The Pitchfork Disney


The Pitchfork Disney is a 1991 stage play by Philip Ridley. It was Ridley's first professional work for the stage, having also produced work as a visual artist, novelist, filmmaker, and scriptwriter for film and radio. The play premiered at the Bush Theatre in London, UK in 1991 and was directed by Matthew Lloyd, who went on to direct the majority of Ridley's early stage plays.
The play was a controversial hit and is generally regarded as kick-starting a new, confrontational "In-yer-face" style and sensibility of drama which emerged in British theatre during the 1990s.
The play is the first entry in Ridley's unofficially titled "East End Gothic Trilogy", being followed by The Fastest Clock in the Universe and Ghost from a Perfect Place.
In 2015 the published script was reissued as part of the Methuen Drama Modern Classics series, recognising the play's impact on modern British theatre.

Synopsis

The play opens with the characters of Presley and Haley, two adults living alone in the East End of London. They lead a childish fantasy existence, living mainly off chocolate. Their parents died a decade before, although their exact fate is not described.
They tell each other stories and discuss their dreams and fears.
From their window, they see two men, one of whom is apparently sick. Agitated, Haley sucks on a drugged dummy and goes to sleep. Despite their fear of outsiders, Presley brings the sick man in, who promptly vomits on the floor. The man introduces himself as Cosmo Disney, and explains that he and his partner are showmen. His sickness is caused by the fact that his particular talent consists of eating insects and small animals. Cosmo emotionally manipulates Presley who tells Cosmo about a recurring dream he has, involving a serial killer named 'The Pitchfork Disney'.
Almost immediately after Presley finishes his story, Cosmo's partner arrives. He is a huge, masked and apparently mute figure named Pitchfork Cavalier. His act is simply taking his mask off to reveal his hideously deformed face. He sings a wordless song, dances with the unconscious Haley and eats some chocolate. Cosmo convinces Presley to accompany Pitchfork to the shops, promising friendship. As soon as they leave, Cosmo performs a sexual assault on Haley by inserting one of his fingers soaked in medicine into her mouth. Presley unexpectedly returns and realises Cosmo's true motives, and breaks his finger which he used to assault Haley. Cosmo flees. Pitchfork briefly returns, terrifies Presley and then leaves. Haley awakes, and the two express their fear.

Themes and interpretation

The play is a dreamlike piece with surreal elements. It primarily deals with fear, particularly childhood fears. Dreams and stories are also explored, and indeed, the entire play can be interpreted as a dream in itself.
Another recurring theme is that of snakes, being described by Presley in two monologues. In the first he describes killing one in a frying pan and in the second he recounts seeing one kill a mouse in the reptile house of a zoo and then later coming home and watching a television programme about a Christian cult who worship snakes. Cosmo himself can be interpreted as being a manifestation of a snake as he eats insects and small animals, claims to have been born hatching from an egg and that he got new skin from unzipping and throwing away the skin he had from being a baby. Presley in one of the monologues describes seeing a snake shed its skin to reveal bright red skin underneath. This description seems to echo Cosmo, who enters the play wearing a long black overcoat which he takes off to reveal the red-sequinned-jacket he is wearing underneath.
Concerning interpretations of The Pitchfork Disney Ridley mentioned in 2016 that “Every time it’s revived it means something different. There’s a production of it on in Canada at the moment which in the present climate is being seen as a play about terrorism – about the fear of the outside coming in and the fear of change. A few years ago it was about the fear of sex, intimacy, of being touched... like tuning forks, they vibrate with whatever’s going on in the atmosphere at the time.”

Development

Ridley began writing the play while still an art student at St Martin's School of Art. While there he created a number of performance art pieces consisting of long fast-paced monologues detailing dream sequences and characters with shifting identities, which usually Ridley would perform in art galleries. From writing these some of Ridley's friends, who were leaving art school to instead pursue acting, suggested that his monologues would make a good basis for a stage play. Ridley began writing The Pitchfork Disney based on two of his monologues that were companion pieces, one centring on a character who was afraid of everything and one who was afraid of nothing, with the play forming from the idea of what would happen if these two characters met.
Ridley in part got the inspiration for the character of Cosmo from when, at the age of 18, he witnessed in a pub a man wearing a red sequined jacket proceed to eat a variety of different insects onstage for entertainment.

