Saltire Review 23, Winter 1961 Quotes
Saltire Review 23, Winter 1961
by
David Cleghorn Thomson1 rating, 3.00 average rating, 0 reviews
Saltire Review 23, Winter 1961 Quotes
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“A theatrical tribute to John Knox is one way of measuring his failure. John Kox was a strong advocate of the death penalty for actors, and consistent supporters of his doctrine should properly have strung up Tom Fleming, his impersonator, along with the rest of the cast of Robert Kemp's Master John Knox presented at the Gateway Theatre during October. The play and the man cannot both be justified, and an unrealistic element enters into a theatrical interpretation that is devised to do fulsome homage to a historical character without conceding that he was one of the Theatre's most savage enemies. This element of calculated inaccuracy was sustained in a piece that Christopher Small, writing in the Glasgow Herald, rightly observed presented us with the Knox of tradition, or sentiment, rather than the Knox of history. But if we are prepared to swallow the legend, Mr. Kemp succeeded in giving it theatrical life.”
― Saltire Review 23, Winter 1961
― Saltire Review 23, Winter 1961
