleanor Bron, Jonathan Coe, John Fortune, Sir Jonathan Miller, Sir John Mortimer, David Nobbs, Ned Sherrin, Eric Sykes and the man himself.
In July 2007 The Donmar Warehouse will stage a new production of A Resounding Tinkle starring Douglas Hodge, which is supported by the sketch 'Gladly Otherwise'.
[edit] Theatre
- A Resounding Tinkle (1957)
- One To Another [sketch writer] (1959)
- One Way Pendulum – A Farce in a New Dimension (1959)
- The Form (1961)
- On The Avenue [sketch writer] (1961)
- One Over The Eight [sketch writer] (1961)
- The Cresta Run (1965)
- How Are Your Handles? [sketches old and new] (1970)
- Playback 625 [with Leopoldo Maler] (1970)
- The Bear by Anton Chekhov [adaptation] (1972)
- Was He Anyone? (1972)
- Whither the Ancient Burial Mounds of Old New Brunswick (1978)
- Inner Voices by Eduardo De Filippo [adaptation] (1983)
- One Way Pendulum [revival by Jonathan Miller] (1988)
- Royal Court 50: A Resounding Tinkle (2006)
[edit] Radio
- A Resounding Tinkle [one-act play] (1960)
- Something Rather Effective [play] (1972)
- Sketches for Radio [sketches] (1974)
- Whither the Ancient Burial Mounds of Old New Brunswick (1979)
- The Parrot Cage Inspector [monologue] (1982)
- Snippets [monologue] (1982)
- Snippets Two [series] (1982)
[edit] Television
- One Way Pendulum (1961)
- A Resounding Tinkle [for Television Playhouse] (1961)
- Uhu… Huh? [sketches for Canadian television] (1965)
- 'Make-A-Man, or The Human Being: Is It Obsolete?' [for New Release] (1966)
- Three Rousing Tinkles [series] (1966)
- Four Tall Tinkles [series] (1967)
- Beryl Reid Says… Good Evening [sketches] (1968)
- World in Ferment [series] (1969)
- Charley’s Grants [co-writer, with John Wells and John Fortune] (1970)
- Thank You Very Much [for Play For Today] (1971)
- But Seriously – It’s Sheila Hancock [sketch writer] (1972)
- 'People Ltd.' [for Full House] (1972)
- Elementary, My Dear Watson [for Comedy Playhouse] (1973)
- Silver Wedding [for Late Night Theatre] (1974)
- An Upward Fall [for Crown Court] (1977)
- The Dick Emery Show [sketch writer] (1977 - 1980)
- 'One Of Our St Bernard Dogs Is Missing' [poem, for Closedown] (1977)
- A Rather Reassuring Programme [sketch writer] (1977)
- Wainwright’s Law [scene writer for educational series] (1980)
[edit] Films
- One Way Pendulum [screenplay] (1964)
- Diamonds for Breakfast [contributing writer] (1968)
[edit] Recordings
- He’s Innocent of Watergate [sketch writer] (1974)
[edit] Publications
- A Resounding Tinkle [one-act] (1958)
- The Hole (1958)
- The Observer Plays [featuring two-act Tinkle] (1958)
- New English Dramatists [featuring two-act Tinkle] (1960)
- One Way Pendulum: A Farce in a New Dimension (1960)
- 'The Overcoat' [short story for Man About Town magazine, illustrated by Peter Blake] (1960)
- Sketches from One To Another (1960)
- 'The Strawlined Hydrant' [short story for Vogue magazine] (1960)
- The Form (1961)
- New Directions: Five One-Act Plays in the Modern Idiom [featuring one-act Tinkle] (1961)
- The Hole, and Other Plays & Sketches (1964)
- The Long and the Short and the Tall [featuring one-act Tinkle] (1964)
- The New British Drama [featuring One Way Pendulum] (1964)
- The Cresta Run (1966)
- A Resounding Tinkle [two-act] (1968)
- Some Tall Tinkles [selected television scripts] (1968)
- Was He Anyone? (1973)
- Harry Bleachbaker: A Novel (1976)
- Play Ten [featuring two short plays] (1977)
- Inner Voices by Eduardo De Filippo [translation] (1983)
- Snippets (2006)
[edit] Unproduced or Unfinished Works
- Crates [stage play] (1957)
- 'Out There By All Means But Not In Here If You Don’t Mind' [sketch] (1960)
- 'Televising Parliament' [sketch] (1963)
- A Seasonal Swing [television play] (pre-1965)
- The Consultant [television play] (1965)
- The Row [television play] (1965)
- Napoli Milionaria by Eduardo De Filippo [translation, used as basis for Peter Tinniswood’s 1991 script produced at the National Theatre in the 1980s ]
[edit] References
- N. F. Simpson, Snippets with afterword by Simon Brett, The Society of Wood Engravers, 2006
- Kenneth Tynan, Tynan on Theatre, Pelican, 1961
[edit] External Links
- - Samuel French, publisher of key works
- The Society of Wood Engravers, publisher of Snippets (2006)
- The William Ready Division Of Archives and Research Collections, N.F. Simpson Manuscripts Collection