The first time Paul Henderson Scott saw Ane Satyre of the Thrie Estaits, Sir David Lyndsay's sixteenth century epic that took the rise out of church, state and gentry, it was a life-changing experience. That production of Scotland's oldest known surviving play, as knocked into textual shape by Robert Kemp, was seen by Scott at the 1948 Edinburgh International Festival. Then, as he related to National Theatre of Scotland artistic director Vicky Featherstone several weeks ago, he couldn't believe he'd never seen it before. Here was a play that represented his culture, his history and his mother tongue in a way that nothing else had in his experience. Since Scott's eureka moment, he has gone on to see it in home-grown productions in 1949, 1973 and in 1985, when Tom Fleming's production for the now defunct Scottish Theatre Company played at the Edinburgh International Festival. The production was revived the following year at Glasgow's Theatre Roy
An archive of arts writing by Neil Cooper. Effete No Obstacle.