ABSTRACT

Partners of the Imagination is the first in-depth study of the work of John Arden and Margaretta D’Arcy, partners in writing and cultural and political campaigns.

Beginning in the 1950s, Arden and D’Arcy created a series of hugely admired plays performed at Britain’s major theatres. Political activists, they worked tirelessly in the peace movement and the Northern Ireland ‘Troubles’, during which D’Arcy was gaoled. She is also a veteran of the Greenham Common Women’s Peace camp. Their later work included Booker-listed novels, prize-winning stories, essays and radio plays, and D’Arcy founded and ran a Woman’s Pirate Radio station. Raymond Williams described Arden as ‘the most genuinely innovative’ of the playwrights of his generation, and Chambers and Prior claimed that ‘The Non-Stop Connolly Show’, D’Arcy and Arden’s six-play epic, ‘has fair claim to being one of the finest pieces of post-war drama in the English language’.

This study explores the connections between art and life, and between the responsibilities of the writer and the citizen. Importantly, it also evaluates the range of literary works (plays, poetry, novels, essays, polemics) created by these writers, both as literature and drama, and as controversialist activity in its own right.

This work is a landmark examination of two hugely respected radical writers.

chapter 1|8 pages

A Yorkshire boyhood

chapter 2|7 pages

Stirrings

chapter 3|8 pages

An Irish girlhood

chapter 4|7 pages

The aspiring actress

chapter 5|12 pages

At the Royal Court Theatre

chapter 6|11 pages

Towards collaboration

chapter 7|9 pages

Festivals of anarchy

chapter 8|11 pages

A playwright without his breeches

chapter 9|10 pages

Alternatives

chapter 10|12 pages

Cartoons, archetypes, slogans, theatre

chapter 11|11 pages

Looking and seeing

chapter 12|11 pages

An activist theatre

chapter 13|16 pages

A mighty bust-up

chapter 14|7 pages

Ireland once again

chapter 15|14 pages

Non-stop

chapter 16|13 pages

Pinpricks and follies

chapter 17|8 pages

Unperson – New person

chapter 19|10 pages

Artists for freedom

chapter 20|7 pages

Pirate woman

chapter 21|10 pages

Undeviating paths

chapter 22|6 pages

The ink horn not yet dry

chapter 23|11 pages

Loose theatre