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The Wednesday Play: Destiny (1978)

David Edgar is one of the most prolific playwrights of modern British history. So far, more than 60 of his plays have been published and performed on stage, radio and television around the world, but his best known work is probably the prize-winning Destiny, which was also the first play he wrote for the Royal Shakespeare Company and which Colin Chambers, literary manager of the RSC, calls “the best modern example of the English dramatic tradition”.

The play was inspired by Edgar’s work as a journalist in Bradford, where he came across a group led by an ex-Conservative councillor that called itself the ‘Yorkshire Campaign to Stop Immigration’. This group, which later merged with the National Front, apparently “addressed many real needs and some real fears” by holding meetings… at which they showed films upside down with no sound. 

Destiny tries to address the question of how such a group could gain purchase, given that Britian had fought against fascism during the Second World War. It starts in India, on the day of independence, introducing four main characters whose lives intercept 30 years later in a small town in the English West Midlands: a colonel who later becomes a Conservative MP; a major who is hoping to succeed him; a sergeant who is a candidate for a far-right party; and an Indian who works in a local foundry. During the election campaign, a strike breaks out at the foundry and a local by-election is transformed into a multi-cultural battleground, which results in the fascists turning for protection and support to the forces they oppose.

The play went on to win the John Whiting Award, presented by the Arts Council for new dramatic writing and was televised by the BBC as part of the Play for Today series in January 1978, with Frederick Treves as the colonel, Nigel Hawthorne as the major, Saeed Jaffrey as Gurjeet Singh Khera and Colin Jeavons as the sergeant. And it’s this week’s Wednesday Play. 

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Have a look at the Liam Neeson kill map

I don’t know if I was the first person to spot that Liam Neeson has slowly turned from being an actor’s actor, who appeared in movies such as Schindler’s List, Husbands and Wives, The Mission and A Prayer For The Dying, into a full-on action movie star, but I was probably the first to nominate him as Hollywood movies’ greatest martial arts actor. Five years on, though, pretty much everyone has realised it, with ‘Liam Neeson’ actually becoming a genre in its own right (ie “Now that’s what I call a Liam Neeson movie: guy looking for a family member goes on killing spree to get them back. Doesn’t star Liam Neeson though.”).

In fact, there’s even a “Liam Neeson Kill Map” that you can use to find out where in the world Liam Neeson has killed people, in what movie and how many. Handy, hey?

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Weekly Wonder Woman

Weekly Wonder Woman: Superman Unchained #8, Sensation Comics #5

I misspoke a little last week when I said that DC had postponed all its important Wonder Woman comics until last Wednesday. In fact, Superman/Wonder Woman, Wonder Woman, et al are due out this week. So last week was actually kind of quiet, too.

Superman Unchained #8

If you’d been expecting Superman Unchained to deliver any Wonder Woman action, given she was in the previous issue, you’d have been disappointed since this issue, she didn’t feature at all, except through Superman wondering how best to fight a baddie called Wraith – perhaps he should emulate Diana?

Fight like Diana

But after creating a level playing field for them both, Superman then decides the big difference between him and Wraith is that Wraith has always had an army at his back, whereas he has always fought alone so has had to learn how to fight… presumably a new development for which he has Diana to thank, because as we remember from Superman/Wonder Woman #5 when faced with some warriors from Krypton, Superman sucked at fighting.

Meanwhile, Lex Luthor turned out to be an intellectual dilettante, who claims to have read The Iliad but doesn’t know that the Trojan Horse only appears in Homer’s other poem, The Odyssey, and then only in flashback (the full tale of its construction is in The Little Iliad, one of the lost poems of the Epic Cycle). Or it might just be a parallel universe where The Iliad’s a bit different – in which case, I’d love to read the new 52 version of the Aithiopis.

Lex hasn't read The Iliad

That means the only Wonder Woman comic of note last week was Sensation Comics #5, which turned out to be quite interesting indeed.

Continue reading “Weekly Wonder Woman: Superman Unchained #8, Sensation Comics #5”