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'''''Good Friday: A Play in Verse''''' is a 1914 work by English poet [[John Masefield]].<ref name=jstor>https://www.jstor.org/stable/27533389?seq=1#metadata_info_tab_contents</ref> first published in [[The Fortnightly Review]] in December 1915.
'''''Good Friday: A Play in Verse''''' is a 1914 work by English poet [[John Masefield]].<ref name=jstor>https://www.jstor.org/stable/27533389?seq=1#metadata_info_tab_contents</ref> first published in [[The Fortnightly Review]] in December 1915.


By 1913 Masefield was best known for his long narrative poem, ''[[Dauber]]''.<ref>''[[The English Review]]'' ([[Advertisement]]). Publication: [[The Times]], Monday, 3 November 1913 Issue 40359p</ref> [[St James's Theatre]] was reviving plays such as ''[[John Masefield#Plays|The Witch]]'' <ref>''Index'', The Times, Thursday, 30 October 1913 Issue 40356p</ref> and ''[[Nan#Arts and entertainment|Nan]]''<ref>''Repertory Season At The St. James's'', The Times, Thursday, 20 November 1913 Issue 40374p</ref>
By 1913 Masefield was best known for his long narrative poem, ''[[Dauber]]{{dn|date=February 2022}}''.<ref>''[[The English Review]]'' ([[Advertisement]]). Publication: [[The Times]], Monday, 3 November 1913 Issue 40359p</ref> [[St James's Theatre]] was reviving plays such as ''[[John Masefield#Plays|The Witch]]'' <ref>''Index'', The Times, Thursday, 30 October 1913 Issue 40356p</ref> and ''[[Nan]]{{dn|date=February 2022}}''<ref>''Repertory Season At The St. James's'', The Times, Thursday, 20 November 1913 Issue 40374p</ref>


14 April 1960 saw the broadcast of [[Hugh Stewart (film editor)|Hugh Stewart]]'s [[Home Service]] production in which artists [[William Devlin (actor)|William Devlin]] and [[Ursula O'Leary]], as [[Pontius Pilate]] and [[Procula]], perform to the atmospheric [[sound effects]] of the [[BBC Radiophonic Workshop]]'s soundware such as the [[EMS Synthi 100]] and [[ARP Odyssey l]].<ref name=JMSYT>[[John Masefield Society]]: ''[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xmp_IDlvzPw Good Friday: A Play in Verse (1916)]''</ref>
14 April 1960 saw the broadcast of [[Hugh Stewart (film editor)|Hugh Stewart]]'s [[Home Service]] production in which artists [[William Devlin (actor)|William Devlin]] and [[Ursula O'Leary]], as [[Pontius Pilate]] and [[Procula]], perform to the atmospheric [[sound effects]] of the [[BBC Radiophonic Workshop]]'s soundware such as the [[EMS Synthi 100]] and [[ARP Odyssey l]].<ref name=JMSYT>[[John Masefield Society]]: ''[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xmp_IDlvzPw Good Friday: A Play in Verse (1916)]''</ref>

Revision as of 08:58, 19 February 2022

John Masefield in 1916

Good Friday: A Play in Verse is a 1914 work by English poet John Masefield.[1] first published in The Fortnightly Review in December 1915.

By 1913 Masefield was best known for his long narrative poem, Dauber[disambiguation needed].[2] St James's Theatre was reviving plays such as The Witch [3] and Nan[disambiguation needed][4]

14 April 1960 saw the broadcast of Hugh Stewart's Home Service production in which artists William Devlin and Ursula O'Leary, as Pontius Pilate and Procula, perform to the atmospheric sound effects of the BBC Radiophonic Workshop's soundware such as the EMS Synthi 100 and ARP Odyssey l.[5]

Setting the scene following the crucifixion of Jesus (Good Friday), Masefield directs that Pilate should enter "as the darkness reddens to a glare."[5]

References

  1. ^ https://www.jstor.org/stable/27533389?seq=1#metadata_info_tab_contents
  2. ^ The English Review (Advertisement). Publication: The Times, Monday, 3 November 1913 Issue 40359p
  3. ^ Index, The Times, Thursday, 30 October 1913 Issue 40356p
  4. ^ Repertory Season At The St. James's, The Times, Thursday, 20 November 1913 Issue 40374p
  5. ^ a b John Masefield Society: Good Friday: A Play in Verse (1916)

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