Play: A Taste of Honey Delaney wrote her first play in ten days, after seeing
Terence Rattigan's
Variation on a Theme (some sources say it was after seeing
Waiting for Godot) at the
Manchester Opera House during its pre-West End tour. Delaney felt she could do better than Rattigan, partly because she felt "
Variation..." showed "insensitivity in the way Rattigan portrayed homosexuals". Her play
A Taste of Honey was accepted by
Joan Littlewood's
Theatre Workshop. "Quite apart from its meaty content, we believe we have found a real dramatist", Gerry Raffles of Theatre Workshop said at the time. In the production's programme Delaney was described as "the antithesis of London's '
angry young men'. She knows what she is angry about."
A Taste of Honey, first performed on 27 May 1958, "I had strong ideas about what I wanted to see in the theatre. We used to object to plays where the factory workers came cap in hand and call the boss 'sir'. Usually North Country people are shown as
gormless, whereas in actual fact, they are very alive and cynical." Reuniting the original cast, the play enjoyed a run of 368 performances in the West End from January 1959; it was also performed on Broadway, with
Joan Plowright as Jo and
Angela Lansbury as her mother in the original cast. The
Encyclopedia of British Writers: 19th and 20th Centuries comments that it "portrays an impoverished family, whose income comes from peddling trinkets", but "the best qualities of the first play are absent." The novelist
Jeanette Winterson has commented that the contemporary reviews of these first two plays' first performances "read like a depressing essay in sexism".
Sweetly Sings the Donkey, a collection of short stories, appeared in 1963.
A Taste of Honey was adapted into a
film of the same title, released in 1961 with Delaney as an extra in the opening netball scene. Delaney wrote the screenplay with the director,
Tony Richardson. According to critics, the film script "contrives to keep in Delaney's best lines while creating a cinematic rather than a theatrical experience". It won the
BAFTA Award for Best British Screenplay and the Writers' Guild of Great Britain Award in 1962. Delaney's other screenplays include
The White Bus,
Charlie Bubbles (both 1967) and
Dance with a Stranger (1985). She also wrote the BBC series "The House That Jack Built" (1977), which she later adapted as an
Off-Off-Broadway play in 1979. Delaney wrote several radio plays, including
Tell Me a Film (2003),
Country Life (2004) ==Death==