The Jewish Chronicle

Stars to pay tribute to playwright who turned his roots into hit shows

- BY LIANNE KOLIRIN ley. Shylock, Venice Chicken Soup with BarRoots, ing about Jerusalem. I’m TalkChips with Everything, The Merchant of Chicken Soup with Barley

THE GREAT and the good of Britain’s theatrelan­d will gather next month to celebrate the life of Sir Arnold Wesker.

MikeLeigh,BernardKop­sandSamant­ha Spiro are among a host of celebritie­s who will pay tribute to the late Jewish playwright at the Royal Court Theatre in London.

The acclaimed writer died of Parkinson’s disease in April, aged 83.

Sir Arnold came to prominence in 1957 with his play

It was part of his famous trilogy, along with which was first performed the following year, and

Among his most noted subsequent plays were about class attitudes in the early 1960s, and

which retells from Shylock’s point of view. Born in Stepney in 1932, his early and most famous plays were all autobiogra­phical — about himself, his wife, his parents, sister and brother-in-law, his national service in the RAF and his experience as a trainee chef.

Sir Arnold was the last of the Royal Court’s “Angry Young Men” who, in the late 1950s and 1960s, revolution­ised British theatre by writing about their own lives.

The Royal Court tribute will bring together collaborat­ors, colleagues and friends alongside actors who have appeared in Sir Arnold’s plays, designers and directors, including the director Mike Leigh, who admired but never managed to meet Sir Arnold.

The event, which has been organised by Sir Arnold’s widow Dusty, will be hosted by former Royal Court artistic director, Dominic Cooke, who directed the theatre’s acclaimed production of

in 2013. Among the other confirmed participan­ts are actors Janie Dee, Frank Barrie and Jessica Raine, and playwright David Edgar.

At the event, playwright and poet Bernard Kops will speak about his friendship with Sir Arnold, which stretched for half a century.

Mr Kops said: “We met when we were both first emerging as writers. There was a great change in theatre and playwritin­g at the time and, in a way, we took over the world — and it never really recovered!

Mr Kops, now 90, would regularly read his poetry to Sir Arnold during his illness. He said: “He did great work in the world, which is why so many people are feeling his loss. But his work will always be there and so he lives on through that.”

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? Sir Arnold Wesker pictured in 1985
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES Sir Arnold Wesker pictured in 1985
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