The History Boys: The Film
By Alan Bennett and Nicholas Hytner
4.5/5
()
About this ebook
Now a major motion picture from Fox Searchlight Pictures, The History Boys: The Film contains Alan Bennett's diary of the filming, the shooting script, and an introduction by director Nicholas Hytner, as well as an extensive plate section that includes a look behind the scenes and stills from the film.
An unruly bunch of bright, funny sixth-form (or senior) boys in a British boys' school are, as such boys will be, in pursuit of sex, sport, and a place at a good university, generally in that order. In all their efforts, they are helped and hindered, enlightened and bemused, by a maverick English teacher who seeks to broaden their horizons in sometimes undefined ways, and a young history teacher who questions the methods, as well as the aim, of their schooling. In The History Boys, Alan Bennett evokes the special period and place that the sixth form represents in an English boy's life. In doing so, he raises not only universal questions about the nature of history and how it is taught but also questions about the purpose of education today.
Alan Bennett
Alan Bennett es autor de muchas y celebradas obras teatrales como "Habeas Corpus", "Forty One Years On", "Kafka's Dick" o "The Madness of George III" (adaptada después al cine), guiones cinematográficos como Prick Up Your Ears (basado en la vida de Joe Orton), y piezas televisivas, en especial "Talking Heads" y "An Englishman Abroad", que lo han convertido en uno de los autores británicos más queridos. Asimismo es muy apreciado como actor. Empezó a escribir es prosa hace solo unos diez años.
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Reviews for The History Boys
14 ratings2 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The film script of a first-rate play by a first-rate author, one of Britain's best.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5The screenplay by Alan Bennett based on his award-winning play. This is a mesmerizing meditation on the meaning of education, history and life. Set in a boys' school in northern England in the early 1980's Bennet creates characters that share wonderfully witty dialogue as they attempt to learn about life, love and themselves; all whilst studiously preparing for the entrance exams and interviews for admittance to Oxford & Cambridge. The screenplay stands on its own and is a wonderful complement to the film (which bears repeated viewings). Most fascinating is the way the screenplay was edited for the final film production.
Book preview
The History Boys - Alan Bennett
Table of Contents
Title Page
INTRODUCTION
THE HISTORY BOYS: THE FILM
CAST AND CREDITS
FILM DIARY
Also by
About the Author
Copyright Page
INTRODUCTION
The History Boys is the second film that Alan Bennett and I have made together. The first, in 1994, was The Madness of King George. Both started as plays at the National Theatre, though The Madness of King George had its title helpfully changed on the journey from stage to screen, as it was feared that for an audience unversed in the history of the English monarchy the title of the play - The Madness of George III—might imply it was the sequel to The Madness of George 1 and The Madness of George 2.
Despite the shortcomings of its title, there always seemed to be a film in The Madness of George III. It was shaped like a screenplay, and stage directions like ‘Outside St Paul’s Cathedral’ and ‘Inside the Royal Apartments, Windsor’ required more than a customary suspension of disbelief from the theatre audience. The film was able to provide King George with a court to preside over and a country to rule. Shooting it, we travelled all over England, and watching Nigel Hawthorne gallop his horse towards the camera in Windsor Great Park, it was impossible not to believe that the story had found its intended medium.
It took us longer to believe that The History Boys belonged on screen. It probably wasn’t until we first put it in front of nine hundred people that we fully realised there was an audience for it in the theatre. I’d been nagging Alan Bennett for a play since my appointment as the National’s director in 2001. It arrived, as his plays always do, out of the blue, in the autumn of 2003; and although I was dazzled by its wit and erudition, and by the urgency of its discussion of the purpose of education and the nature of historical truth, I reckoned there were maybe only seventy or eighty performances in it. I think I worried that it might turn out to be too esoteric for a larger public.
The first preview crowd at the National, however, comprehensively trashed the old adage that nobody ever made a fortune by overestimating the intelligence of the audience. Like all subsequent audiences, they went happily nuts. Exhilarated by the play’s subject matter and often convulsed with laughter at its jokes, they rose to it above all because they cared about its people; which suggested there might be a film in it after all.
