Home / Arts and Entertainment / Class warfare ignites 1945 election night drama
Class warfare ignites 1945 election night drama
17 Feb
Summary
- A modern adaptation of 'Miss Julie' updates the setting to 1945 Britain.
- The play explores class tensions on the night of Labour's election victory.
- While based on Strindberg, the focus shifts from sex to British class warfare.

Patrick Marber's 1995 adaptation of August Strindberg's "Miss Julie" relocates the classic tragedy to a country estate in Britain during 1945. The drama unfolds on the momentous night of the Labour party's landslide election victory, a time of promised societal change.
The narrative centers on John, a chauffeur, and Julie, the daughter of a Labour peer. As the staff celebrate offstage, John indulges in his master's wine, drawing parallels to Churchill. Julie, descending from upstairs, provocatively engages John, testing boundaries and exploring the societal shifts heralded by the election.
Marber's sharp, rebarbative writing, reminiscent of his earlier works, delves into class warfare rather than purely sexual desire. The dialogue is steeped in spite, with characters trading barbed insults that highlight their differing social standings and ingrained habits of command and deference.
While the production is praised for its intimate staging and malicious clarity, it's noted that the play doesn't quite capture Strindberg's unhinged desire. The focus remains on the psychological impact of upbringing and the inescapable realities of class, even as the country appears on the brink of a new dawn.




