Peter and Alice
Peter and Alice is a play by American writer John Logan based on the meeting of 80-year-old Alice Liddell and Peter Llewelyn Davies, then in his thirties, in a London bookshop in 1932, at the opening of a Lewis Carroll exhibition. The production was directed by Michael Grandage and was performed by Judi Dench as Alice and Ben Whishaw as Peter.
Peter and Alice | |
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Written by | John Logan |
Characters | Peter Llewelyn Davies, Alice Liddell |
Date premiered | 25 March 2013 |
Place premiered | Noël Coward Theatre, London |
Original language | English |
Genre | Drama |
Setting | Bookshop, London |
Summary
The play is based on a meeting between Alice Liddell Hargreaves, the woman who inspired Alice, and Peter Llewellyn Davies, one of the boys who inspired Peter Pan, at the opening of a Lewis Carroll exhibition in 1932. The play sees enchantment and reality collide as this brief encounter lays bare the lives of these two characters.
Cast
- Ben Whishaw as Peter Llewelyn Davies
- Judi Dench as Alice Liddell
- Nicholas Farrell as Lewis Carroll
- Derek Riddell as J.M. Barrie
- Olly Alexander as Peter Pan
- Ruby Bentall as Alice in Wonderland
- Stefano Braschi as Arthur Llewelyn Davies / Reginald Hargreaves / Michael Llewelyn Davies
Understudies include:
- Stefano Braschi for Peter Llewelyn Davies;
- Georgina Beedle for Alice in Wonderland;
- Henry Everett for both Lewis Carroll and J.M. Barrie;
- Christoper Leveaux for Peter Pan, Arthur Llewelyn Davies, Reginald Hargreaves and Michael Llewelyn Davies;
- Pamela Merrick for Alice Liddell Hargreaves.
Reception
Reviews for the production were positive for the play. Michael Billington in The Guardian wrote: "It's not a play that shocks or startles by its insights, but the reward lies in watching Dench and Whishaw recreate the agony and the ecstasy of inherited fame.".[1] Charles Spencer in The Telegraph wrote: "It’s a beautiful and searching play that will live long in the memory".[2] Libby Purves in The Times wrote "A meeting of two childhood muses, played by Judi Dench and Ben Whishaw, breaks your heart open".[3] However, there was some criticism of the play. Henry Hitchings in The Evening Standard wrote: "this is a piece that uses lush language to compensate for its lack of real dynamism".[4]
Awards and nominations
London production
Year | Award | Category | Nominee | Result | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2014 | Laurence Olivier Award | Best New Play | Nominated | [5] | |
Best Actress | Judi Dench | Nominated | |||
References
- Billington, Michael. Guardian.co.uk, March 25, 2013
- Spencer, Charles. telegraph.co.uk, March 26, 2013
- Purves, Libby, . thetimes.co.uk, March 26, 2013
- Hitchings, Henry. standard.co.uk, March 26, 2013
- "Olivier awards 2014 – full nominations". theguardian.com. The Guardian. 10 March 2014. Retrieved 10 March 2014.