Reception and legacy

Initial reception
The play was considered shocking for the time it was produced, with reportedly some walkouts throughout the show's run, along with rumours of audience members fainting. One verified account of an audience member fainting happened when Ridley was in the audience which lead to discussions backstage about if there should be a nurse present in the theatre for each performance.
Generally the reviews from critics of the play during its initial run praised the production for its acting and direction, but were critical towards Ridley's script.
A number of critics felt that the play was purposely trying to be repulsive. Critic Maureen Paton described the play as “ludicrously bad” and a “repugnant tiresome story… Mr. Ridley’s Grimm obsessions are in the worst possible taste”, concluding that “This pointless wallow makes Marat-Sade seem like Pontins Holiday Camp.” Melanie McDonagh for The Evening Standard wrote that “Philip Ridley, is simply the Fat Boy from the Pickwick Papers, who sneaks up on old ladies and hisses: "I want to make your flesh creep".” For The Jewish Chronicle, David Nathan commented “To the Theatre of the Absurd, the Theatre of Comedy and the Operating Theatre you can now add the Theatre of Yuk” and argued that although “The arousal of disgust is as legitimate a dramatic objective as the arousal of any other strong emotion, but as an end in itself it seems pointless.”
Some critics also felt that the play was derivative of other works with City Limits critic Lyn Gardner writing that the script was “derivative of some playwrights' worst plays”. In comparing the enigmatic quality of the play to Pinter's writing, Maureen Paton wrote "Where Pinter's ironic technique like a two-way mirror can give an intellectual patina to a mystery wrapped in an enigma, Ridley seems luridly self-indulgent… Ridley drops various ominous hints that are never resolved, leaving the audience to wallow in the mire of pointless speculation.”
Likewise, another reoccurring criticism was that the script was contrived and lacked specific explanations for its content. Lyn Gardner wrote that the play “has no discernible internal logic, spewing imagery meaninglessly from nowhere… with long meandering monologues which… go nowhere and appear to have no dramatic impetus… air of contrived weirdness when what is desperately needed is a sense of reality and some concrete explanations.” Kenneth Hurren for the Mail on Sunday called the play “woefully contrived” and even wrote that “It struck me that the author was in need less of an audience than a psychiatrist.” Benedict Nightingale for The Times wrote that “the play's obscurities becom irksome” but stated that “There is no obligation on a dramatist to explain his characters' behaviour. Perhaps it is enough for Ridley to cram his play with images of childhood guilt, confusion, self-hatred and dread, leaving the audience… to the dramatic Rorschach blot that emerges… Maybe Ridley will be more specific in his next play.”
Despite these criticisms the script did receive praise from some critics. An overwhelmingly positive review came from Catherine Wearing who wrote in What's On “This is a world premiere you must rush to see… presents a world that is boldly dramatic, dead contemporary and sickeningly terrifying. At last, some new work for the theatre that has vision and bravery in its telling… There's a sinister and original mind at work here with lots to say… Dark powerful and choc a-bloc with shock tactics this must be a must for anyone who wants dynamic, contemporary theatre.”
Reacting to the reviews, Ian Herbert in Theatre Record wrote that there was “a most encouraging set of disagreements” amongst critics regarding The Pitchfork Disney. He then went on to defend the play citing it as “a very important debut”, compared Ridley's writing favourably to Harold Pinter's and added that Ridley was a writer to watch out for: “he has a little to learn yet about dramatic structure and all the boring rules, but he can already create astonishingly original characters and give them lines that hold an audience spellbound.”
By the end of its original run the play had acquired something of a cult following, with a group of actors reportedly seeing the production several times and attending the production's final performance wearing T-shirts with lines from the play printed on them in big bold lettering. It was so successful that the Bush Theatre for the first time in its history had to schedule an extra matinee performance to meet audience demand.
For his performance as Presley, Rupert Graves subsequently won the Charrington Fringe Award for Best Actor.
Legacy
Years after its premiere the play gained in reputation, achieving recognition as a major work and highly influential in the development of in-yer-face theatre, which dominated new writing in British Theatre during much of the 1990s.
Bush Theatre artistic director Dominic Dromgoole wrote in 2000 that the play "took the expectations of a normal evening in the theatre, rolled them around a little, jollied them along, tickled their tummy, and then savagely, fucked them up the arse… Performed right at the beginning of 1990, this was one of the first plays to signal a new direction for new writing. No politics, no naturalism, no journalism, no issues. In its place, character, imagination, wit, sexuality, skin and the soul."
Critic and leading expert on In-yer-face theatre, Aleks Sierz, has often cited the play as a pioneering work. In his introduction to the Methuen Classics edition of the play-text, Sierz wrote “The Pitchfork Disney is not only a key play of the 90s; it is the key play of that decade... Its legend grew and grew until it became the pivotal influence on the generation of playwrights that followed. It is a foundation text; it separates then from now.”
Despite the play being cited as a key work in instigating the in-yer-face theatre style and sensibility, Ridley has spoken about how he feels that The Pitchfork Disney were produced before in-yer-face theatre happened: "I had done my first three plays… by 1994 and that’s the year that most people say the ‘in your face’ thing started. All those seeds were laid before that, but it didn't feel that I was doing that and no one said I was doing that until many years after the event." "When in-yer-face was happening I was writing plays for young people."
Significant plays that critics believe have been influenced by or bear homage to the play include:
Monologues from the play have also become popular audition pieces, most notably Presley's speech about killing a snake in a frying pan and Hayley's speech about being chased into a church by savage dogs.

Notable productions

World Premiere
2 January 1991 at The Bush Theatre, London.
Directed by Matthew Lloyd.
Glasgow Revival
Citizens' Theatre, Glasgow.
Directed by Malcolm Sutherland.
American Premiere
5 February 1995 at the Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company, Washington D.C.
Directed by Rob Bundy.
Winner of ‘Outstanding resident play’ and ‘Outstanding lead actor, resident play’ for Wallace Acton at the Helen Hayes Awards, with nominations also for ‘Outstanding Supporting actress, resident play’ for Mary Teresa Fortuna, ‘Outstanding Director, resident play’ for Rob Bundy, ‘Outstanding Set Design, resident play or musical’ for James Kronzer and ‘Outstanding Sound Design, resident play or musical’ for Daniel Schrader.
Bolton Revival
January 16 1997 at the Octagon Theatre, Bolton.
Directed by Lawrence Till.
New York Premiere
8 April 1999 at Blue Light Theater Company, New York.
Directed by Rob Bundy.
London Revival 2012
25 January - 17 March 2012 at The Arcola Theatre, London.
Directed by Edward Dick.
London Revival 2017
27 January - 18 March 2017 at Shoreditch Town Hall, London.
Directed by Jamie Lloyd.
Winner of the 2018 Off West End Awards for 'Best Supporting Male in a Play', awarded to Tom Rhys Harries. Also nominated were George Blagden for ‘Best Male in a Play’ and Jamie Lloyd for ‘Best Director’.