Saturday, October 26, 2019
Willy Russells Our Day Out Essay -- Willy Russell Our Day Out Essays
Willy Russell's "Our Day Out"      Willy Russell has written many plays over the last thirty years, but  there is one feature that is common to all of them: the issue of  social and cultural background. This is the situation of the  characters; their surroundings; their class; the society in which they  are brought up, and the culture of that society. It is this that can  lead to the behaviour, feelings, opinions and general outlook of the  characters. Russell explores the effects that society and culture can  have on people in all his plays, but in none is it so poignant as in  'Our Day Out', the story of what happens when Mrs Kay takes her  Progress class out of inner-city Liverpool on a school trip to Conwy  Castle, Wales.    Throughout 'Our Day Out' the issue of social and cultural background  is ever-present, but it is discussed and conveyed in many different  forms; the colloquial dialect Russell uses; the symbolism that is  featured; the behaviour and attitudes of the children; the way that  people react to these children, and the insights we get into their  family lives.    Willy Russell himself said that he writes for the theatre because  'it's concerned with the spoken rather than the written word'. In 'Our  Day Out' we see the importance of the spoken word through the language  that the children use. Having grown up and taught at a Comprehensive  school in Liverpool, Russell knows the Liverpudlian dialect perfectly,  and he uses his knowledge to give a truly representative feel to the  play. The children use words such as 'agh'ey', 'ooer', and 'nott'n',  and the authentic language that the children use help to make the play  feel more real. Because Russell writes the words as they would be  spoken in a Liverpudlian acce...              ...ry isn't. The poignancy and intensity of the play is somewhat  masked in places by the comedy, but we do catch glimpses of the  hopeless, desperate situation these children are facing. As Mrs Kay  says, 'Ten years ago you could teach them to stand in a line, you  could teach them to obey, to expect little more than a lousy factory  job. But now they haven't even got that to aim for.  There's nothing for  them to do, any of them; most of them were born for factory fodder,  but the factories have closed down.' Throughout the play this is the  underlying tone, and the subtle way that Russell conveys this message  heightens the effect when it comes. This day out is simply an oasis;  one day of fun out of their whole lives, and at the end of it we see  how the glimmer of something bright and beautiful makes it all the  harder to turn your eyes back to the grey and mundane.                      
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