Stephen
Jeffreys – Playwright, teacher.
Born April
22 1950; died September 17 2018
Stephen
Jeffreys, who has died of a brain tumour aged 68, was a playwright who
reimagined history across several centuries in daring ways that illustrated
contemporary concerns. This worked most strikingly in his best known play, The
Libertine, but was also the case with his recently revived adaptation of
Charles Dickens’ Hard Times (1982), a reworking of Richard Brome’s 17th
century comedy, A Jovial Crew (1992) for the Royal Shakespeare Company, and,
for Sydney Theatre Company, The Convict’s Opera (2008), an update of John Gay’s
The Beggar’s Opera featuring contemporary pop hits.
There
were pop songs there too in Jeffreys’ stage version of Backbeat (2011). An
early adaptation of Iain Softley’s film about the early days of The Beatles
with only Softley’s name attached had been seen at the Citizens Theatre,
Glasgow, before being reworked by Jeffreys for the West End.
Jeffreys
was also a great teacher, who, during a decade as literary associate at the
Royal Court Theatre in London throughout the 1990s, effectively nurtured an
entire generation of British playwrights into creative being. Beginning his
tenure in 1992, Jeffreys championed Sarah Kane’s era-defining debut play,
Blasted, Mojo by Jez Butterworth and The Beauty Queen of Leenane by Martin
McDonagh. Works by Simon Stephens, Jonathan Harvey, Tanika Gupta, Joe Penhall
and many others were also brought to life on Jeffreys’ watch.
Playwright
and current artistic director of the Royal Lyceum Theatre, Edinburgh David
Greig described Jeffreys as “a dazzlingly good teacher. His influence was
really widespread, and he shaped an entire generation of us. He really
understood structure, and was inspiringly good at teaching it. The Royal Court
often wanted quite raw voices from young writers who maybe hadn’t experienced
much theatre, and Stephen could teach people the rudiments of the craft of play-writing
in a way that enabled you.”
Jeffreys
was born in Crouch End, London, and decided to be a writer aged twelve. He
graduated from Southampton University with an English literature degree in
1972, and began teaching at a London comprehensive.
He briefly worked
as an assistant electrician at the Royal Court’s upstairs space in 1975, and went
on to teach at the Cumbria College of Art and Design. His first produced play,
Like Dolls or Angels (1977), about a stuntman, won an award at the National Student
Drama Festival.
In
the early 1980s, Jeffreys was instrumental in setting up Pocket Theatre, based
at the Brewery Arts Centre in Kendal, Cumbria, with whom he became
writer-in-residence, and who toured Hard Times. It was here he met and worked
with actors Rob
Pickavance, Alison Peebles and Gerry Mulgrew, who forged the idea to found
the theatre company that became Communicado. It was his mother, according to
Jeffreys, who came up with the name for the company.
In
1984 Jeffreys wrote Communicado’s hit version of Carmen, transposing Prosper
Merimee’s original story to the time of the Spanish Civil War in 1936. The show
was an Edinburgh Festival Fringe hit, and transferred to the Tricycle Theatre
in Kilburn.
Two
years later Communicado produced Desire, Jeffreys’ update of Robert Louis
Stevenson’s Faustian short story, The Bottle Imp, which he set in a time of
revolutionary fervour on an un-named Caribbean island. Again it was a hit, and
toured the country.
“There was a point,” Jeffreys told The Herald in 2014, “when I was better known as a writer in Scotland than England.”
“There was a point,” Jeffreys told The Herald in 2014, “when I was better known as a writer in Scotland than England.”
In
1990, Valued Friends, about four flatmates who are offered a fortune to vacate
their home for property developers, was a hit at Hampstead theatre A Going
Concern (1993), about a failing family business, followed. The Libertine first
appeared at the Royal Court in 1994, and told the scandalous story of 17th
century poet John Wilmot, aka the Earl of Rochester, an amoral hedonist who
ostracised himself from the court of Charles II and effectively pleasured
himself to death.
The
roots of Jeffreys’ play date back to 1975, when his dentist was
off-loading his library to patients so as not to lead his increasingly
curious thirteen-year -old daughter astray. Jeffreys was gifted a copy of
Rochester's tellingly named play, SODOM. It took seventeen years before
Jeffreys wrote The Libertine.
“At
the time, the seventeenth century seemed more real to me than life under
John Major,” Jeffrey told The Herald. “I'd got very bored with all these grim
naturalistic plays, and I'd already written a play called The Clink, which
was about the death of Elisabeth 1. That opened in London the week
Margaret Thatcher resigned as Prime Minister, so seemed to say something about life in 1990s Britain.”
The Libertine
gathered added traction a decade after its premiere when it was made into a
film starring Johnny Depp as Rochester, with John Malkovich as Charles II. Malkovich
had played Rochester in Chicago in Steppenwolf Theatre Company’s 1996
production. Jeffreys provided the screenplay for the film. His original stage
version was revived at the Citizens Theatre, Glasgow in 2014 for what was its
first UK production in two decades. More recently, it was revived on the West
End in 2016, with Dominic Cooper in the title role.
When
The Libertine was first seen at the Royal Court, Kane’s play, Blasted, was
causing a furore in the venue's upstairs theatre. Both, in different ways,
announced how drama, like the world, was changing.
“It was Christmas, and there was snow on the ground,” Jeffreys remembered, “and I remember looking out of a window from the theatre, and on one side, Harold Pinter was walking towards the theatre, and on the other side Edward Bond was doing the same. At first I thought they were coming to see my play, then I realised they were coming to see
Sarah's. But they were both kind of scandalous plays. Both were explosive in their own way.”
“It was Christmas, and there was snow on the ground,” Jeffreys remembered, “and I remember looking out of a window from the theatre, and on one side, Harold Pinter was walking towards the theatre, and on the other side Edward Bond was doing the same. At first I thought they were coming to see my play, then I realised they were coming to see
Sarah's. But they were both kind of scandalous plays. Both were explosive in their own way.”
Such generosity to other writers was key to
Jeffreys’ make-up. As Greig points out, “He was passionate about writers, and
would champion their work in a way that went way beyond his own writing.”
Other
works include the blues-based I Just Stopped By to See the Man (2000), directed
by Richard Wilson, and Bugles at the Gates of Jalalabad (2009), part of a season
at the Tricycle covering Afghan history. On screen, he penned the screenplay of
Diana (2013), which
cast Naomi Watts as the doomed people's princess in an adaptation of Kate Snell’s
book Diana Her Last Love. In 2016, the same year as The Libertine was seen in
the West End, Jeffreys wrote a version of Ben Johnson’s The Alchemist for the
RSC.
For
all his technical expertise, Jeffreys enjoyed flying blind, and not knowing
where a work might end up. Talking about The Libertine, he described this approach
as “like the difference between getting a box of fireworks and looking at
the label that says how much they explode, then watching them launch
themselves into the air and see what happens. That's when things become
really exciting.”
Jeffreys is survived by his wife Annabel Arden and their two sons, Ralph and Jack.
Jeffreys is survived by his wife Annabel Arden and their two sons, Ralph and Jack.
The Herald, September 21st 2018
ends
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