Red Noses
Play written by Peter Barnes
Red Noses | |
---|---|
Written by | Peter Barnes |
Characters | Father Flote Father Toulon Master Bells Brodin Marguerite Rochfort Frapper Pope Clement VI bigod |
Date premiered | 1985 |
Place premiered | Barbican Theatre, London |
Original language | English |
Subject | The Black Death, a Pope and a band of red nosed comics |
Genre | Comedy |
Setting | 14th-century France |
Red Noses is a comedy about the black death by Peter Barnes, first staged at Barbican Theatre in 1985.[1] It depicted a sprightly priest, originally played by Antony Sher, who travelled around the plague-affected villages of 14th century France with a band of fools, known as Floties, offering holy assistance.[2] It was for this play that Barnes won his Olivier award.[3]
Awards and nominations
- Awards
- 1985 Laurence Olivier Award for Best New Play
Original cast
- Alain Boutros - David Whitaker
- Archbishop Monselet - Raymond Bowers
- Attendant, Leper - Phillip Dupuy
- Bonville, Lefranc - Norman Henry
- Brodin - Pete Postlethwaite
- Camille - Rowena Roberts
- Charles Bembo - Derek Crewe
- Dr Antrechau, Patris - Peter Theedom
- Druce - Jimmy Yuill
- Evaline, First Leper - Sarah Woodward
- First Flagellant - Steve Swinscoe
- Frapper - Nicholas Woodeson
- Grez - Nicholas Farrell
- Jean le Grue - Bernard Horsfall
- Marcel Flote - Antony Sher
- Marguerite - Polly James
- Marie - Katharine Rogers
- Mistral, Bigod - Nicholas Bell
- Mme de Vonville - Yvonne Coulette
- Moncriff, Jacques B - Charles Millham
- Mother Metz - Yvonne Coulette
- Pellico - Don McKillop
- Pope Clement VI - Christopher Benjamin
- Rochfort - Richard Easton
- Sabine - Cathy Tyson
- Scarron - Brian Parr
- Second Flagellant - Philip Barnes
- Sonnerie - Jim Hooper
- Third Flagellant - Tony London
- Toulon - Peter Eyre
- Viennet, Vosques - James Newall
References
- Barnes, Peter (1985). Red Noses (First ed.). London: Faber and Faber. ISBN 0-571-13771-7.
- Martin Kohn (16 January 1995). "Literature Annotations: Barnes, Peter - Red Noses". Literature, Arts & Medicine Database. Retrieved 18 September 2008.
External links
- v
- t
- e
- Dear Daddy (1976)
- The Fire that Consumes (1977)
- Whose Life Is It Anyway? (1978)
- Betrayal (1979)
- The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby (1980)
- Children of a Lesser God (1981)
- Another Country (1982)
- Glengarry Glen Ross (1983)
- Benefactors (1984)
- Red Noses (1985)
- Les Liaisons Dangereuses (1986)
- Serious Money (1987)
- Our Country's Good (1988)
- Racing Demon (1989/1990)
- Dancing at Lughnasa (1991)
- Death and the Maiden (1992)
- Six Degrees of Separation (1993)
- Arcadia (1994)
- Broken Glass (1995)
- Skylight (1996)
- Stanley (1997)
- Closer (1998)
- The Weir (1999)
- Goodnight Children Everywhere (2000)
- Blue/Orange (2001)
- Jitney (2002)
- Vincent in Brixton (2003)
- The Pillowman (2004)
- The History Boys (2005)
- On the Shore of the Wide World (2006)
- Blackbird (2007)
- A Disappearing Number (2008)
- Black Watch (2009)
- The Mountaintop (2010)
- Clybourne Park (2011)
- Collaborators (2012)
- The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time (2013)
- Chimerica (2014)
- King Charles III (2015)
- Hangmen (2016)
- Harry Potter and the Cursed Child (2017)
- The Ferryman (2018)
- The Inheritance (2019)
- Leopoldstadt (2020)
- No Ceremony (2021)
- Life of Pi (2022)
- Prima Facie (2023)
- Dear England (2024)