GamePlan (play)
Encyclopedia
'GamePlan' is a 2001 play by British
United Kingdom
The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern IrelandIn the United Kingdom and Dependencies, other languages have been officially recognised as legitimate autochthonous languages under the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages...

 playwright
Playwright
A playwright, also called a dramatist, is a person who writes plays.The term is not a variant spelling of "playwrite", but something quite distinct: the word wright is an archaic English term for a craftsman or builder...

 Alan Ayckbourn
Alan Ayckbourn
Sir Alan Ayckbourn CBE is a prolific English playwright. He has written and produced seventy-three full-length plays in Scarborough and London and was, between 1972 and 2009, the artistic director of the Stephen Joseph Theatre in Scarborough, where all but four of his plays have received their...

, the first in a trilogy of plays called Damsels In Distress
Damsels in Distress (plays)
Damsels in Distress is a trilogy of plays written in 2001 by British playwright Alan Ayckbourn. The three plays, GamePlan, FlatSpin and RolePlay, were originally performed as a set by the Stephen Joseph Theatre Company . The plays were written to be performed by the same seven actors using the same...

(FlatSpin
FlatSpin (play)
FlatSpin is a 2001 play by British playwright Alan Ayckbourn, the second in a trilogy of plays called Damsels In Distress It is about an actress called Rosie Seymour who accepts a date with a mysterious Sam Berryman, who seems to have mistaken her for a Joanna Rupelford.-Background:See also:...

and RolePlay
RolePlay (play)
RolePlay is a 2001 play by British playwright Alan Ayckbourn, the third in a trilogy of plays called Damsels In Distress...

being parts two and three.) The darkest of the three plays, it is about a teenage girl who tries to support herself and her mother through prostitution.

Background

See also: Background on Damsels in Distress (plays) page.

GamePlan, along with FlatSpin
FlatSpin (play)
FlatSpin is a 2001 play by British playwright Alan Ayckbourn, the second in a trilogy of plays called Damsels In Distress It is about an actress called Rosie Seymour who accepts a date with a mysterious Sam Berryman, who seems to have mistaken her for a Joanna Rupelford.-Background:See also:...

, was originally intended to be part of a pair of plays, both set in the London Docklands, and both using the same cast of seven. Ayckbourn has a flat in the Docklands, where he observed that neighbours do not know each other well and strange things can happen under their noses. The pair of plays was eventually joined by a third, RolePlay
RolePlay (play)
RolePlay is a 2001 play by British playwright Alan Ayckbourn, the third in a trilogy of plays called Damsels In Distress...

, written as an afterthought, and the trilogy, Damsels In Distress
Damsels in Distress (plays)
Damsels in Distress is a trilogy of plays written in 2001 by British playwright Alan Ayckbourn. The three plays, GamePlan, FlatSpin and RolePlay, were originally performed as a set by the Stephen Joseph Theatre Company . The plays were written to be performed by the same seven actors using the same...

, was shown in the Stephen Joseph Theatre
Stephen Joseph Theatre
The Stephen Joseph Theatre is a theatre in the round in Scarborough, North Yorkshire, England that was founded by Stephen Joseph and was the first theatre in the round in Britain....

's 2001 season. Like the other two plays, this drew some inspiration from the London Docklands.

This play was also a landmark in the progression of Ayckbourn's plays into darker and more contemporary material. Although contemporary subjects had been covered before, such as domestic violence in The Things We Do For Love, the subject of teenage prostitution was a new departure. It was still tame compared to the material now covered by other playwrights, but still arguably a gamble.

Characters

As part of the Damsels in Distress trilogy, GamePlan was written to use the same seven actors as the other two plays in the series. In this play, the characters are:
  • Sorrel Saxon, a sixteen-year-old schoolgirl
  • Lynette Saxon, her mother, forty, former businesswoman, now a cleaner
  • Kelly Butcher, Sorrel's friend, also sixteen
  • Leo Tyler, a dapper retired dry cleaner and Sorrel's first client
  • Dan Endicott, a detective police sergeant, forties
  • Grace Page, a severe WPC, thirties
  • Troy Stephens, a tabloid-quality journalist, thirties


Sorrel, Lynette and Kelly are the main characters in the play, with the other four making smaller appearances in single scenes.

