Show Information

Standard

£12.00 - £29.00

Access Customer

£12.00 - £29.00

Essential Companion

£12.00 - £29.00

Under 21

£12.00
Running time: 2 hours (including any intervals)
Produced by: London Classic Theatre
Age Guidance: 14+
Warnings: Nudity, scenes of a sexual nature, strong language & loud noises
Drama

What the Butler Saw

Saturday 29th June

  • Description
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  • Reviews
  • Cast & Crew

Within the pristine walls of his private psychiatric clinic, Doctor Prentice is interviewing a new secretary. Geraldine wants the position but seems underqualified and uncertain about her parentage. Mrs Prentice appears, flushed and in urgent need of a drink, following an illicit encounter with Nick Beckett, blackmailer and bell boy at the Station Hotel. In the meantime, Doctor Rance, a Government Inspector and Sergeant Match, a policeman, arrive amidst increasing chaos with searching questions of their own.

WHAT THE BUTLER SAW is Joe Orton’s final, most ambitious play, manic farce and masterclass in fearless comic writing. No institution, political view or tradition is safe, as Orton focuses his wicked sense of humour on a range of targets, including the establishment, an ex-Prime Minister, cross-dressing, misogyny and the medical profession. He brings together an array of distinctive characters, placing them in a series of improbable situations, unflinchingly exploring comic territory few playwrights before or since have dared to visit.

John Kingsley (Joe) Orton, playwright, author and diarist was born in Leicester in 1933. During a short, but dazzling career in the London theatre world, he shocked, outraged, and delighted audiences with his riotous black comedies, including Loot, The Erpingham Camp, The Ruffian on the Stair and Entertaining Mr Sloane. Joe Orton was battered to death by his lover, Kenneth Halliwell, in 1967.

The Reviews Hub
StarStarStarStar Star Outline

Orton’s script is intelligent, wordy, and very funny. Jam-packed with one-liners and satirical barbs, it is certainly not for the faint-hearted. It is brought to life brilliantly in this production and is perhaps even more relevant now than it was in 1969. Theatre should generate a reaction, and What the Butler Saw will definitely shock you, but (depending on your outlook) will also make you laugh. Pearl-clutchers and Snowflakes need not apply.

Alex Cardall

John Dorney

Alana Jackson

Jack Lord

Jon-Paul Rowden

Holly Smith

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