as Fanny Hawthorn in the Broadway production of
Hindle Wakes (1912) The play was first performed in 1912 by
Annie Horniman's Gaiety Theatre company, originally in
Manchester and then in
London and on Broadway. The character Fanny Hawthorn was played by
Edyth Goodall in the original production. It was a controversial piece at the time it was first produced, and provoked a prolonged correspondence in the
Pall Mall Gazette in which both the author, Stanley Houghton, and the original actress participated, with many correspondents questioning whether the play's treatment of non-marital sex would set a bad example. The
Vice-Chancellor of the
University of Oxford placed all the theatres performing it out of bounds to students. It was the play in performance at the
Royal Exchange Theatre during the
1996 Manchester bombing and the play with which the theatre reopened in December 1998 after almost two and a half years of repair works following the bomb damage. Both productions were directed by
Helena Kaut-Howson with
Ewan Hooper as Mr Jeffcote,
Sue Johnston as Mrs Jeffcote,
Colin Prockter as Mr Hawthorn,
Nicholas Gleaves as Alan Jeffcote and
Sophie Stanton as Fanny Hawthorn. The production won a
MEN Award. The 100th anniversary of Stanley Houghton's
Hindle Wakes was marked in 2012. In September 2012, the first London revival in over 30 years took place at Finborough Theatre (Earls Court) from the 11th to the 29th. It has been filmed four times, twice in the
silent era (
1918,
1927), and twice in the
sound era (1931, 1952) although the film versions have tended to open out the play considerably. The
1931 film starred
Belle Chrystal as the mill girl and
John Stuart as the employer's son, with
Sybil Thorndike,
Edmund Gwenn and
Norman McKinnel. Parts of it were filmed in
Blackpool. A version of it featured in the series
Laurence Olivier Presents (1976), starring
Judi Bowker,
Donald Pleasence,
Trevor Eve and co-directed by
Laurence Olivier and
June Howson.
Mint Theater Company produced it in New York City in 2018. This production was nominated for a Drama Desk Award Outstanding Revival of a Play. This was the first time it has been produced in the United States in 95 years. ==See also==