John Kingsley ("Joe") Orton (1 January
1933 – 9 August 1967 ) was an English playwright.
In a short but prolific career lasting from 1964
until his death, he shocked, outraged and amused audiences with his
scandalous black comedies. Ortonesque became a recognised term
for "outrageously macabre.
Early life
William and Elsie Orton married in 1931. Elsie
worked in the local footwear industry until tuberculosis cost her a
lung; William worked for Leicester Council as a gardener. Their eldest
son John was born at Causeway Lane Maternity Hospital, Leicester, into
their working-class family. When he was two years old, they moved from
261 Avenue Road Extension in Clarendon Park, Leicester, to the Saffron
Lane council estate. Joe soon had a younger brother, Douglas, and two
younger sisters, Marilyn and Leonie.
Orton attended Marriot Road Primary School, but
failed the eleven-plus exam after extended bouts of asthma, and so
took a secretarial course at Clark's College in Leicester from 1945 to
1947. He then began working as a junior clerk on £3 a week.
Orton became interested in performing in the
theatre around 1949 and joined a number of different dramatic
societies, including the prestigious Leicester Dramatic Society. While
working on amateur productions he was also determined to improve his
appearance and physique, buying bodybuilding courses, taking elocution
lessons, and trying to redress his lack of education and culture. He
applied for a scholarship at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA)
in November 1950. He was accepted, and left the East Midlands for
London. His entrance into RADA was delayed until May 1951 by
appendicitis.
Orton met Kenneth Halliwell at RADA in 1951 and
moved into a West Hampstead flat with him and two other students in
June of that year. Halliwell was seven years older than Orton and of
independent means, having a substantial inheritance. They quickly
formed a strong relationship and became lovers.
After graduating, both Orton and Halliwell went
into regional repertory work: Orton spent four months in Ipswich as an
assistant stage manager; Halliwell in Llandudno, Wales. Both returned
to London and became writers. They collaborated on a number of
unpublished novels (often imitating Ronald Firbank), and had little
success. The rejection of their great hope, The Last Days of Sodom,
in 1957 led them to solo works. Orton would later return to the books
for ideas; many show glimpses of his stage-play style.
Confident of their "specialness," Orton and
Halliwell refused to work for long periods. They subsisted on
Halliwell's money (and unemployment benefits) and were forced to
follow an ascetic life in order to restrict their outgoings to £5 a
week. From 1957–1959, they worked in six-month stretches at Cadbury's
to raise money for a new flat; they moved into a small, austere flat
at 25 Noel Road in Islington in 1959.
Crimes and punishment
A lack of serious work led them to amuse themselves
with pranks and hoaxes. Orton created the alter ego Edna Welthorpe, an
elderly theatre snob, whom he would later revive to stir controversy
over his plays. Orton chose the name as an allusion to Terence
Rattigan's "Aunt Edna," Rattigan's archetypal playgoer.
They would also steal books from the local library
and subtly modify the cover art or the blurbs before returning them to
the library. A volume of poems by John Betjeman, for example, was
returned to the library with a new dustjacket featuring a photograph
of a nearly naked, heavily tattooed, middle-aged man. The couple
decorated their flat with many of the prints. They were eventually
discovered and prosecuted for this in May 1962. The incident was
reported in Daily Mirror as "Gorilla in the Roses". They were
charged with five counts of theft and malicious damage, admitted
damaging more than 70 books, and were jailed for six months (released
September 1962) and fined £262. Orton and Halliwell felt that that
sentence was unduly harsh "because we were queers."
However, prison would be a crucial formative
experience for Orton; the isolation from Halliwell would allow him to
break free of him creatively; and he would clearly see the corruptness,
priggishness, and double-standards of a purportedly liberal country.
As Orton put it, 'It affected my attitude towards society. Before I
had been vaguely conscious of something rotten somewhere, prison
crystallised this. The old whore society really lifted up her skirts
and the stench was pretty foul... Being in the nick brought detachment
to my writing. I wasn't involved anymore. And suddenly it worked.'
The book covers that Orton and Halliwell vandalised
have since become a valued part of the Islington Local History Centre
collection. Some are exhibited in the Islington Museum.
Career
Orton began to write plays in the early 1960s. He
wrote his last novel, Head to Toe, in 1961 and had his writing
accepted soon afterward. In 1963 the BBC paid £65 for the radio play
The Ruffian on the Stair, broadcast on 31 August 1964. It was
substantially rewritten for the stage in 1966.
