After the Dance
Terrance Rattigan
Terence Rattigan’s After the Dance is a brilliant attack on the hedonistic lifestyle of the ‘bright young things’ of the 1920s and 30s.
David is a high-living, hard-drinking, successful writer involved with two women: his wife Joan and an earnest-minded younger woman, Helen. When Joan commits suicide, David considers following her, but instead returns to a life of parties and drinking.
After the Dance was first produced at the St James’s Theatre, London, in June l939. It signalled a more serious direction in Rattigan's writing after the relative frivolity of the hugely successful French Without Tears. It opened ... Read more
This edition includes an authoritative introduction, biographical sketch and chronology.
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About Terrance Rattigan
Reviews for After the Dance
Guardian
'A harrowing critique of a period of heedless frivolity and a dazzling reminder of the strengths of Rattigan’s writing'
Evening Standard
'A great and wonderful revelation... combines superb social comedy with shafts of powerful emotion'
Telegraph