Pinter wrote
The Room over two or four days in 1957, depending on the account, at the suggestion of his friend
Henry Woolf for his production as part of a postgraduate program in directing at the
University of Bristol,
Bristol,
England. In their published interviews, Pinter and Woolf vary in describing how many days Pinter took to write
The Room. According to Billington, in his official biography
Harold Pinter, Woolf asked Pinter to write the play in a letter that Pinter received in the autumn of 1956, when he "was newly married" to actress
Vivien Merchant "and in the middle of a season at
Torquay"; "[Pinter] replied that he couldn't possibly deliver anything in under six months. In fact, the play arrived in the post very shortly. It was written over four afternoons and late nights while Pinter was playing in
Rattigan's
Separate Tables at the
Pavilion Theatre, Torquay, in November 1956.
The Room, as the play was called, was eventually staged by the Bristol Drama Department in May 1957 in a converted squash-court and in a production by Woolf himself" (66–67). In a conversation with friend
Gordon Bowker in 1964, Woolf claims that in the process of undertaking his directing course at Bristol in 1957, he asked his old school friend Harold Pinter if he could write a one act play for him to produce for his graduation. Pinter said that he had never written a play before but would give it a try. According to Woolf, Pinter "said he couldn't write a play in under six months. He wrote it in two days, he says four days, no it wasn't it was two days." ==Production history==