Orton revelled in his achievement and poured out new works. He had
completed Entertaining Mr. Sloane by the time Ruffian
was broadcast. He sent a copy to theatre agent Peggy Ramsay in
December 1963. It premiered at the New Arts Theatre on 6 May 1964
under the direction of Michael Codron. Reviews ranged from praise to
outrage.
Entertaining Mr Sloane lost money in its three-week run, but
critical praise from playwright
Terence Rattigan, who invested £3,000 in it, ensured its survival.
The play was transferred to
Wyndham's Theatre in the
West End at the end of June and to the
Queen's Theatre in October. Sloane tied for first in the
Variety Critics' Poll for "Best New Play" and Orton came second
for "Most Promising Playwright." Within a year, Sloane was
being performed in New York, Spain, Israel and Australia, as well as
being made into a film and a television play.
Orton's next performed work was
Loot. The first draft was written between June and October
1964 and entitled Funeral Games, a title Orton would drop at
Halliwell's suggestion but would later reuse. The play is a wild parody
of
detective fiction, adding the
blackest farce
and jabs at established ideas on death, the police, religion, and
justice. Orton offered the play to Codron in October 1964 and it
underwent sweeping rewrites before it was judged fit for the West End
(for example, the character of "Inspector Truscott" had a mere eight
lines in the initial first act.)
Codron had manoeuvred Orton into meeting his colleague
Kenneth Williams in August 1964. Orton reworked Loot with
Williams in mind for Truscott. His other inspiration for the role was
DS
Harold Challenor.
With the success of Sloane, Loot was hurried into
pre-production despite its obvious flaws. Rehearsals began in
January 1965 with a six-week tour culminating in a West End debut
planned. The play opened in
Cambridge on 1 February to scathing reviews.
Orton, at odds with director
Peter Wood over the plot, produced 133 pages of new material to
replace, or add to, the original 90. The play received poor reviews in
Brighton, Oxford,
Bournemouth,
Manchester, and finally
Wimbledon in mid-March. Discouraged, Orton and Halliwell went on
an 80-day holiday in Tangier, Morocco.
In January 1966, Loot was revived, with Oscar Lewenstein
taking up an option. Before his production, it had a short run (11–23
April) at the University Theatre, Manchester. Orton's growing
experience led him to cut over 600 lines, raising the tempo and
improving the characters' interactions.
Directed by Braham Murray, the play garnered more favourable
reviews. Lewenstein, still a bit cool, put the London production in a
"sort of Off-West End theatre," the Jeanetta Cochrane Theatre in
Bloomsbury, under the direction of
Charles Marowitz.
Orton continued his habit of clashing with directors with Marowitz,
but the additional cuts they agreed to further improved the play. It
premiered in London on 27 September 1966, to rave reviews. Loot
moved to the
Criterion Theatre in November, raising Orton's confidence to new
heights while he was in the middle of writing
What the Butler Saw.
Loot went on to win several awards and firmly established
Orton's fame. He sold the film rights for £25,000 although he was
certain it would flop. It did, and Loot on
Broadway repeated the failure of Sloane. But Orton, still
on an absolute high, proceeded over the next ten months to revise
The Ruffian on the Stair and The Erpingham Camp for the
stage as a double called
Crimes of Passion; wrote Funeral Games; wrote the
screenplay
Up Against It for
the Beatles; and worked on What the Butler Saw.
The Good and Faithful Servant was a transitional work for
Orton. A one-act television play, it was completed by June 1964 but
first broadcast by
Associated-Rediffusion on 6 April 1967.
The Erpingham Camp, Orton's take on The
Bacchae, written through mid-1965 and offered to Rediffusion in
October of that year, was broadcast on 27 June 1966 as the 'pride'
segment in their series Seven Deadly Sins.
Orton wrote and rewrote Funeral Games four
times from July to November 1966. Created for a 1967 Rediffusion
series, The Seven Deadly Virtues, Orton's play dealt with
charity--especially Christian charity—in a confusion of adultery and
murder. Rediffusion did not use the play; instead, it was made as one
of the first productions of the new ITV company Yorkshire Television,
and broadcast posthumously on 26 August 1968.
In March 1967 Orton and Halliwell had intended
another extended holiday in Libya, but they returned home after one
day because the only hotel accommodation they could find was a boat
that had been converted into a hotel/nightclub. Orton was working hard,
energised and happy; Halliwell was increasingly depressed,
argumentative, and plagued with mystery ailments.