Setting

The entire play is set in Lynette Saxon's flat, on the riverside in the London Docklands. As part of Damsels in Distress, the play was written to use the identical set to the other two plays. As with most Ayckbourn plays, it was originally performed in the Round
Theatre in the round
Theatre-in-the-round or arena theatre is any theatre space in which the audience surrounds the stage area...

 for its original production at the Stephen Joseph Theatre
Stephen Joseph Theatre
The Stephen Joseph Theatre is a theatre in the round in Scarborough, North Yorkshire, England that was founded by Stephen Joseph and was the first theatre in the round in Britain....

. However, it was adapted for the Proscenium
Proscenium
A proscenium theatre is a theatre space whose primary feature is a large frame or arch , which is located at or near the front of the stage...

 for subsequent performances elsewhere.

The play is performed in two Acts. Both acts are divided into three scenes. The play takes place over a period of six weeks.

Synopsis

The play opens at six in the morning with Sorrel Saxon catching her mother, Lynette, smoking. Lynette was a successful businesswoman, until business collapsed in the dotcom crash. She now cleans the offices she once managed (hence the early start and the smoking), whilst her husband ran off with her business partner to live abroad. Lynette mentions that they will not be able to afford the flat much longer, and contemplates moving out of London, in spite of Sorrel's protests.

Unknown to Lynette, Sorrel already has her own plan to make ends meet. After Lynette leaves, Sorrel's friend, Kelly Butcher, arrives. She is an unassertive girl who always agrees with Sorrel. Sorrel's idea is to make money as a high-class call girl. Sorrel's researches consists of the internet (in particular the codewords for different services – Sorrel intends to be “vanilla” or straight sex) and the rose-tinted story former classmate, Big Angie, who got chucked out of her school for doing the same. Sorrel seems convinced she knows what she is doing, and (as a result of her earlier experiences) sees sex as no big deal. Sorrel arm-twists Kelly to be her "maid", meeting the clients and helping if there's any trouble.

In the second scene, Sorrel prepares for her appointment with her first client, her plans now well advanced. To make herself untraceable, she has set up a website of lovechicks.co.uk, assumed a business name of "Mandy", and obtained a mobile phone exclusively for her business. This does not stop her receiving calls from prospective customers requesting disgusting acts. The client is one that Sorrel confidently believes won't cause any trouble.

The third scene takes place that evening. Kelly has brought, from her own savings, her maid's outfit, Sorrel's call girl underwear (so tight she can hardly breathe), and contraceptives. Then the client arrives. He is Leo Tyler, a mild-mannered man bearing flowers, tutting at the dirty magazines left for him, and more interested in talking about himself and his late wife. Sorrel's inexperience begins to show when she sprawls over the couch in an unsexy way. When Leo goes to the bedroon, she talks to Kelly about the noises call girls are supposed to make during sex, and starts to show doubts about the act. But with time short before Lynette returns home, this does not stop Sorrel going to the bedroom.

Kelly mistakes Sorrel's very bad fake orgasm noises, as Sorrel being attacked, and rushes in with a vase of flowers to brain Leo. With the confusion resolved, Sorrel and Leo carry on. Then Sorrels returns from the bedroom, in tears, hyperventilating. Leo, having evidently had his money's worth, returns to find himself alone in the living room. He quietly places the money on the table, and promptly has a heart attack and dies.

Act Two begins later that night. Lynette returns and senses Sorrel has problems, but Sorrel will not answer, nor discuss Lynette's own problems. Eventually, Lynette gives her a sleeping pill. In the middle of the night, Kelly comes back, and she and Sorrel quietly carry out Leo's body (which they hid earlier) and throw him over the balcony into the Thames
River Thames
The River Thames flows through southern England. It is the longest river entirely in England and the second longest in the United Kingdom. While it is best known because its lower reaches flow through central London, the river flows alongside several other towns and cities, including Oxford,...

. Just as they have done so, Lynette appears and asks questions. The two girls giggle helplessly, so she assumes it must be drugs.

The next scene takes place two weeks later. Sorrel has aborted her plan and has put it behind her, assuming she and Kelly are in the clear. She has got rid of the website and switched off her “work” mobile, using it only once when her own mobile runs out of battery. She has just finished the chat when Lynette comes in with a bottle of cheap pink bubbly and announces that she has finally got a job, as a publisher for a small religious book group. But before she can open the bottle, Lynette and Sorrel start another row.

