A Sleeping Clergyman | |
---|---|
Written by | James Bridie |
Date premiered | 29 July 1933[1] |
Place premiered | Malvern Festival Theatre |
Original language | English |
Setting |
|
A Sleeping Clergyman is a 1933 play in Two Acts by James Bridie.[2][3] Directed by H. K. Ayliff, it opened at Malvern's Festival Theatre in July 1933, before moving to London's Piccadilly Theatre in September, where it ran for 230 performances.[4] It then transferred to Broadway's Guild Theatre in October 1934, where it closed after 40 performances.[5] It was revived, again with Robert Donat, at London’s Criterion Theatre in 1947.[6]
Hereditary evil runs through three generations of a medical family, in the 'conflict of social morality and natural desires'[7] - the dissolute and murderous Camerons (from 1867 to 1935) - before a son and daughter finally redeem the family name.[8][9]
The play was later adapted for radio and broadcast on the BBC's Saturday Night Theatre on 1 January 1949.[10] A televised version was also broadcast by the BBC, in its Sunday Night Theatre slot on 11 January 1959.[11]