The Basement (play)

The Basement is a television play (later a stage play) by Harold Pinter. It was written first as a screenplay for a film, then revised for television and broadcast on 20 February 1967.

Origin: "The Compartment"

The Basement is based on "The Compartment" (1965), an unpublished 27-page screenplay (circulated only in typescript) that Pinter wrote in 1963–65 "for a film never made, planned as part of a triple-bill, Project I promoted by Grove Press, New York, with Samuel Beckett's Film [1965] and Eugène Ionesco's The Hard-Boiled Egg" (Baker and Ross 112). Of the three works planned for this trilogy of films, "only Film would be produced, being released in 1965" (112).

According to Pinter's official authorised biographer Michael Billington, also cited by Baker and Ross (112), "Pinter's contribution The Compartment lay dormant until he rewrote it for television as The Basement" (Billington 191).

Setting

The "exterior" and "interior" of "a basement flat" in various seasons and at various times of day and night (Two Plays and a Film Script 91–112).

Synopsis

Two men, (Tim) Law and (Charles) Stott, compete for possession of and dominance over a "basement flat" and their at-times mutual girlfriend, Jane. During the course of the play, they reverse roles with relation to each other, to the ownership or possession of the flat, and to their relationship with or possession of Jane. The changing furnishings of the room reflect their changing roles and who is in power over whom at various points in time. At first Jane appears to be submissive in relation to the men; but as the action develops, at times she appears to dominate each man and both of them. The character relationships between Stott and Law and the basic plot resemble Pinter's prose fiction works "Kullus" and "The Examination".

Characters

Productions

Television première

First transmitted on 20 February 1967,[1] it formed part of BBC 2's Theatre 625 series.

Director
Cast

Stage première: Eastside Playhouse, New York, October 1968

The Basement was first produced on stage at the Eastside Playhouse, in New York City, in October 1968, as part of a double bill with Pinter's play Tea Party, directed by James Hammerstein.

Cast
Stage personnel

Duchess Theatre, London, September 1970

Hammerstein also directed another stage production at the Duchess Theatre, in London, on 17 September 1970 (The Basement, HaroldPinter.org) with a new cast.[1]

Cast

See also

Notes

  1. 1 2 See The Basement, in Plays: Three 150 and in Three Plays and a Filmscript 91; and the same production details listed in "The Basement – Premiere" (in "Production 1970"). HaroldPinter.org. Harold Pinter, 2000–[2008]. Web. 23 March 2009. (The HaroldPinter.org Webpage also reprints a review of the 1970 Duchess Theatre stage production, entitled "Pinter Propriety", by Irving Wardle, first published in the Times, on 18 September 1970.)
  2. The Basement (in double bill with Tea Party). HaroldPinter.org. Harold Pinter, 2000–[2008]. Web. 23 March 2009.

Works cited

Further information: Bibliography for Harold Pinter

Baker, William, and John C. Ross, comps. Harold Pinter: A Bibliographical History. London: The British Library (BL); New Castle, DE: Oak Knoll Press (OKP), 2005. ISBN 0-7123-4885-9 (BL). ISBN 1-58456-156-4 (OKP).

Billington, Michael. Harold Pinter. 1996. London: Faber and Faber, 2007.

Pinter, Harold. The Basement. In Plays: Three. London: Eyre Methuen, 1978. ISBN 0-413-38480-2.

–––. The Lover, Tea Party, The Basement: Two Plays and a Film Script. New York: Grove Press, 1967. (An Evergreen Book E-432).

–––. Tea Party and Other Plays. London: Methuen, 1967. British first ed.; published 15 June 1967. (Baker and Ross 54–55).

External links

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