But before the row end two police officers arrive at the door: Dan Endicott, who does the questioning, and Grace Page, who contributes Biblical quotations. They are investigating the death of Leo, and through tracing his internet use and where the body was found, they have narrowed down his whereabouts to this flat. When they question Lynette about the mobile number, she insists it's not hers or Sorrel's, but when they ring it, the mobile goes off. Lynette instantly responds by claiming she was the call girl, and Sorrel's attempted confession is ignored.

In the final scene, Kelly is helping Lynette and Sorrel pack to move, clearly in advanced stages as boxes now litter the whole flat. Although no-one was arrested (owing to the police failing to pin down exactly how Leo died), word has got round about Lynette's confession. Sorrel explains to Kelly that after being ostracised by her neighbours, Lynette appears to have given up. She has declined the job, and is moving to Doncaster
Doncaster
Doncaster is a town in South Yorkshire, England, and the principal settlement of the Metropolitan Borough of Doncaster. The town is about from Sheffield and is popularly referred to as "Donny"...

 for no better reason than once knowing some people who lived there.

A journalist then calls at the door, introducing himself as Troy Stephens, from a magazine (evidently a trashy one) called "As It Is", which is ironic as he wishes to run a story on Lynette Saxon turning to prostitution to support her daughter. Noticing Lynette's lack of enthusiasm, Troy mentions that a fee, which he shows her on a piece of paper. Lynette suggests she would say yes if they add a zero to the end of the figure. Troy goes outside to check with his office, whilst Lynette gets out the bottle of pink bubbly (left untouched since the police visit) on standby. She says that it probably won't be the answer they want, but there will be other chances. With the bottle ready, the play instantly ends just as the door opens, giving the impression that, whatever happens, the friendship of the three women will survive.

Productions

The play was first performed at the Stephen Joseph Theatre
Stephen Joseph Theatre
The Stephen Joseph Theatre is a theatre in the round in Scarborough, North Yorkshire, England that was founded by Stephen Joseph and was the first theatre in the round in Britain....

, with an opening night on 24 May 2001, and a premiere on 29 May 2001. It featured the following cast:
  • Lynette Saxon - Jacqueline King
    Jacqueline King
    -Career:King trained at the Bristol Old Vic Theatre School. After training she worked as an actor in Africa, Canada, America, Sri Lanka and UAE.On returning to the UK, she appeared in several Alan Ayckbourn productions, including the original runs of Comic Potential and the Damsels in Distress...

  • Sorrel Saxon - Saskia Butler
  • Kelly Butcher - Alison Pargeter
    Alison Pargeter
    Alison Pargeter is an English actress who played the roles of stalker Sarah Cairns in the BBC soap opera EastEnders, also Mary Slessor in a 11-part television series of Mary Slessor, and the Nag's Head barmaid called Val in the BBC Only Fools and Horses prequel Rock & Chips.-Theatre:Pargeter was a...

  • Leo Tyler - Robert Austin
  • Dan Endicott - Tim Faraday
  • Grace Tyler - Beth Tuckey
  • Troy Stephens. - Bill Champion


The production team was the following:
  • Director - Alan Ayckbourn
    Alan Ayckbourn
    Sir Alan Ayckbourn CBE is a prolific English playwright. He has written and produced seventy-three full-length plays in Scarborough and London and was, between 1972 and 2009, the artistic director of the Stephen Joseph Theatre in Scarborough, where all but four of his plays have received their...

  • Design - Roger Glossop
  • Lighting - Mick Hughes
  • Costumes - Christine Wall
  • Music - Keith Jarrett


The production then toured. The first West End
West End theatre
West End theatre is a popular term for mainstream professional theatre staged in the large theatres of London's 'Theatreland', the West End. Along with New York's Broadway theatre, West End theatre is usually considered to represent the highest level of commercial theatre in the English speaking...

 performance was at the Duchess Theatre
Duchess Theatre
The Duchess Theatre is a West End theatre in the City of Westminster, London, located in Catherine Street, near Aldwych.The theatre opened on 25 November 1929 and is one of the smallest 'proscenium arched' West End theatres. It has 479 seats on two levels....