Orton's controversial farce What The Butler Saw
debuted in the West End after his death in 1969. It opened at the
Queen's Theatre with Sir Ralph Richardson, Coral Browne, Stanley
Baxter, and Hayward Morse.
Murder
On 9 August 1967, Halliwell bludgeoned 34-year-old
Orton to death at his home in Islington, London, with nine hammer
blows to the head, and then committed suicide with an overdose of 22
Nembutal tablets washed down with the juice from canned grapefruit.
Investigators determined that Halliwell died first, because Orton's
body was still warm.
The 22 November 1970 edition of The Sunday Times
reported that on 5 August 1967, four days before the murder, Orton
went to the Chelsea Potter pub in the King's Road. He met friend Peter
Nolan, who later gave evidence at the inquest that Orton told him that
he had another boyfriend and wanted to end his relationship with
Halliwell, but didn't know how to go about it.
The last person to speak to Halliwell was his
doctor, who arranged for a psychiatrist to see him the following
morning. He spoke to Halliwell three times on the telephone. The last
call was at 10 o'clock. Halliwell took the psychiatrist's address and
said, "Don't worry, I'm feeling better now. I'll go and see the doctor
tomorrow morning."
Halliwell had felt increasingly threatened and
isolated by Orton's success, and had come to rely on anti-depressants
and barbiturates. The bodies were discovered the following morning
when a chauffeur arrived to take Orton to a meeting to discuss a
screenplay he had written for the Beatles.
Halliwell left a suicide note, informing police
that all would be explained if they read Orton's diaries, "especially
the latter part". The diaries have since been published.
Orton was cremated at the Golders Green Crematorium,
his maroon cloth-draped coffin being brought into the west chapel to a
recording of The Beatles song "A Day in the Life". Harold Pinter read
the eulogy, concluding with "He was a bloody marvellous writer."
According to Dennis Dewsnap's memoir, What's Sex Got To Do With It
(The Syden Press, 2004), Orton and Halliwell had their ashes mixed and
were buried together. Dewsnap writes about Orton's agent Peggy Ramsay:
"...At the scattering of Joe's and Kenneth's ashes, his sister took a
handful from both urns and said, 'A little bit of Joe, and a little
bit of Kenneth. I think perhaps a little bit more of our Joe, and then
some more of Kenneth.' At which Peggy snapped, 'Come on, dearie, it's
only a gesture, not a recipe,' a line surely worthy of Joe himself,
though indicative of the contempt in which Ramsey held the Orton
family. She described them as simply "the little people in Leicester",
leaving a cold, nondescript note and bouquet at the funeral on their
behalf.
Orton's legacy stands to live on in his hometown,
Leicester; the development of the "cultural quarter" of the city, a
former industrial area, continues apace and the new Theatre, Curve,
the central development in the area, has a new pedestrian concourse
outside the theatre's main entrance named "Orton Square." Curve
officially opened 4 December 2008.
Biography and film, radio, TV
John Lahr wrote a biography of Orton entitled
Prick Up Your Ears, a title Orton himself had considered using, in
1978. The 1987 film adaptation is based on Orton's diaries and on
Lahr's research. Directed by Stephen Frears, it starred Gary Oldman as
Orton, Alfred Molina as Halliwell and Vanessa Redgrave as Peggy Ramsay.
Alan Bennett wrote the screenplay.
Joe Orton was played by the actor Kenny Doughty in
the BBC film Kenneth Williams: Fantabulosa!, starring Michael
Sheen as Kenneth Williams.
Two archive recordings of Orton are known to
survive: a short BBC radio interview first transmitted in August 1967
and a video recording, held by the British Film Institute, of his
appearance on Eamonn Andrews' ITV chat show transmitted 23 April 1967.
Plays
-
Fred and Madge (written 1959, published
2001)
-
The Visitors (written 1961, published
2001)
-
The Ruffian on the Stair (first
performance 1964)
-
Entertaining Mr Sloane (first performance
1964)
-
Loot (first performance 1965)
-
The Erpingham Camp (first performance
1966)
-
The Good and Faithful Servant (first
performance 1967)
-
Funeral Games (first performance 1968)
-
What the Butler Saw (first performance
1969)
-
Up Against It (screenplay)
Novels
-
Head to Toe (published 1971)
-
Between Us Girls (published 2001)
-
Lord Cucumber and The Boy Hairdresser
(co-written with Halliwell) (published 1999)