Information AboutPeter Nichols |
| CATEGORIES ABOUT PETER NICHOLS | |
| 1927 births | |
| old bristolians | |
| living people | |
| people from bristol | |
| english dramatists and playwrights | |
|
Born in Bristol , England , he was educated at Bristol Grammar School , and then did his National Service in the RAF for three years, going on to study acting at the Bristol Old Vic Theatre School . While he was working as a teacher he began to write television plays which achieved notice. His first play for the stage was "The Hooded Terror", part of a season of new plays at the Little Theatre in Bristol which included "Cockade" by another new playwright Charles Wood. He later wrote '' A Day In The Death Of Joe Egg '' for the stage because he thought it would be unacceptable for television. Nichols' plays are hard to categorize. He is quoted as saying 'Do any damn thing you have to do to keep the heart and soul alive'. ''A Day in the Death of Joe Egg'' is a one-set drama in Music Hall style. '' The National Health '' is a fantasy farce, also interrupted by Vaudeville . '' Privates On Parade '' is a Musical Comedy . '' Poppy '' takes the form of a Christmas Pantomime . Despite the comic style, Nichols' plays deal with the most serious of themes. In ''A Day in the Death of Joe Egg'' the burden of raising a hopelessly Handicapped child shatters a couple's marriage. The patients of ''The National Health'' suffer and die, as do the singing soldiers of ''Privates On Parade''. In ''Poppy'' Dick Whittington 's sister becomes a drug addict. ''Passion Play'' focusses on adultery and betrayal. ''Joe Egg'' is based on Nichols' own experiences of raising a handicapped child. ''The National Health'' draws on a hospital stay of his own, and ''Privates'' draws on his own military experiences. His plays include
''A Day in the Death of Joe Egg'' won two Tony Award s. |
|
|