, opening on 7 September 2001, and featured the same cast and production team. However, the success of RolePlay
RolePlay (play)
RolePlay is a 2001 play by British playwright Alan Ayckbourn, the third in a trilogy of plays called Damsels In Distress...

over the other two productions led to GamePlan being sidelined, along with FlatSpin
FlatSpin (play)
FlatSpin is a 2001 play by British playwright Alan Ayckbourn, the second in a trilogy of plays called Damsels In Distress It is about an actress called Rosie Seymour who accepts a date with a mysterious Sam Berryman, who seems to have mistaken her for a Joanna Rupelford.-Background:See also:...

, until eventually it was shown only once a week, to the disappointment of both Ayckbourn and the cast.

However, there were four subsequent professional productions of GamePlan between 2004 and 2008, as opposed to RolePlay which had only three.

Critical Reviews

Reviews of GamePlan were dominated by the decision of Ayckbourn to write a play on such a different area to his normal territory. Michael Billington
Michael Billington (critic)
Michael Keith Billington is a British author and arts critic. Drama critic of The Guardian since October 1971, he is "Britain's longest-serving theatre critic" and the author of biographical and critical studies relating to British theatre and the arts; most notably, he is the authorised...

 of The Guardian
The Guardian
The Guardian, formerly known as The Manchester Guardian , is a British national daily newspaper in the Berliner format...

wrote: "... his 58th and latest play strikes me as unsettling as anything he has written. What the Scarborough audience treated as a robust romp I took to be a cry of despair about the moral depths to which our society has sunk". The reviews were, on the whole, supportive of the change of tone. They also generally liked the concept of writing for a repertory company.

The opinions of the play itself, however, were more mixed. The reviews were generally favourable of the first half. John Peter, for The Sunday Times
The Sunday Times
The Sunday Times is a British Sunday newspaper.The Sunday Times may also refer to:*The Sunday Times *The Sunday Times *The Sunday Times *The Sunday Times...

, praised the comedy scene where Sorrel tries to get Leo's attention with her unerotic gestures, but Michael Billington saw it as "the desperate pathos of a schoolgirl seeking to vamp an older man". The opinion of the second half was less favourable. Although some reviewers were satisfied with the way Ayckbourn had mixed the comedy and drama, most were unconvinced the mixture worked in such a dark situation. Jeremy Kingston wrote for The Times
The Times
The Times is a British daily national newspaper, first published in London in 1785 under the title The Daily Universal Register . The Times and its sister paper The Sunday Times are published by Times Newspapers Limited, a subsidiary since 1981 of News International...

: "The two policemen are caricatures, and to make one of them prone to long biblical quotes is a pretty desperate attempt to flesh out a character", although the same scene was positively received by Dave Windass of The Stage
The Stage
The Stage is a weekly British newspaper founded in 1880, available nationally and published on Thursdays. Covering all areas of the entertainment industry but focused primarily on theatre, it contains news, reviews, opinion, features and other items of interest, mainly to those who work within the...

.

When touring, GamePlan received further reviews as part of the whole Damsels In Distress
Damsels in Distress (plays)
Damsels in Distress is a trilogy of plays written in 2001 by British playwright Alan Ayckbourn. The three plays, GamePlan, FlatSpin and RolePlay, were originally performed as a set by the Stephen Joseph Theatre Company . The plays were written to be performed by the same seven actors using the same...

trilogy. The trilogy as a whole received positive reviews, and GamePlan was generally deemed much stronger than FlatSpin
FlatSpin (play)
FlatSpin is a 2001 play by British playwright Alan Ayckbourn, the second in a trilogy of plays called Damsels In Distress It is about an actress called Rosie Seymour who accepts a date with a mysterious Sam Berryman, who seems to have mistaken her for a Joanna Rupelford.-Background:See also:...

, but most praise was reserved for RolePlay
RolePlay (play)
RolePlay is a 2001 play by British playwright Alan Ayckbourn, the third in a trilogy of plays called Damsels In Distress...

. This later led to the marginalisation of GamePlan and FlatSpin in favour of this play.

Alison Pargeter
Alison Pargeter
Alison Pargeter is an English actress who played the roles of stalker Sarah Cairns in the BBC soap opera EastEnders, also Mary Slessor in a 11-part television series of Mary Slessor, and the Nag's Head barmaid called Val in the BBC Only Fools and Horses prequel Rock & Chips.-Theatre:Pargeter was a...

's role as Kelly Butcher contributed to her winning the Best Newcomer in the Critics' Circle Awards.

External links

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