Available Formats
Shirley Valentine & One For The Road
By (Author) Willy Russell
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Methuen Drama
1st August 2006
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
822.914
Paperback
112
Width 126mm, Height 198mm, Spine 8mm
128g
Shirley Valentine, 42-year-old put-upon mother and housewife, leaves the drudgery of cooking dinner for her husband, packs her bags and heads for the sun. The note on the kitchen table reads "Gone to Greece back in two weeks." "It is a simple and brilliant idea...the profound and perennial point of the comedy is the problem we seem to have contemplating the idea of a woman alone - in a pub, on a beach, in a restaurant. This is what Shirley learns to combat as she unravels her own sexual and social identity. The play is not only funny, it is also moving." (Michael Coveney, Financial Times)
One for the Road "starts...with the mid-life hero torn between the security of married life in a dormer bungalow on a northern housing estate and dreams of being a rucksacked super-tramp. Mr Russell writes with knowledgeable venom about a world where Beethoven Underpass leads to Wagner Walkway and where anyone who doesn't join Weight Watchers or the Ramblers Club is regarded as a social deviant." (Francis King, Sunday Telegraph)
Willy Russell's plays... speak to even the critical heart.' * Libby Purves, The Times, 28.07.10 *
'When Shirley blossoms on her sneakily planned Greek holiday, her feminimity unfurls disarmingly, and there are moments of pathos throughout.' * Henry Hitchings, Evening Standard, 28.07.10 *
'You peer into these windows onto other lives, and see your own world partially reflected back at you. Highly recommended.' * Dominic Cavendish, Daily Telegraph, 29.07.10 *
Almost 30 years after its Liverpool premiere, there is, it has to be said, something almost unbelievable about Russell's account of a bright, dynamic woman who has somehow become such a taken-for-granted wife and mother - no job, no other identity - that she simply puts up with a bullying husband who barely gives her the time of day . . . this image of a female lie still seems to strike a huge chord with generations of women who find themselves infinitely relied on for the practicalities of domestic life, but barely noticed as people . . . [on Shirley:] a character whose very existence has been changing ordinary women's lives, ever since she first appeared. * Scotsman *
One of the most-produced writers of his time, Willy Russell (b. Whiston, Liverpool, 23 Aug. 1947) is a playwright and songwriter. He has written a large number of highly successful plays and musicals for stage and TV including John, Paul, George, Ringo ... and Bert (1974), Breezeblock Park (1975), One for the Road (1976),Our Day Out (television 1977; stage musical version 1983), Stags and Hens (1978; filmed as Dancin' thru the Dark, 1990), Educating Rita (1979), Blood Brothers(1981; musical version 1983), and Shirley Valentine (1986). His novel, The Wrong Boy, was published to great acclaim in 2000.