The Visitors is a 1961 one-act play by BritishplaywrightJoe Orton.[2] The BBC and the Royal Court Theatre had considered the work but ultimately rejected it, despite both having insisted that the writing was "excellent."[3] Orton's career took off in 1964 with the staging of his Entertaining Mr. Sloane, and The Visitors (aka The Visit) remained forgotten until its UK publication in 1998 by Nick Hern Books; a US edition from Grove Press followed in 1999.[4]
Synopsis
Kemp, a man facing death, is visited in hospital by his middle-aged daughter, Mrs. Platt.[5] She and the nurse exchange optimistic clichés that completely ignore the reality of his situation.[6][7]
Criticism
Elaine Showalter describes it and Fred & Madge, with which it was published, as reading "as if they had just been written, and are wittier than most of what gets staged in the West End", suggesting that they should be produced.[6] Stephen Grecco describes the two plays as "replete with the redundancies and dead ends typical of very early drafts" and considers neither play to be "riveting enough" for production. He identifies the father and daughter characters with those in Entertaining Mr. Sloane, and the nursing staff as reminiscent of the character Fay in Loot.[7]
^Lahr, John. Prick up Your Ears: The Biography of Joe Orton. New York: Knopf, 1978, p. 126. ISBN0394501535
^Orton, Joe. The Visitors and Fred and Madge. New York: Grove Press, 1999, p. iv ISBN0-8021-3628-1
^Orton, Joe; Orton, Joe Fred and Madge (17 October 1998). "The visitors; Fred and Madge : two plays". New York : Grove Press; [Emeryville, Calif.] : Publishers Group West [distributor] – via Internet Archive.