Finborough Theatre Logo

You're Human Like The Rest Of Them

by B.S. Johnson

Press Info
February - May 2017
“Laughter is a weapon: all you can do is laugh, isn’t it?”
Three short plays by B.S. Johnson
5 - 21 Mar 2017
archive

The evening features a revival of B.S. Johnson’s short plays You’re Human Like the Rest of Them and Down Red Lane, alongside the world premiere of Not Counting the Savages.

About The Play

About The Play

You’re Human Like the Rest of Them
Down Red Lane
Not Counting the Savages

★★★★ Broadway World

“Laughter is a weapon: all you can do is laugh, isn’t it?”

Spanning ten years of Johnson’s short yet prolific career, the evening features the first UK revival in many years of Johnson’s short plays You’re Human Like the Rest of Them and Down Red Lane, and the world stage premiere of Not Counting the Savages.

Hailed by Samuel Beckett as a ‘most gifted writer’, this is a rare opportunity to see the work of Britain’s ‘ultimate forgotten author’, one of the most irreverent, visionary voices to come out of post-war Britain.

You’re Human Like the Rest of Them is the wickedly funny portrayal of a young man facing up to the excruciating reality of the human condition. When plucky schoolmaster Haakon is sent to hospital with a minor back complaint, he finds himself in a lecture in back care alongside a cast of colourful octogenarians. Outraged by their exposure of the flaws of the human design, he returns to his own classroom a changed man, posing a new lesson of the day: what is the meaning of life? Originally commissioned by the Royal Shakespeare Company in 1964, Johnson’s first stage play later went on to become a ground-breaking film.

Down Red Lane was Johnson’s final work written before his early death at the age of 40. A man newly come up in the world, the Diner has found a new vocation – fine dining. Knowing only too well the weakness of his regular customer, the Waiter plies him with every temptation. Unable to resist, the Diner is seemingly intent on indulging himself to death until his angry working class body begins to fight back. It’s Man versus Belly in Johnson’s absurd tale of the consequences of indulgence and desire.

Not Counting the Savages was originally produced as a teleplay directed by Mike Newell and starring Brenda Bruce as part of the BBC’s Thirty Minute Theatre season in 1972. This production marks its world stage premiere. Wife is left traumatised by an encounter with a flasher in a local graveyard, but when she turns to her family for support, her doctor husband is indifferent, her son gets a voyeuristic kick and her daughter accuses her of overreacting. When the family conference is cut short by an emergency call from the hospital, Wife is left wondering why her husband is able to save a life, but desperately unable to save their marriage.

The run will be accompanied by the FINBOROUGHFORUM, a series of informal post-show discussions and debates, on Monday evenings: 13 and 20 March. All events are free to ticketholders for that evening’s performance of the play. FINBOROUGHFORUM events will all be Twitter friendly with live tweets from @FinboroughForum. Using the hashtag #finfor, the speakers will also answer questions posed on Twitter so everyone can be included, no matter where they are in the world. The events will feature a Q&A session with Steve Johnson, discussions with academics, industry professionals and members of the cast and company.

YOU’RE HUMAN LIKE THE REST OF THEM POST-SHOW DISCUSSIONS

Monday 13 March
Q&A with international best-selling author of B.S. Johnson biography Like A Fiery Elephant Jonathan Coe, and academic and co-editor of Well Done God! Julia Jordan.

Monday 20 March
Panel discussion with Carla Kingham and members of the cast.

More Detail

Cast

Crew

Director

Carla Kingham

Producer

Audrey Thayer Presented by Marricdale Productions in association with Neil McPherson for the Finborough Theatre.

Set and Costume Design

Rūta Irbīte

Lighting

Kieron Johnson

Sound

Max Pappenheim

Supported by

The B.S. Johnson Estate