We knew our show’s strengths, and though they included neither a driving narrative nor any whiff of the picturesque, there seemed to be no point in trying to parachute into the material cinematic attributes it had no interest in possessing. If there was ever to be a History Boys film, the point of it would surely be that it would allow us to intensify what was exciting about the play. Maybe it could bring us closer to the protagonists, get under their skins and see behind their eyes. Maybe it could capture their speed of thought and the glitter of their intellects. But whatever else it turned out to be, it would be about eight boys and four teachers. So when we finally started to think about making it, we knew it would also be about the twelve actors who had created them.
The casting question surfaced as soon as we began talking with potential financiers. Film companies understandably want to cover themselves for the near inevitable failure of a film to meet expectations. They reason that the best way of persuading audiences to see a film is to stuff it with actors they want to see, whatever the film turns out to be. It would be nice to think that what audiences want to see is a good film, whoever’s in it. This utopian way of looking at things, though widely shared by those who make films, is treated with grave suspicion by those who finance them. The first film company we spoke to wanted to make what might be called a contribution to the casting process. As we already had a cast that we thought unimprovable, and whose ownership of their roles after a year on stage was absolute, this got us nowhere.
I am fiercely proud of the eight history boys. Three of them - Samuel Barnett, Dominic Cooper and Russell Tovey — had been at the National for some time, their versatility matched now by an authority that had grown with each passing week. While appearing in our vast adaptation of Philip Pullman’s His Dark Materials, they had all taken part in the first exploratory reading of The History Boys. Jamie Parker was also part of the group that read the play for the first time, playing Rudge. He did Rudge well, but later did Scripps even better, and turned out to be a genuinely accomplished pianist, which was a massive bonus. It was late in the day that we realised Russell Tovey should play Rudge. Russell had come to the National to play the Boy in Henry V, and had since established a monopoly in fresh-faced enthusiasts, which is what he is in life. Rudge couldn’t be further away from the real Russell, who readily rose to the challenge of showing us how restricted our idea of him had been. Samuel Anderson, James Corden, Sacha Dhawan and Andrew Knott joined us at the start of rehearsals in March 2004 and, by the time we opened, all eight played together like a jazz band. I have never known actors so in sympathy with each other, so quick to generate between each other real thought and feeling, and to erase the distinction between theatrical illusion and life.
This was no small achievement. Alan Bennett is a stylist as recognisable, in his way, as Oscar Wilde. People don’t actually talk the way they do in his plays: the history boys are often far wittier and more articulate than even the cleverest Oxbridge entrant. It was a measure not only of their exceptional talent but also of the work we did together over several weeks of rehearsal and many months of performance that the eight actors were able to root Alan’s inimitable speech patterns in concrete reality and toss them off without apparent effort. ‘Lecher though one is, or aspires to be,’ says Dakin, aged eighteen, referring to Hector’s extra-curricular activities, ‘it occurs to me that the lot of woman cannot be easy, who must suffer such inexpert male fumblings virtually on a daily basis.’ Dominic Cooper delivers this with the aplomb of a latter-day Jack Worthing, but you never doubt that it’s part of the daily banter of a Sheffield teenager, falling as naturally from his lips as the cheerful obscenities that pepper all the boys’ dialogue on screen, as it would in life.
As for the teachers: Richard Griffiths, Frances de la Tour and Clive Merrison were National Theatre veterans, and it had been obvious from the moment the play arrived that we should be pursuing them to be in it. Irwin was the trickiest part to cast, his oscillations between intellectual self-confidence and personal insecurity baffling to most of the actors who read for it. Stephen Campbell Moore arrived in the nick of time, only a couple of weeks before rehearsals started.
My attachment and Alan’s to these actors went beyond personal loyalty. The world we had created together was the world we wanted to film. There was undoubtedly another, and maybe a better, film that could have been made based on Alan’s play, but none of us had any interest in it. So we decided to cut loose and make by ourselves all the decisions that would under normal circumstances involve consultation with our paymasters. We’d go looking for someone to pay for the movie only when we were ready to start shooting it.
We realised immediately that we’d only get away with this if we were able to offer the film at the kind of price that would be