Literature • Irish writer
Brendan Behan wrote of his experiences in the English borstal system in his autobiography
Borstal Boy (1958). It was later adapted into
play and
film versions. •
Alan Sillitoe's short story "
The Loneliness of the Long-Distance Runner" (1959) is included in the
book of the same title. A boy's period in a borstal for robbing a bakery is recounted. The
film version followed in 1962 in which
Tom Courtenay starred and the director was
Tony Richardson. • In
Roald Dahl's children's book
Matilda (1988), Hortensia initially refers to the school as "borstal" on Matilda's first day. • Alan Figg's book
Borstal 80 gives a personal account of time served 1980 to 1981 at
Portland Borstal.
Cinema • The British film
Boys in Brown (1949) stars
Richard Attenborough,
Dirk Bogarde and
Jack Warner. It looks at life in a borstal and the challenges faced by those who go through them. •
Scum (1977), a once banned
Play for Today, and its cinema remake
Scum (1979) are set in a borstal.
Ray Winstone, in a very early role, features in both versions. • Young
Raymond Briggs is threatened with being sent to "Borstal" by a police officer after being suspected of trying to steal "valuable billiard cues" from a golf club in the animated film
Ethel & Ernest (2016). •
Scrubbers, a (1982) British drama film set in a girls' borstal, directed by
Mai Zetterling and starring Amanda York and Chrissie Cotterill
Television • In the fourth episode of the first series of the show
Fawlty Towers, titled "The Hotel Inspectors", the main character,
Basil Fawlty, is chastised by his wife, Sybil, for his harsh treatment of their guests. She tells him, "This is a hotel, not a borstal." Basil later ingratiatingly repeats the line to a guest whom he believes to be a hotel inspector. • A ninth series episode of the BBC television show
Father Brown, titled "The Wayward Girls" and first broadcast in January 2022, was set in a borstal. • In the first series, 6th episode, of
Downton Abbey,
Lady Sybil Crawley asks her father's permission to be driven to Ripon to attend a Borstal committee meeting ("I've missed the last two"), but instead she has the chauffeur, Branson, drop her at the location where the by-election vote count is being announced. She is injured in a brawl; Branson and her father's cousin Matthew rescue her. •
Dog Borstal is the title of a British television series in which dog trainers address challenging behaviour by dogs. • The "Crime" episode of the 1997 British comedy series
Brass Eye featured a segment satirizing the borstal system.
Music • The British rock band
Faces recorded a song (written by
Rod Stewart,
Ronnie Wood, and
Ian McLagan) called "Borstal Boys" on their final studio album
Ooh La La. • The British punk rock band
Sham 69 had a top 40 hit single with a song called "Borstal Breakout" in 1977. • The British rock band
Humble Pie recorded a song called "
30 Days in the Hole" that included the lyric "Some seeds and dust, and you got Borstal." • The British ska/rock band
Madness based their song "Land of Hope and Glory" from the album
One Step Beyond... on one of their members' time in a borstal for petty theft. • The British singer-songwriter
Richard Thompson included a song called "I Can't Wake Up to Save My Life" on his 1994 album
Mirror Blue, which included the lines "Things I done make my dreams turn bad, like borstal boys coming home to Dad", an image similar to "chickens coming home to roost". • The German punk band
Oxymoron released a track titled "Borstal" on their 1995 album "Fuck The Nineties...Here's Our Noize". • The British synthpop band
Bronski Beat featured a mince pie-eating competition in Borstal with lead singer
Jimmy Somerville winning the contest in the music video of the cover song "
It Ain't Necessarily So" from the album
The Age of Consent. • The Borstal is a punk rock band from
Jakarta, Indonesia. • Borstal is a
heavy hardcore band from
London, with
Brujeria and
Knuckledust members (including lead singer, Pelbu). • Borstal is a song by British hip hop group
Monster Florence. • The British rock band
Squeeze included a song called "Vicky Verky" on their 1980 album
Argybargy, which included the lines "Well he went off to Borstal, He said that he was forced to, Rob the flats of Hi Fis, 'Cause she was ill and she would cry". • The Scottish band
Trashcan Sinatras include the following line on their song, "You Made Me Feel" from the 1991 album
Cake: "I'm losing my grip and sailing this ship, from barstool to Borstal and back". ==See also==